Sections
You are here: Home Document Centre Project Related Documents Project Information Documents
Document Actions

Project Information Documents

Up one level
GEF IW project information documents.
CEO Endorsement Letter
CEO Endorsement Letter
APCP - GEF Grant Agreement
Global Environment Facility Trust Fund Grant Agreement between Romania and International Bank for Reconstruction and Development acting as an Implementing Agency of the Global Environment Facility
Danube/Black Sea Strategic Partnership - Reducing Pollution Working Paper
 
Danube/Black Sea Strategic Partnership - Investment Fund Paper
 
PIR for 2000
 
PIR for 1999
 
PIR for 1998
 
Marine Electronic Highway Project Appraisal
The Marine Electronic Highway (MEH) Demonstration Project is the first (demonstration) phase of a proposed two-phase program to establish a MEH in the Straits of Malacca and Singapore. The Demonstration Project's objective is to determine if a full-scale MEH for the Straits is economically justified and financially feasible. If the MEH is successful in the Straits of Malacca and Singapore, it has the potential to be extended to the whole shipping route from Europe and the Middle East to East Asia.
Guarani plan of operation for 2008
 
WIOLAB project Sustainability Strategy
The marine and coastal environment, and the goods and services it provides, are under threat in many regions of the world. Some of the world’s most valuable coastal and marine ecosystems are to be found in the Western Indian Ocean (WIO) region. The WIO States, having recognized the urgent need for better and more effective management of their coastal and marine resources, developed and approved the WIO-LaB project, under the umbrella of the Nairobi Convention (NC). The broad goal of this project is to contribute to the environmentally sustainable management and development of the Western Indian Ocean (WIO) region by addressing the land-based sources of pollution that have adverse impacts on rivers, estuaries and coastal waters, as well as their biological resources.
Pesticides Runoff Project Document(Spanish)
 
South China Sea 54 Giwa Regional Assessments
This GIWA report presents the results of Scaling, Scoping, Causal chain and Policy options analyses conducted for the GIWA region 54 South China Sea region in 2001-2002. The South China Sea region contains nine nations; China, Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia, Brunei and the Philippines. This Large Marine Ecosystem and its catchments are bounded to the west by the Mekong River (GIWA region 55), north by East China Sea (GIWA region 36), east by the Sulu-Celebes (Sulawesi) Sea (GIWA region 56) and Small Island States (GIWA region 62), and south and southeast by Indonesian Seas (GIWA region 57).
Executive Summary
 
Letter of Endorsement by the Goverment
 
GEF Project Brief
 
Fund Executive Summary: World Bank/GEF Partnership Investment Fund for Pollution Reduction in the Large Marine Ecosystems of East Asia (Tranche 1 of 3 tranches)
 
Moldova Project Information Document
During the last few decades, the Black Sea suffered severe environmental damage, mainly due to coastal erosion, eutrophication, conversion of wetlands, increased nutrient run-off from agriculture, invasion of exotic species, and inadequate resource management all of which led to a decline of its biological diversity, loss of habitat and long-term ecological changes.
Moldova Project Appraisal Document
The development objective of the project i s to increase significantly the use of environmentally fhendly agricultural practices by farmers and agro-industry in Moldova in order to reduce nutrient discharge from agricultural sources to the Danube River and Black Sea.
Romania Project Information Document
The Black Sea, a critical regional resource and one of Europe's newest seas, has been relatively stable until recent times. During the past decades, however, the Black Sea suffered severe environmental damage, mainly due to coastal erosion, eutrophication, insufficiently treated sewage, conversion of wetlands, increased nutrient run-off from agriculture, introduction of exotic species, and inadequate resource management all of which led to a decline of its biological diversity, loss of habitat and long-term ecological changes.
Croatia Intergrated Safeguards Datasheet
The development objective of the project is to significantly increase the use of environmentally friendly agricultural practices by farmers in Croatia’s Pannonian plain in order to reduce nutrient discharge from agricultural sources to surface and ground water bodies. In support of this, the project will assist the Government of Croatia to: (i) promote mitigating measures for nutrient reduction from agricultural sources to surface and ground water bodies (manure management); (ii) implement a national Agrienvironment policy (Code of Good Agricultural Practices); and (iii) a public awareness campaign that would disseminate the benefits of project activities with the aim towards replication at the national and regional levels. The global environmental objective of the project is to reduce the discharge of nutrients into waters draining into the Danube River and Black Sea.