Re-lansarea portalului finantarilor PONT

Rubrica DOCUMENTE: vom culege si pune la dispozitie documente vitale (de marimi mari) legate de programe de finantare, integrarea europeana, economie, lumea civila, etc. Asteptam de asemenea sugestii din partea citiroirlor PONT.
Baza de date a ONG-urilor (ONGBit): Informatiile din acesta pot fi acum accesate prin intermediul site-ului pontweb.ro, prin colaborarea cu Romanian Gateway Association si Fundatia pentru Dezvoltarea Societatii Civile din Romania.
Serviciul de e-mail PONT.info: de acum toti citirorii vor primi un singur e-mail, in care vor aparea toate informatiile cerute prin web, respectiv oportunitatile numai in categoriile cerute, respectiv stirile si licitatiile publice.
Design nou: prin intermediul firmei Powerdesign echipa noastra a reproiectat site-ul in intregime. Acest lucru permite o mai buna navigare in cadrul site-ului, o mai buna interconectibilitate intre diferitele rubrici.

PONT este gestionat de Impuls XXI, un ONG format din tineri, care si-au propus dezvoltarea unor programe, servicii, sit-uri prin care pot contribui la o mai buna circulatie a informatiilor in Romania.

[b]Despre PONT[/b]

PONT.web este portalul finantarilor (www.pontweb.ro), care pe parcursul a trei ani de istorie a reusit sa devina unul dintre cele mai frecventate sit-uri de acest gen. PONT.web ofera servicii gratuite pentru firme private, organizatii neguvernamentale, institutii publice si persoane fizice din Romania. Informatiile publicate pe site sunt urmatoarele:

* Noile oportunitati de finantare, burse, conferinte,
* Stiri prin urmatoarele rubrici: EU-RO, IT, Lumea ONG, Economic, Protectia mediului si Presa de azi
* Posibilitate de cautare in baza de date a oportunitatilor
* Baza de date a institutiilor, organizatiilor finantatoare

Carnivore si oameni

Initiativa se bucura de sprijinul financiar al Ambasadei Olandei in Romania si se deruleaza pe o perioada de sase luni. Activitatile se concentreaza pe trei specii: lup, urs si vidra – toate cele trei fiind specii periclitate si protejate pe plan global. Proiectul reprezinta primul pas in doua programe pe termen lung, unul pentru protectia carnivorelor mari – lup, urs si ras -, iar celalalt pentru protectia vidrelor.

in primele sase luni, scopul primordial este de a cerceta conflictele dintre carnivore (speciile susamintite) si oameni intamplate in ultimii trei ani pe teritoriul Transilvaniei. Prin conflicte intelegem pagubele produse in gospodarii (in cazul vidrei in elestee, pastravarii, lacuri de pescuit), turme de oi, atacuri asupra oamenilor, etc. Investigarea acestor incidente se face prin mai multe mijloace: analiza parerii si atitudinii persoanelor afectate de aceste cazuri (pagubiti, apropiati) si a organelor responsabile (directii silvice, asociatii de vanatori) prin utilizarea unor chestionare; efectuarea unor studii de caz despre posibilele cauze care au condus la aceste conflicte, despre marimea reala a pagubelor si despre eventualele mijloace de protectie care pot fi implementate pe plan local.

La sfarsitul proiectului rezultatele si datele colectate pe parcurs vor fi publicate. Scopul final este de a informa corect si obiectiv oamenii despre aceste trei specii (urs, lup, vidra) inconjurate de numeroase superstitii si temeri nefondate. in acelasi timp nu se poate neglija faptul ca uneori chiar produc pagube. De multe ori insa, aceste pagube, incidente pot fi evitate prin metode de preventie / protectie relativ simple si implementabile si pe plan local.

Prin aceasta cale am dori sa-i rugam pe toti cei care au cunostinte despre asemenea cazuri sa ne contacteze la sediul asociatiei (str. Crinului nr.22) in timpul programului (intre orele 9.00-14.00) sau la numarul de telefon 264-726.

Electronic smog

The evidence – which is being taken seriously by national and international bodies and authorities – suggests that almost everyone is being exposed to a new form of pollution with countless sources in daily use in every home.

Two official Department of Health reports on the smog are to be presented to ministers next month, and the Health Protection Agency (HPA) has recently held the first meeting of an expert group charged with developing advice to the public on the threat.

The UN’s World Health Organisation (WHO) calls the electronic smog "one of the most common and fastest growing environmental influences" and stresses that it "takes seriously" concerns about the health effects. It adds that "everyone in the world" is exposed to it and that "levels will continue to increase as technology advances".

Wiring creates electrical fields, one component of the smog, even when nothing is turned on. And all electrical equipment – from TVs to toasters – give off another one, magnetic fields. The fields rapidly decrease with distance but appliances such as hair dryers and electric shavers, used close to the head, can give high exposures. Electric blankets and clock radios near to beds produce even higher doses because people are exposed to them for many hours while sleeping.

Radio frequency fields – yet another component – are emitted by microwave ovens, TV and radio transmitters, mobile phone masts and phones themselves, also used close to the head.

The WHO says that the smog could interfere with the tiny natural electrical currents that help to drive the human body. Nerves relay signals by transmitting electric impulses, for example, while the use of electrocardiograms testify to the electrical activity of the heart.

Campaigners have long been worried about exposure to fields from lines carried by electric pylons but, until recently, their concerns were dismissed, even ridiculed, by the authorities.

But last year a study by the official National Radiological Protection Board concluded that children living close to the lines are more likely to get leukaemia, and ministers are considering whether to stop any more homes being built near them. The discovery is causing a large-scale reappraisal of the hazards of the smog.

The International Agency for Research on Cancer – part of the WHO and the leading international organisation on the disease – classes the smog as a "possible human carcinogen". And Professor David Carpenter, dean of the School of Public Health at the State University of New York, told The Independent on Sunday last week that it was likely t? cause up to 30 per cent of all childhood cancers. A report by the California Health Department concludes that it is also likely to cause adult leukaemia, brain cancers and possibly breast cancer and could be responsible for a 10th of all miscarriages.

Professor Denis Henshaw, professor of human radiation effects at Bristol University, says that "a huge and substantive body of evidence indicates a range of adverse health effects". He estimates that the smog causes some 9,000 cases of depression.

Perhaps strangest of all, there is increasing evidence that the smog causes some people to become allergic to electricity, leading to nausea, pain, dizziness, depression and difficulties in sleeping and concentrating when they use electrical appliances or go near mobile phone masts. Some are so badly affected that they have to change their lifestyles.

While not yet certain how it is caused, both the WHO and the HPA accept that the condition exists, and the UN body estimates that up to three in every 100 people are affected by it.

Case History: ‘I felt I was going into meltdown’

Until a year ago, Sarah Dacre reckoned she had a "blessed life". Running her own company, and living in an expensive north London home, the high-earning divorcee described herself as "fab, fit and 40s". Then suddenly the sight in her right eye failed: she first noticed it when she was unable to read an A-Z map. Soon she was getting pains and numbness in her joints. She could not sleep and spent nights "pacing about like a caged lion". Her short-term memory failed and if she took notes to remind her, she would forget she had made them.

The symptoms got worse whenever she was exposed to electricity. She could not use a computer for more than five minutes without becoming nauseous. Even using a telephone landline gave her a buzzing in the ear and made her feel she was "going into meltdown".

Invisible "smog", created by the electricity that powers our civilisation, is giving children cancer, causing miscarriages and suicides and making some people allergic to modern life, new scientific evidence reveals.

The evidence – which is being taken seriously by national and international bodies and authorities – suggests that almost everyone is being exposed to a new form of pollution with countless sources in daily use in every home.

Two official Department of Health reports on the smog are to be presented to ministers next month, and the Health Protection Agency (HPA) has recently held the first meeting of an expert group charged with developing advice to the public on the threat.

The UN’s World Health Organisation (WHO) calls the electronic smog "one of the most common and fastest growing environmental influences" and stresses that it "takes seriously" concerns about the health effects. It adds that "everyone in the world" is exposed to it and that "levels will continue to increase as technology advances".

Wiring creates electrical fields, one component of the smog, even when nothing is turned on. And all electrical equipment – from TVs to toasters – give off another one, magnetic fields. The fields rapidly decrease with distance but appliances such as hair dryers and electric shavers, used close to the head, can give high exposures. Electric blankets and clock radios near to beds produce even higher doses because people are exposed to them for many hours while sleeping.

Radio frequency fields – yet another component – are emitted by microwave ovens, TV and radio transmitters, mobile phone masts and phones themselves, also used close to the head.

The WHO says that the smog could interfere with the tiny natural electrical currents that help to drive the human body. Nerves relay signals by transmitting electric impulses, for example, while the use of electrocardiograms testify to the electrical activity of the heart.

Campaigners have long been worried about exposure to fields from lines carried by electric pylons but, until recently, their concerns were dismissed,?even ridiculed, by the authorities.

But last year a study by the official National Radiological Protection Board concluded that children living close to the lines are more likely to get leukaemia, and ministers are considering whether to stop any more homes being built near them. The discovery is causing a large-scale reappraisal of the hazards of the smog.
The International Agency for Research on Cancer – part of the WHO and the leading international organisation on the disease – classes the smog as a "possible human carcinogen". And Professor David Carpenter, dean of the School of Public Health at the State University of New York, told The Independent on Sunday last week that it was likely to cause up to 30 per cent of all childhood cancers. A report by the California Health Department concludes that it is also likely to cause adult leukaemia, brain cancers and possibly breast cancer and could be responsible for a 10th of all miscarriages.

Professor Denis Henshaw, professor of human radiation effects at Bristol University, says that "a huge and substantive body of evidence indicates a range of adverse health effects". He estimates that the smog causes some 9,000 cases of depression.

Perhaps strangest of all, there is increasing evidence that the smog causes some people to become allergic to electricity, leading to nausea, pain, dizziness, depression and difficulties in sleeping and concentrating when they use electrical appliances or go near mobile phone masts. Some are so badly affected that they have to change their lifestyles.

While not yet certain how it is caused, both the WHO and the HPA accept that the condition exists, and the UN body estimates that up to three in every 100 people are affected by it.

Case History: ‘I felt I was going into meltdown’

Until a year ago, Sarah Dacre reckoned she had a "blessed life". Running her own company, and living in an expensive north London home, the high-earning divorcee described herself as "fab, fit and 40s". Then suddenly the sight in her right eye failed: she first noticed it when she was unable to read an A-Z map. Soon she was getting pains and numbness in her joints. She could not sleep and spent nights "pacing about like a caged lion". Her short-term memory failed and if she took notes to remind her, she would forget she had made them.

The symptoms got worse whenever she was exposed to electricity. She could not use a computer for more than five minutes without becoming nauseous. Even using a telephone landline gave her a buzzing in the ear and made her feel she was "going into meltdown".

4. Etapa a patra – Implementare

4.1. Identificarea potentialelor institutii de implementare
4.2. Evaluarea posibilitatilor de lucru cu sectorul privat
4.3. Evaluarea posibilitatilor de lucru cu sectorul neguvernamental
4.5. Asigurarea implicarii institutiilor care asigura implementarea
4.4. Revizuirea structurilor organizationale existente
4.6. Pregatirea Planului de Implementare a Proiectului
4.7. Pregatirea bugetului pentru implementare si stabilirea procedurilor contabile
4.8. Asigurarea finantarii
4.9. Asigurarea integrarii eficiente a PAM in procesul de planificare statutar

4.1. Identificarea potentialelor institutii de implementare

¬ Municipalitatile: Municipalitatea va avea principala responsabilitate de a implementa majoritatea recomandarilor din plan. Ea este responsabila de managementul si supravegherea unei serii de probleme de mediu: managementul apelor reziduale, colectarea si depozitarea deseurilor solide, asigurarea unor rezerve de apa si mentinerea ariilor verzi. Consiliul municipal va avea un rol esential in stabilirea bugetelor, adoptarea si obtinerea fondurilor.
¬ Companiile utilitare: Acestea au un rol hotarator in implementarea proiectului. Utilitatile sunt direct responsabile de asigurarea unor servicii specifice cum sunt asigurarea apei potabile, managementul apei menajere, colectarea si depozitarea deseurilor solide.
¬ Autoritatile regionale (judetene, raionale): Acestea pot oferi potentiale fonduri pentru rezolvarea problemelor care se extind dincolo de jurisdictia unei municipalitati. De exemplu, autoritatile regionale aferente pot facilita un acord intre cateva municipalitati pentru managementul unui serviciu comun sau a unei probleme de mediu comune.
¬ Autoritatile nationale: Acestea stabilesc politicile de mediu care ofera cadrul legal pentru rezolvarea problemelor de mediu, in unele cazuri ofera asistenta tehnica si financiara.
¬ Sectorul privat: Municipalitatea poate angaja companii particulare sa indeplineasca servicii publice, ca de exemplu colectarea si managementul deseurilor solide.
¬ Organizatiile neguvernamentale: ONG-urile pot avea un rol important in implementarea unei game largi de activitati conexe protectiei mediului (conducerea programelor de educatie privind mediul, implementarea programelor de monitorizare a mediului care implica cetatenii, conducerea unor expertize de mediu instalarea si utilizarea echipamentelor de mediu, etc.)
¬ Industria: PAM va identifica cateva industrii ? atat private cat si de stat ? care vor avea responsabilitati specifice pentru reducerea nivelului poluarii.
Eforturile comunitatii de implementare vor implica o cooperare a acestor institutii. GI in colaborare cu municipalitatea poate avea un rol deosebit in identificarea institutiilor potrivite, agentiilor, organizatiilor si persoanelor care sa participe la faza de implementare.

China releases artificially raised panda into the wild

Seeing it disappearing into the bamboo forest, Liu Bin, the 28-year-old keeper, had tears in his eyes. "Xiang Xiang is just like my child, who has grown up and will leave the family to live a life independently," said Liu, "I hate to part with Xiang Xiang but I hope it can survive on its own and will not forget me."

Born in 2001, Xiang Xiang, whose mother was ar?ificially inseminated, has spent the last three years in a 200,000-square-metre wildness training compound. With three years’ training, Xiang Xiang has learned how to build a den, forage for food and mark its territory, and it has also developed defensive skills by howling and biting just as a wild giant panda would do, said Zhang Hemin, head of the China giant panda protection centre here.

Experts from the centre performed Xiang Xiang’s last physical check-up and gave it a number of inoculations, before releasing. Xiang Xiang has been released at the height of the bamboo shoot season, making it easier for it to find food, informed Zhang. "The release of Xiang Xiang marks a significant change in ways of saving the endangered species by training the pandas to live in the wild before releasing them, which would top the agenda of China’s efforts to that effect," said Zhao Xuemin, deputy head of the State Forestry Administration.

Chinese scientists have given priority to artificial breeding and protection of the hairy creatures before releasing them to nature, Zhao said, adding that the release also marks the start of China’s efforts to carry out wildness training on other endangered species. According to Zhao, China also plans to release Chinese alligators, David deer, wild horses and red ibis, among others, into the wild after wildness training.

4.2. Evaluarea posibilitatilor de lucru cu sectorul privat

Acest parteneriat implica adesea o relatie contractuala intre institutia publica si o companie privata care obliga ambele parti sa ofere servicii specifice. Acest aranjament contractual presupune desemnarea responsabilitatilor si riscurilor pentru una sau mai multe dintre urmatoarele activitati:
¬ Finantarea proiectului utilizand fonduri publice si (sau) private;
¬ Proiectarea si (sau) realizarea utilitatilor;
¬ Operarea si intretinerea utilitatilor sau serviciilor.
Exista urmatoarele tipuri de relatii public-privat: servicii contractuale; utilitati publice; facilitati financiare de dezvoltare; privatizare; facilitati comerciale. Cooperarea cu sectorul privat include in sine atat avantaje cat si dezavantaje.
Sunt cinci considerente de baza pentru a lucra cu sectorul privat:
¬ Potentialul acces la o tehnologie mai avansata;
¬ Proiectare, constructie si (sau) operare cu costuri eficiente;
¬ Finantare flexibila;
¬ Delegarea responsabilitatilor si riscurilor;
¬ Costuri garantate (un parteneriat intre municipalitate si o companie particulara poate aduce anumite beneficii comunitatii prin garantarea costurilor).
Exista doua potentiale dezavantaje majore in lucrul cu sectorul privat: pierderea controlului local asupra finantarii, operarii si mentinerii utilitatilor (partenerul privat poate sa controleze metoda de realizare a serviciilor, conformarea cu standardele de tratare, nivelurile de descarcare etc.) si riscurile financiare (acest lucru este cu atat mai evident atunci cand compania particulara se confrunta cu probleme financiare sau decide sa se retraga din proiect).
Cooperarea cu sectorul privat poate oferi beneficii foarte mari dar municipalitatea trebuie sa compare atent beneficiile si riscurile. Daca se decide ca o companie privata sa implementeze o parte a PAM, trebuie sa se aleaga foarte atent aceasta companie. Va trebui sa se identifice companiile care au experienta in probleme si tehnologii similare.

4.3. Evaluarea posibilitatilor de lucru cu sectorul neguvernamental

¬ Dezvoltarea coalitiei: Autoritatile si ONG-urile pot forma coalitii puternice si eficiente care sustin abilitatea fiecarei institutii de a rezolva problemele si de a strange fonduri.
¬ Asistenta din afara: Unul dintre cele mai puternice si strategice avantaje ale ONG-urilor consta in faptul ca acestea au acces adesea la retele mari de voluntari si cetateni.
¬ Asistenta de implementare: Autoritatile locale nu dispun adesea de experienta sau de resursele necesare implementarii programelor. Pe de alta parte, ONG-urile ar putea fi din ce in ce mai in masura sa indeplineasca acest rol datorita expertizei specializate de care dispun, accesului la fonduri destinate special ONG-urilor si deoarece au o mai mare capacitate de a completa fondurile cu timpul si energia voluntarilor. Exista anumite avantaje si dezavantaje in cooperarea cu sectorul ONG. Avantajele unui parteneriat autoritati -ONG sunt urmatoarele: Deciziile sunt luate mai democratic pentru ca sunt implicati un numar mai mare de cetateni datorita retelei largi de membri si voluntari de care dispun ONG-urile. Deciziile sunt mai bune deoarece incorporeaza o arie mai larga a valorilor si perspectivelor comunitatii.
¬ Resursele de sprijin: ONG-urile pot contribui cu resursele proprii de timp, energie, entuziasm si experienta, care adesea sunt substantiale.
¬ Consolidarea credibilitatii publice: ONG-urile se bucura adesea de mai multa incredere publica, fiind percepute ca mult mai aproape de valorile si interesele cetatenilor.
Exista si cateva potentiale dezavantaje in colaborarea cu sectorul neguvernamental. Acestea include:
¬ Un proces mai dificil si mai indelungat de luarea deciziilor;
¬ Pregatirea organizatiilor. in unele tari ale ECE multe ONG-uri sunt noi si relativ lipsite de experienta.
Cooperarea cu sectorul neguvernamental poate oferi beneficii reale, dar municipalitatea trebuie sa analizeze bine, atat beneficiile cat si riscurile.

GM trees are being grown secretly in UK

The admission came after warnings about such trees from ministers from over 100 countries at a UN conference in Curitiba, Brazil. They urged a "precautionary approach" towards them after hearing that they could "wreak ecological havoc throughout the world’s forests".

Some 16 countries around the world are developing GM trees, and more than a million have already been planted in China. At least 24 species, from papaya to silver birch, from olive to teak, have already been modified; the most commonly treated are poplar, pine and eucalyptus.

The process can speed growth: GM poplars can grow four times faster than traditional softwood trees used for timber and paper. It has also reduced their content of lignin, which strengthens trees but make the wood harder to pulp and whiten for paper.

Other modifications enable them to produce their own pesticides to fight off insects, to resist diseases and to enable them to endure heavy doses of herbicides so that plantations can be drenched to kill weeds without harming the trees.

A GM orange tree, developed in Sp?in, bears fruit after only one year of life, instead of six. Danish scientists have worked on modified Christmas trees, with a view to developing specimens whose needles do not fall off. And in the boldest suggestion yet, an American professor has suggested that trees could be modified to make the moon habitable by growing "huge greenhouses over their heads".

But the ministers in Brazil were concerned that genes from the modified trees could spread great distances on the wind and across national boundaries. Tree pollen can travel up to 2,000 km. And, because trees can live for centuries, modified examples pose a long-term threat to the world’s forests.

Contamination by genes conferring fast growth, for example, could make some forest trees crowd out other species; genes that produce insecticides could decimate rainforest ecosystems, the richest on earth; and genes that reduce lignin could make trees more vulnerable to pests.

The Department of the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs denied late last week that GM trees had ever been grown in the open in Britain, until given details by The Independent on Sunday.

All the plantations have either been destroyed by protesters or cut down at the end of the experiments. Britain’s only GM trees are now elms, resistant to Dutch elm disease and being grown in "a controlled environment" somewhere in Dundee.

The scientists developing them say they will not plant any outside because they fear "terrorism" by protesters. They will not disclose precisely where they are or give details of the numbers, but confirm that there are "more than a hundred" of them.

Elm

Being grown at a secret indoor location by Abertay University scientists and modified to be resistant to Dutch elm disease. The scientists hope the trees will in time replace the 20 million taken from the British landscape by the disease.

Poplar

Grown at Jealotts Hill Research Station at Bracknell, Berks, and modified so that the wood is whiter for making paper. Most, grown by the biotech firm Zeneca, were destroyed by protesters, but a few were successfully harvested.

Eucalyptus

Grown by Shell Research Ltd at Sittingbourne and West Malling, both in Kent. The tree was modified to resist the use of herbicides, as in most current GM crops. The experiment is now over.

Apple

Greensleeves and Jonagold apple trees, modified to resist insect pests and fungal diseases, were grown by the University of Derby, but destroyed by protesters.

Governments worldwide have issued an unprecedented warning about the greatest biotech hazards so far: GM trees. Trees modified to grow faster, yield better wood, produce whiter paper, resist pests and disease and tolerate herbicides are increasingly being cultivated.

Elms resistant to Dutch elm disease are being grown in Dundee, Scotland. But the scientists involved will not say precisely where they are, or even exactly how many of them are being grown.

The Government was forced to admit for the first time last week that GM poplar, apple and eucalyptus trees have been cultivated outdoors in Berkshire, Derbyshire and Kent.

The admission came after warnings about such trees from ministers from over 100 countries at a UN conference in Curitiba, Brazil. They urged a "precautionary approach" towards them after hearing that they could "wreak ecological havoc throughout the world’s forests".

Some 16 countries around the world are developing GM trees, and more than a million have already been planted in China. At least 24 species, from papaya to silver birch, from olive to teak, have already been modified; the most commonly treated are poplar, pine and eucalyptus.

The process can speed growth: GM poplars can grow four times faster than traditional softwood trees used for timber and paper. It has also reduced their content of lignin, which strengthens trees but make the wood harder to pulp and whiten for paper.

Other modifications enable them to produce their own pesticid?s to fight off insects, to resist diseases and to enable them to endure heavy doses of herbicides so that plantations can be drenched to kill weeds without harming the trees.

A GM orange tree, developed in Spain, bears fruit after only one year of life, instead of six. Danish scientists have worked on modified Christmas trees, with a view to developing specimens whose needles do not fall off. And in the boldest suggestion yet, an American professor has suggested that trees could be modified to make the moon habitable by growing "huge greenhouses over their heads".

But the ministers in Brazil were concerned that genes from the modified trees could spread great distances on the wind and across national boundaries. Tree pollen can travel up to 2,000 km. And, because trees can live for centuries, modified examples pose a long-term threat to the world’s forests.
Contamination by genes conferring fast growth, for example, could make some forest trees crowd out other species; genes that produce insecticides could decimate rainforest ecosystems, the richest on earth; and genes that reduce lignin could make trees more vulnerable to pests.

The Department of the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs denied late last week that GM trees had ever been grown in the open in Britain, until given details by The Independent on Sunday.

All the plantations have either been destroyed by protesters or cut down at the end of the experiments. Britain’s only GM trees are now elms, resistant to Dutch elm disease and being grown in "a controlled environment" somewhere in Dundee.

The scientists developing them say they will not plant any outside because they fear "terrorism" by protesters. They will not disclose precisely where they are or give details of the numbers, but confirm that there are "more than a hundred" of them.

Elm

Being grown at a secret indoor location by Abertay University scientists and modified to be resistant to Dutch elm disease. The scientists hope the trees will in time replace the 20 million taken from the British landscape by the disease.

Poplar

Grown at Jealotts Hill Research Station at Bracknell, Berks, and modified so that the wood is whiter for making paper. Most, grown by the biotech firm Zeneca, were destroyed by protesters, but a few were successfully harvested.

Eucalyptus

Grown by Shell Research Ltd at Sittingbourne and West Malling, both in Kent. The tree was modified to resist the use of herbicides, as in most current GM crops. The experiment is now over.

Apple

Greensleeves and Jonagold apple trees, modified to resist insect pests and fungal diseases, were grown by the University of Derby, but destroyed by protesters.

4.4. Revizuirea structurilor organizationale existente

¬ Jurisdictia departamentului municipal. Adesea, noile structuri vor trebui folosite pentru a se asigura ca departamentele municipale isi coordoneaza activitatile. Implementarea actiunilor care abordeaza anumite probleme necesita o coordonare atenta intre diferite departamente municipale, cum ar fi: spatii verzi, transport, finante, sanatate publica si protectia mediului. Municipalitatea poate avea in vedere constituirea unui Comitet Interdepartamental, alcatuit din reprezentanti ai fiecarui departament, potrivit sa coordoneze actiunile din timpul reprezentarii.
¬ Jurisdictia completa a municipalitatii. Una dintre problemele majore care preocupa azi multe comunitati este necesitatea unor servicii de mediu pentru noi amenajari, care au loc in afara jurisdictiei legale a municipalitatii. Pentru a aborda aceste probleme municipalitatile si-au extins limitele, au negociat serviciile teritoriale sau au transferat puterea si resursele catre alte institutii publice.
¬ Jurisdictia municipala multipla. Factorii economici pot avea adesea sa sublinieze nevoia municipalitatilor de a coopera la utilizarea si managementul unei utilitati de mediu. Comunitatile de marime mica pot coopera detinand si operand in comun utilitatile pentru apa potabila, apa reziduala si managementul deseurilor solide sau folosind un personal comun in activitati comune etc. Cooperarea poate fi realizata formal prin crearea unor comisii comune sau consilii cu reprezentati ai fiecarei municipalitati participante.
¬ Jurisdictia ecologica. Provocarile pe care le ridica managementul resurselor de mediu in comunitatile de astazi sunt regionale de fapt, ceea ce sugereaza o abordare, tinand cont de limitele ecologice a unor probleme ar fi cea mai potrivita.
Date fiind aceste aspecte jurisdictionale, comunitatea va trebui sa identifice schimbarile organizatorice necesare asigurarii unei implementari eficiente.