- Regional water observation mechanism
- Regional Cooperation Assessment
- Water Quality Monitoring (JP)
- Water scarcity and drought (JP)
- Groundwater (JP)
- Waste water reuse (JP)
- Shared Water Resources Management (JP)
- Linking rural development and water management (JP)
- Water institutions
- Climate Change
- Floods
- Desalination
- Right to Water
- Irrigation
- Satellite data
- Water reports & data
- Hydrology
- Sanitation
- Gender and IWRM
- Arab-WAYS
- Virtual Water & Water Footprint
- WANA Water Panel
- Water & Energy
- Water Demand
- Water Governance
- Water Pricing
- Water accounts
- Geosciences
- Rural Management
UNEP-MAP
-
SWIM-SM Workshop on Sustainable Use of Non-Conventional Water Resources, 16 September 2011, in Athens - Greece
-
Regional Workshop on Surveys and Inspections related to the International Convention on the Control of Harmful Anti-Fouling Systems on Ships
-
UNEP Vacancy: Chief, Technical Advisor (Project Post) P6, D1, Project
-
MedPartnership launches new website
-
Legal Instruments reducing risks from offshore exploration activities and protecting the Mediterranean coasts’ degradation enter into force today
-
IWC6: 6th Biennial International Waters Conference - "Raising the Bar: 20 Years of GEF Transboundary Water Results"
-
Horizon 2020 Capacity Building/Mediterranean Environment Programme: “National capacity building activity on Green Public Procurement Procedures”
-
B4E, the Business for Environment Global Summit
-
The 13th Meeting of the Mediterranean Commission on Sustainable Development (MCSD): “Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation – Experience and Strategies in the Mediterranean”.
-
UNEP-MAP: 2nd Meeting of the Compliance Committee
The United Nations
Environment Programme/Mediterranean Action
Plan (UNEP/MAP).
Adopted in 1976 in Barcelona, MAP was the first UNEP's regional Sea Convention. This Barcelona convention and its 6 Protocols constitute legally binding instruments.
The MAP was originally a framework for common actions (preparation of regional and national policies, capacity building and technical assistance) needed by the Mediterranean Countries to combat the pollution of the Mediterranean Sea itself (see MAP Phase I).
In 1995, the Barcelona conventions was extensively ammended to give a sustainable development focus and to deal with costal area as well (see MAP Phase II). Indeed activities carried out between 1976 and 1995 confirmed that socio-economic trends, combined with inadequate development planning and management are the root of most environmental problems. Estimates showed that up to 80 per cent of marine pollution was originated by land-based activities.
you are not logged in


