Small Water Retention Program in Forests (lowlands) of Poland

Title Small Water Retention Program in Forests (lowlands) of Poland
Description
Preview image No image
Preview image caption
Creators fullname Laszlo Cseh
Contributors fullname
NWRM
Site information
Climate zone
cool temperate dry
Type
Case Study Info
Light or indepth?
Light
Design and implementations
Application scale
Country
Installation date
2014-12
Performance timescale
> 20 years
Area (ha)
1e+06
Contractural arrangements
1
Design contractual arrangement
Arrangement type Responsibility Role Comments Name
Agreement between between the Ministry of Agriculture and Food Economy and the Minister of Environmental Protection, Natural Resources and Forestry of Poland on cooperation in the field of the development of small water retention
Design consultation activity
No data
Design land use change
No data
Design authority
Authority type Role Responsibility Name Comments
Other
Implementation
The State Forests – National Forests Holding General Directorate of the State Forests
Coordinating the implementation of the programme
Other
Implementation
17 Regional Directorates of the State Forests
Other
Determination of design details of the measure
178 Forest Districts
National water authority
Initiation of the measure
Ministry of the Environment
In charge fo the programme
Lessons, risks, implications
Key lessons
The programme will be accomplished by 31 December 2014.
Success factor(s)
No data
Financing
No data
Barrier
Barrier type Barrier role Comments
Legal obligations / restrictions
main barrier
Every object requires an development consent, however most of them needs environmental impact assessment.
Driver
Driver type Driver role Comments
Balancing different objectives
main driver
necesity to improve water amangement in forest lowlands
Availability of subsidies
main driver
Cohesion Fund in frames of Operational Programme, 2007-2014
Financing share
No data
Policy, general governance
Policy description
The seasonal climate variation including higher spring precipitation and summer dry periods combined with a long lasting drainage have led to excessive drought occurring in forest ecosystems. In response to water management needs, the State Forests since the mid-90’s have been undertaking small scale water retention works. Small scale retention actions have been financed from own and external funds (i.e. Ecofund, National Fund for Environmental Protection and Water Management).
Part of wider plan
1
Policy target
Target purpose
Increase Water Storage
Groundwater Recharge
Runoff control
Policy pressure
No data
Policy area
No data
Policy impact
No data
Policy wider plan
No data
Policy requirement directive
No data
Socio economic
Costs total
5e+07
Costs total information
approx. 50 million EUR (ca. 34,2 million EUR co-financed by Cohesion Fund)
Ecosystem improved biodiversity
1
Information on Ecosystem improved biodiversity
providing habitat for typical wetland flora species: Iris sibirica; Cypripedium calceolus; Eriphorum vaginatum; Oxycoccus palustris; Nymphaea alba; Nymphaea candida
providing habitat for typical wetland fauna species: Hyla arborea; Emys orbicularis; Salamandra salamandra; Castor fiber; Lyrurus tetrix
Biophysical impacts
Increased landscape storage capacity
27
Increased landscape storage capacity unit
%
Information on Increased landscape storage capacity
increased water storage from the present 8 380 253 m3 (2007) to approx. 31 million m3 (in 2014)
Monitoring maintenance
Performance
sources
Nwrm type Light
Nwrm geolocation 21.0065,52.2316
General
National Id
Poland_02
Summary
Forest ecosystems in Poland have long suffered from drought. From the mid-90s, the Polish forest management authority undertook a variety of small-scale water retention works, financed from a combination of its own and external funds (i.e. the Polish Ecofund, and the Polish National Fund for Environmental Protection and Water Management). In 2006, the authority consolidated all its initiatives into a single project ‘Increasing retention and preventing floods and droughts in forest ecosystems in lowland.’ It is the first to be conducted on such a large scale, combining water retention in forest ecosystems with the protection against surface water run-off. The project is funded by EU Cohesion Fund, 2007-2013.
Transboundary
0
Longitude
21.0065
Latitude
52.2316
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