Resultat från workshops
Workshop 1-5 Results
Priority Areas of Future Cooperation Requiring Ecosystem Restoration Efforts
Transnational Objectives and Joint Recommendations to ban Bottom Trawling in the Baltic Sea
Examples of fisheries and coastal management that serve local solutions to shared environmental problems in the Baltic Sea
Project Outcome: Measures for the restoration of marine and coastal ecosystems in the project regions
Workshop Bycatch Nov 2025 Presentation 14 Additional Measures – Fabian Ritter
Workshop Bycatch Nov 2025 Presentation 13 Beyond the Mesh – Thomas Noack
Workshop Bycatch Nov 2025 Presentation 11 HELCOM’s Toolbox of Bycatch Mitigation Measures – Katarzyna Kamińska
Workshop Bycatch Nov 2025 Presentation 10 International Experience of Cetacean Bycatch Mitigation – Russel Leaper
Workshop Bycatch Nov 2025 Presentation 08 Setting Acceptable Limits for Seabird Bycatch in the Polish Baltic Sea – Dominik Marchowski
Workshop Bycatch Nov 2025 Presention 07 Bycatch of Baltic Proper Harbour Porpoises – Julia Carlström
Workshop Bycatch Nov 2025 Presentation 05 HELCOM’s Roadmap on Fisheries Data – Katarzyna Kamińska
Workshop Bycatch Nov 2025 Presentation 04 Overview bycatch in the Baltic Sea – Sven Koschinski
Workshop Bycatch Nov 2025 Presentation 02 Mindful Conservation – Fabian Ritter
Workshop Bycatch Nov 2025 Presentation 01 Introduction BCD – ROD
Workshop Ecosystem-Based Management and Fisheries: Pike factories – restoring predatory fish populations and their habitats, Lars Ljunggren_
Workshop Ecosystem-Based Management and Fisheries: Ecosystem-based marine management put into practice in the Stockholm archipelago, Gustav Almqvist
Workshop Ecosystem-Based Management and Fisheries: Fish Lab – From Science to Action, Amanda Öberg, BalticWaters
Workshop Ecosystem-Based Management and Fisheries: Regional ecosystem-based fisheries management – key concepts and recent developments, Eva Papaioannou
Workshop Ecosystem-Based Management and Fisheries: ICES ecosystem analysis for EBFM of the Bothnian Sea, Dr. Carolyn Faithfull, ICES
Workshop Ecosystem-Based Management and Fisheries: Implementing international Ecosystem Based Fisheries Management Jean-Cristophe, Pew
Presentation: Introduction to Ecosystem Based Fisheries Management, Dr. Sara Söderström
Workshop Fisheries Management in MPAs: Bottom trawling and spatial planning in the Danish Baltic Sea
by Stefan Neuenfeldt, PhD., Senior Researcher at the National institute for Aquatic Resources from the Technical University of Denmark (DTU Aqua)
He heads the research area for fish population dynamics and stock assessments. His work focuses on species distributions and interactions and scaling small scale processes to population-level vital rates. He has coordinated several BONUS, and H2020 projects on integrating biological processes in eco-system based fisheries management and currently participates in the EU project Marine Plan ‘Improved transdisciplinary science for effective ecosystem-based maritime spatial planning and conservation in European Seas’. STN is member of the ICES Baltic Fisheries Assessment Working Group and co-chairs the ICES Working Group on Ecosystem-based fisheries management in the Western Baltic.
In his presentation, he evidenced data of bottom trawling in Denmark, as well as the true costs to nature and the ecosystem.
Workshop Fisheries Management in MPAs: Bottom trawling in HELCOM MPAs
by: Dr. Kemal Pinarbasi, HELCOM Secretariat
Kemal Pinarbasi is an expert in marine spatial planning and biodiversity conservation. Since joining HELCOM, he has contributed to pivotal projects, including the Third Holistic Assessment of the Baltic Sea and the MSP4BIO project, where he coordinates the Baltic Sea test site and leads efforts to enhance policy coherence. His work aligns closely with the EU Biodiversity Strategy 2030 and the Convention on Biological Diversity Post-2020 Framework.
During his presentation, he outlined the current state of the Baltic Sea and the ecological and climate change pressures it is under. He also provided a rough estimate of the costs associated with bottom trawling in HELCOM Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) versus the valuation of ecosystem services.
Workshop Blue Restoration: Salt Marshes in the Polish Coast area
Krzysztof Kaluzny, Manager of the OTOP West Pomaranian Reserves gave a speech about Salt Marshes in the Polish Coast area at the Baltic Coast Dialog Workshop on September 19, 2024.
Functioning ecosystems alongside the Baltic Coast are crucial for blue restoration. Threats to Salt Marshes are:
- overgrowth of invasive species, such as common reed (Phragmites australis)
- land reclamation
- drainage
- agricultural runoff
- rarer and smaller periodic flooding by seawater (climate changes)
Workshop Blue Restoration: HELCOM’s role in restoring marine and coastal ecosystems in the Baltic Sea area
Rüdiger Strempel, executive secretary of HELCOM, gave an insight on HELCOM’s role in restoring marine and coastal ecosystems in the Baltic Sea area at the Baltic Coast Dialog Workshop on September 19, 2024.
In upcoming workshops on blue restoration from the Baltic Coast Dialog you will be able to participate and find solutions on how to engage local stakeholders of the Baltic Sea area and also get into dialogue with them. The next one on the topic of Fisheries Regulations in marine protected areas will already be taking place in Berlin at the end of November.
In the following you will find Rüdiger Strempel’s presentation.
You want to get more information about blue restoration measures? Presentations from the Baltic Coast Dialog workshops can be found here.
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Workshop Blue Restoration: Recovery story of Zostera meadows in Puck Bay – one of the most valuable habitats of the Southern Baltic Sea
Halina Kendzierska, Ph.D. from the Department of Marine Ecology University of Gdańsk gave some insights on Zostera meadows and its recovery story at the Baltic Coast Dialog Workshop on September 19, 2024. Zostera plays a crucial role for blue restoration.
A few of the very much needed benefits of Zostera are nutrients and carbon storage, matter circulation, breed and nursery area, food availability, bioturbation and bioirigation and sediment stabilisation. This means, seagrass plays a crucial role in cleaning water by trapping sediments and absorbing nutrients, which causes cleaner water. It is also providing food and habitat for a variety of beneficial species in the Baltic Sea ecosystem. Seagrass is a requirement for thriving fish polulations.
Biodiversity is always much higher in Zostera meadows than on the sand next to it.
H. Kendzierska, PhD
As one of the participants of the Blue Restoration Workshop put it: “We can not do the large scale restoration. We need to give it into peoples hand who can.” This is your time to get involved.
In the following you will find Halina Kendzierska’s presentation.
More interesting key note speeches in the series of the Baltic Coast Dialog can be found here.
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