Agreement on the Conservation of Small Cetaceans of the Baltic and North Seas (New York, 1992)
ASCOBANS was concluded in 1991 as the Agreement on the Conservation of Small Cetaceans of the Baltic and North Seas (ASCOBANS) under the auspices of the Convention on Migratory Species (CMS or Bonn Convention) and entered into force in 1994. In February 2008, an extension of the agreement area came into force which changed the name to "Agreement on the Conservation of Small Cetaceans of the Baltic, North East Atlantic, Irish and North Seas".
The Agreement Area is defined as follows:
"... the marine environment of the Baltic and North Seas and contiguous area of the North East Atlantic, as delimited by the shores of the Gulfs of Bothnia and Finland; to the south-east by latitude 36°N, where this line of latitude meets the line joining the lighthouses of Cape St. Vincent (Portugal) and Casablanca (Morocco); to the south-west by latitude 36°N and longitude 15°W; to the north-west by longitude 15° and a line drawn through the following points: latitude 59°N/longitude 15°W, latitude 60°N/longitude 05°W, latitude, 61°N/longitude 4W;latitude 62N/ longitude 3W; to the north by latitude 62°N; and including the Kattegat and the Sound and Belt passages."
The Secretary General of the United Nations has assumed the functions of Depository of the Agreement. ASCOBANS is open for accession by all Range States (i.e. any state that exercises jurisdiction over any part of the range of a species covered by the Agreement or whose flag vessels engage in operations adversely affecting small cetaceans in the Agreement area) and by regional economic integration organisations.
This presentation was taken from the ASCOBANS Website
You can find more information, and the agreement in other languages, on: www.ascobans.org
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To whom it may concern,
My name is Geraldine Mertens and I am student in a Master in Marine and Lacustrine Science and Management in Brussels.
I am interested in "How does the UK protect harbour porpoises, and what will happen after Brexit? ».
I am trying to go deeper into that subject as I would like to give a presentation about this for one of my course of Law.
I was wondering if you got further information about how they will protect the porpoises now that UK got out of Europe or where I could find more information about that?
Kind Regards,
Géraldine