The Transboundary Water Management – Comparing Policy Translations of the Water Framework Directive in the International Basin Districts of the Oder River and the Torne River
29 mar 2019
Acerca de este artículo
Publicado en línea: 29 mar 2019
Páginas: 29 - 39
Recibido: 07 jun 2018
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/quageo-2019-0006
Palabras clave
© 2019 Aleksandra Ibragimow et al., published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.
Fig. 1

Characteristics of the International Oder River Basin District (IORBD) and the International Torne River Basin District (ITRBD) according to Elfvendahl et al_ 2006, ICOP 2009, 2014, Öhman et al_ 2016_
Characteristics | International Odra River Basin District | International Torne River Basin District |
---|---|---|
Length of the river | 841 km | 520 km |
The area | 124 115 km2 | 40 000 km2 |
The area / percentage of the area in the different countries | 107169 km2 / 86.4% Poland | 25 000 km2 / 64% Sweden |
Annual runoff to the Baltic sea | 18.5 billion m3 | about 17800 million m3 (strong annual variation) |
The human population inhabiting the river basin area | About 16.7 million in 2005: | About 80000 in 2012: |
Ecoregions | The Carpathians | Central plain |
The main land use | Agricultural land (62%) | Boreal forests (58%) |
Sources of contamination | Historical and ongoing mining industry, treated waste water from the main towns, agriculture | Treated waste water from the main towns, settlements and industry, such as historical and ongoing mining industry, forestry practices, peat mining, fish farming, agriculture |
Significant natural resources | Natura 2000 area | Naturally breeding salmon population |
Stakeholders on the area of the International Oder River Basin District (IORBD) and the International Torne River Basin District (ITRBD)_
River Basin District | Country | Institution |
---|---|---|
International Oder River Basin District | Germany | German Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety in Bonn |
Ministry for Environment, Health and Consumer Protection Brandenburg | ||
Ministry of Agriculture, the Environment and Consumer Protection Mecklenburg-Vorpommern | ||
Saxon State Ministry for the Environment and Agriculture | ||
State Office of Environment, Health and Consumer Protection Brandenburg | ||
National Office for the Environment, Nature Conservation and Geology | ||
State Bureau for Agriculture and Environment | ||
Saxon State Office for Environment, Agriculture and Geology | ||
Poland | President of the National Water Management Authority | |
Regional Water Management Board: in Gliwice, Wroclaw, Poznan, Szczecin | ||
Czech Republic | Ministry of the Environment | |
Ministry of Agriculture | ||
T. G. Masaryk Water Research Institute | ||
Czech Environment Inspection | ||
Agency for Nature Conservation and Landscape Protection of the Czech Republic | ||
Czech Hydrometeorological Institute | ||
Labe River Basin Authority, state enterprise | ||
Ohře River Basin Authority, state enterprise | ||
Odra River Basin Authority state enterprise | ||
International Torne River Basin District | Finland | Finnish-Swedish Transboundary River Commission |
Ministry of the Environment | ||
Centre for Economic Development, Transport and Environment of Lapland | ||
Water Management District of Tornionjoki | ||
Natural Resources Institute, Finland | ||
Finnish Environment Institute | ||
Municipalities | ||
Sweden | Ministry of Environment and Energy | |
County Administrative Board of Norrbotten | ||
Water authority of Bottenvik | ||
Swedish agency for marine and water management | ||
Geological survey of Sweden | ||
Municipalities |