2014-07-19
The Ministry of Agriculture, Food and the Environment proposes to the European Commission the inclusion of four marine areas as Sites of Community Importance (SCI) in the Natura 2000 Network
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The Ministry of Agriculture, Food and the Environment proposes to the European Commission the inclusion of four marine areas as Sites of Community Importance (SCI) in the Natura 2000 Network

The Ministry of Agriculture, Food and the Environment publishes today in the Official State Gazette (BOE) its ministerial order proposing to the European Commission the inclusion of four large marine areas in the list of Sites of Community Importance (SCI) of the Natura 2000 Network.
 
The marine areas that are now proposed are the Western Submarine Canyon System of the Gulf of Lion and the Menorca Channel, in the Levantine-Balearic marine demarcation; the mud volcanoes of the Gulf of Cadiz, in the South Atlantic demarcation; and the Bank of Galicia, in the North Atlantic demarcation. The proposals cover more than 1.7 million hectares.
 
The ministerial order submits to the European Commission the Spanish proposal for the inclusion of these areas in the List of Sites of Community Importance of the Natura 2000 Network and provides information on their geographical limits, surface area and the values for which they are proposed. Likewise, a preventive protection regime is included until these spaces are designated by the Commission as SCIs.
 
EXTENSIVE AND IN-DEPTH STUDY OF THE AREAS
This proposal to include areas in the Natura 2000 Network comes after a long and in-depth study of these areas within the framework of the LIFE+ INDEMARES project “Inventory and designation of the Natura 2000 Network in marine areas of the Spanish State”, coordinated by the Biodiversity Foundation.
 
This project began in 2009 with the development of oceanographic campaigns entrusted to several research teams and has as partners, in addition to the Ministry of Agriculture, Food and the Environment, the Spanish Institute of Oceanography, the Spanish Institute of Oceanography, the Higher Council for Scientific Research, ALNITAK, the Coordinator for the Study of Marine Mammals, OCEANA, the Society for the Study of Cetaceans in the Canary Islands, SEO/BirdLife and WWF Spain.
A GREAT COMMITMENT TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE NATURA 2000 NETWORK.
The four areas that are now proposed as SCIs within the Natura 2000 Network
they are in addition to the 39 SPAs that were recently declared (http://bit.ly/1rtBPap), and corroborate the Ministry’s great commitment to the development of the Natura 2000 Network in the marine area in Spain.
 
More information about the proposed areas, and the rest of the project areas
INDEMARES, at the following link on the Ministry’s website:
http://bit.ly/1niNDNl.