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Committee of the Regions COTER Seminar Regional Policy in regions with specific geographical characteristics 14 December 2009 Kiruna, Sweden Session 2: The situation of regions with geographical characteristics: Mountain regions
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Committee of the Regions COTER Seminar Regional Policy in regions with specific geographical characteristics 14 December 2009 Kiruna, Sweden Session 2: The situation of regions with geographical characteristics: Mountain regions Thomas Dax Bundesanstalt für Bergbauernfragen, Vienna, Austria (Federal Institute for Less-Favoured and Mountainous Areas)thomas.dax@babf.bmlfuw.gv.at
Outline • Mountain areas in Europe (definition; scope, diversity) • Situation andtrends in mountainregions • Challengesofsustainabledevelopmentandcohesionaspects • Analysis ofimpactofpolicies on mountainareas • Regional initiatives andsuccessfactorsformountaindevelopment
A common framework for mountain analysis • Definition(national definitions and delimitations, LFA scheme for CAP; regions for Interreg programmes); common indicators of Nordregio study (LAU2)data availability problems add regional perspective for EU comparison (NUTS3): EC working paper (02/2009) • Mountain policies(national, EU-level; diverse application patterns)specificity addressed in strategic documents • Challenges faceddemographic changes /ageing populationshifts in economic activityaccessibility, infrastructure and service supplyemerging potential (quality production)tension between ecological sensitivity and use (e.g. tourism)
Mountain areas (selected countries) Source: Nordregio 2004, p.29f.
Municipalities with depopulation (from mountain areas and lowlands), 1991-2001 Lowlands Mountain Areas Note: bars in red, municipalities with more than -10% depopulation
Challenges of sustainable development and cohesion aspects Major processes: • Continuing process of EU economic and social integration, globalisation and economic restructuring • Development of information and transport technologies • Changing political geography of Europe (enlargement, regionalism) • Changing socio-demographic structure of EU population, and • Environmental degradation threats (energy supply, climate change implications)
Mountain policy framework Recent stronger territorial orientation (sector policies, CAP, SF, including trans-border cooperation and Territorial Cohesion) • Main sector policies (agriculture, forestry, tourism, infrastructure, public services; environment, risk management, nature conservation; spatial planning) • Trans-national cooperation (including international agreements: Alpine and Carpathian Conventions; Interreg programmes) • Integrated approaches (pilot action, including Leader in mountains, national priorities and action) • Institutional development (research and development: Mountain Forum, Rio/Johannesburg process, IYM 2002, Mountain Partnership, SARD-M „remunerating positive externalities“)
Pillar 1 support per Annual Work Unit (AWU) Arkleton Centre 2005
Pillar 2 support per Annual Work Unit (AWU) Arkleton Centre 2005
Integrated perspectives on activities Reflectingcohesionneedsandconceptofsustainability • Improving (spatial) accessibility • Need forincentivepolicies • Take accountoflandscapevalues • Amenitiescharacteristicswith a territorial dimension (needofcollectiveaction) • Mountain areas, lowintensitylandmanagement, natureconservation (appropriatelandmanagement) • Coordinationactivities, multi-levelgovernance (horizontal andvertical)
Local action in mountain development Need for innovative approaches beyond LFA scheme • Bottom-up approaches (since 1970s),pilot action towards mainstreaming (Leader etc., community capacity building, cooperation – governance) • Two aspects of local capacity building:► „diversification“ of farm households► general spatial relevance of rural action (types of rural regions) • Best-practice and success dimensions
organic farming high quality production and regional products short supply chains „Deepening“ agri-tourism new on-farmactivities diversification natureandlandcapemanagement „Broadening“ rural area Agro-food supply chain conventional agriculture mobilisation of ressources „Regrounding“ new forms of cost reduction off-farm income Structure of rural development at farm enterprise level Source: van der Ploeg et al. 2002
Key issues for mountain policy strategies • Recognition of mountain areas as specific development areas • Remuneration of services rendered to surrounding lowland areas • Diversification and exploitation of the local potential for innovation • Addressing cultural changes without loss of identity • Sustainable management of mountain ecosystems (including biodiversity) • Trans-regional cooperation and strategic regional development approaches • Institutional development (multi-level governance) to focus on sustainable resource use
References • Nordregio, Mountain areas in Europe, EC-study (2004) • BABF, F&F32, Berggebiete in Europa (2004) • BABF, F&F35, Benachteiligte Gebiete in den NMS (2006) • ESPON studies 2000-2006 (project 2.1.3 and others) • Bausch et al., Prospective Study, Alpine Space (2006) • EC, proceedings, mountain policies conference (2003) • Dax, The role of mountain regions in territorial cohesion, Euromontana (2008) • Eu-project IMALP, Guidelines for promoting sustainable agriculture in Alpine mountain regions (2006) Thankyou!