1 / 27

INTEGRAL RURAL DEVELOPMENT AS THE GROUND OF ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY

Explore the concept of integral rural development and its role in promoting environmental sustainability. Learn about the Slovenian Rural Development Network and their efforts in fostering cooperation and partnership for rural development.

pcushing
Download Presentation

INTEGRAL RURAL DEVELOPMENT AS THE GROUND OF ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. INTEGRAL RURAL DEVELOPMENT AS THE GROUND OF ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY BONN, 3.-7. 09. 2005GORAN SOSTER SRDN Slovenian rural development network Janja Kokolj Prošek MAFF Luka Juvancic BTF

  2. WHEN NEW WINDS START TO BLOW, • SOME PEOPLE BUILD WINDBREAKERS, • BUT SMART PEOPLE BUILD WINDMILLS.

  3. GEOGRAPHIC POSITION OF SLOVENIA • Territory: 20.256 km2 • Borders: Italy (202 km), Austria (324 km), Hungary (88 km), Croatia (546 km), 46 km of coastal line • Geographical macro regions:-alpine (12% of territory), -sub alpine (31%), -subpannonian (23%),-dinaric-karst (26%),-sub Mediterranean (8%) • Inhabitants (1998): 1.982.603Population density: 97.9 inhab./km2 • Rural population: 57.3 %

  4. SLOVENIAN COUNTRYSIDE • In Slovenia countryside occupies 93% of total area, there lives 60 % of all population • Large number of settlements, mainly very small (almost 6.000) • 80% of all settlements are in hilly, mountainous and karst areas, there are just 40 % of people living there • 86.467 European comparable agriculture holdings • Average largeness of farm with forests is 9,9 ha • Average largeness of 5,9 ha agricultural land on farm • 80% of Slovenian areas are LFA

  5. SLOVENIAN AGRICULTURAL POLICY • Basis for Integrated Rural Development are: • Strategy for development of agriculture (1993): beside production important role in preserving of culture landscape, protection of natural resources, protection of the environment and incorporation of Integrated rural development. • Programme of agricultural policy reform (1998-2002): four pillars of agricultural policy

  6. POST ACCESSION IMPLEMENTATION Year 2004 Preaccession programme SAPARD Implementation of 7 measures within Single programming document 2004 -2006 (SPD) National scheme Rural development programme 2004 – 2006

  7. Rural development policy Objective: development of rural areas (preservation of environment, settlement, vitality) RURAL DEVELOPMENT IN SLOVENIA Long term Integrated Self renewable

  8. RURAL DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMMES • CRPOV programmes (Integrated Rural Development and Village renewal Programmes) • Rural development programmes - Local development initiatives support

  9. 2000: Establishing of SRDNSlovenian Rural development network • The CRPOV Programme of Integrated Rural development and other rural development projects over the last 12 years have shown that there is a need of formal and effective cooperation and networking between those who offer support and funding and those who actually carry out development projects. • The neeed for PARTNERSHIP in horizontal and vertical direction

  10. SLOVENIAN RURAL DEVELOPMENT NETWORK • Legal based on the law for establishing nonprofitable organisations • STRUCTURE • Aktive Members (200) • Management board (8) - elected by members • President • Underpresident • Members • Suppervisory board (3) • Financial control (3) • Disciplinary comision (3)

  11. SLOVENIAN RURAL DEVELOPMENT NETWORK – THE MISSION STATEMENT • To bring together all players on a field of rural development • To inform and educate the members and others • Cooperation and mutual help among individuals and organisations • To ensure effective representation of rural interests in the flow of information between Government and NGOs and from local to regional and national to international level • To be active partner in the process of forming legislation and Rural Development Policy

  12. MAIN IDEA ON CRPOV PROJECTS IN 90’TIES • THE MAIN IDEA IS • 3 X I • i – Identity • i – Innovation • i - Initiative

  13. PRINCIPLES OF THE CRPOV PROGRAMME Three steps of the CRPOV programmes: Preparation starting the programme Introduction development strategy for villages and future development Implementation action plan and its of the projects implementation in rural areas

  14. CRPOV DEVELOPMENT PROJECTS • Five different working areas (themes) • Animation and education • Project management CULTURAL SPACE LIVING SPACE SETTLEMENT SPACE SOCIAL SPACE WORKING SPACE

  15. RURAL DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMMES • RDP • Introduced in year 1996 with the intention to continue and upgrade CRPOV projects • Basic characteristics: • It combines development goals of at least three municipalities •  It represents basics for the preparation of implementation of LEADER programmes •  Same methodology and approach as with CRPOV projects

  16. CONTEMPORARY GUIDELINES FOR RURAL DEVELOPMENT • Local partnerships – carriers of local development • Development objectives set • Appropriately organised • Included in every development faze • “Bottom up” approach • Profession – “right hand” in the development process • Helping the population with definiton of aimes • Presence at all times (monitoring activities) • Municipality – important factor for development of local areas • Contemporary trends of decentralisation • Village development – important task for local communities and municipalities • European countries: Integral development principle • Responsibility, independence and autonomy from external sources

  17. CURRENT SITUATION ON THE CRPOV PROJECTS FIELD • Two types of projects: •  CRPOV projects for the area of village, settlement, and part of the municipality. Since 1991 till 2003cca. 300 projects in different phases of implementation • Rural development programmes- projects for the area covering at least three municipalities. Since 1996 till 200319 projects in 118 municipalities, 20 projects of Wine roads of Slovenia in 76 municipalities

  18. UNDERSTANDING THE DYNAMIC OF SOCIO-ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL CHANGES • It is necessary to know that gradually building of the rural development policy adopted to the specifics of particular country is proper GROUNDING for the common rural RDP in EU 25 (strong enough to hold the new building, which shape was inspired from the western experience)

  19. EFFECTIVE RDP:BUILDING ON THE PROPER GROUNDING • Continually informing and awarenesss rising of the farmers to avoid the conflicts and misunderstanding of the CAP • Selection of the proper measures to the national circumstances (tradition, needs, oportunities) • Monitoring and evaluation in the function of the permanent improvements of the RDP

  20. SLOVENIA 2004-06: FINANCIAL RESOURCES AND PROGRAMME OF THE MEASURES FOR RURAL DEVELOPMENT

  21. IMPLEMENTATION OF RURAL DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMME: EU15 (2000-03); Slovenia (2004-06)

  22. SIGNIFICANT CORRELATION OF THE CAP MEASURES WITH THE ENVIRONMENT IMPROVEMENT • In Slovenia the number of the Organic farms grew constantly in co-relation with the stimulating measures (payments) – 2004: 1.600 farms in control (apr.3,5%) • In 2004 the total payments per farm reached permitted upper level of maximal payments • Huge shift from the conventional to integrative farming with tremendous environmental impact • TO SMALL difference between organic and integrative farms (WRONG MESSAGE)

  23. NATURA 2000 IN SLOVENIA:CHALLENGE FOR THE NEW FINANCIAL PERSPECTIVE 2007 - 2013 Government 29.4.2004 (Ur. l. RS, št. 49/2004) SPA - 26 areas (22,8 %) SCI - 260 areas (31,6 %) TOTAL - 35, 5 % (9 % above 900 m)

  24. NATURA 2000:BUILDING ON THE WEEK GROUNDING • It was URGENT NEEDED programme for the protection of the European nature heritage • Week grounding in social sense (UP – BOTTOM APPROACH) • Not ready for implementation because of the lack of communication (CONFLICTS WITH THE LAND OWNERS)

  25. SAVING NATURA 2000 • Saving the programme Natura 2000 is possible only with the BOTTOM - UP establishing of the MANAGEMENT PLANS for non covered areas – including the parks • Ownership • Financial resources ?

  26. CO-RELATION OF ENVIRONMENTAL AND SOCIAL ASPECTS OF RDP • For THOUSANDS YEARS small farmers were keeping tradition of sustainable agriculture • Only one generation was needed to loose the proportions of sustainability (size according only to the technical capacities, environmental demmage, loosing of fertile-living soil, …) • Huge domination of the small, medium and semi-subsistence farms in the world WHICH DO NOT HAVE REPRESENTATIVES IN ANY BODY

  27. “To expect” is justified. • “To take measures” is necessary. • “TO EXECUTE” - • is the only thing that counts.

More Related