(13.01.2011)
Annual press conference of the Association of Friends of the German-Polish European National Park Unteres Odertal e. V., the chairman of the board, Thomas Berg, explained, among other things, the following:
“The past year 2010 was a particularly successful one for our National Park Association. He was able to acquire 20 hectares of agricultural land and is still very interested in buying more land in the national park region. The resources required for this are available.
In addition, the association established itself as a successful part-time farmer in 2010, where it cannot find a competent partner for its nature conservation work. But that only affected one large company in the south. Otherwise, the association sticks to its strategy of leasing its land to local farmers subject to nature conservation requirements. All attempts by the allied large agrarians to prevent the association from acquiring land with a constructed right of first refusal failed shortly before Christmas before the Frankfurt / Oder regional court. In this context, we refer to our press release 01/2011 of January 4th, 2011.
The coöperation with the national park administration is positive. After the hedge project on the areas of the old Criewen estate had been jointly successful, it has now been possible to obtain funding for the construction of wells in order to be able to graze the valuable dry grassland with sheep and goats. The forest conversion in Zone Ib areas also went smoothly. The fees already paid for the water and soil associations for designated total reserves (Zone Ia) have actually been reimbursed to us after a long and complicated application process in accordance with the Brandenburg Water Act (BbgWG). We want a simple and fair procedure with a fixed payment claim, but no payments to us as supplicants, which are then approved or not according to good behavior and cash situation. The three plan-request dates with the three planning offices commissioned by the land consolidation authority also went properly.
However, the distribution of the club and state areas to Zone I and Zone II has not yet been clarified. After the negotiations were broken off by the old government in June 2009, we now assume that the land reorganization authority will comply with the clear legal situation will decide. Otherwise we reserve the right to take further legal action; four more are already pending in court, and one more is also foreseeable because of a “final use certificate” required by the ministry (MUGV), for which there is no legal basis.
For the coming year, the association wishes that bison be kept on the edge of the national park. This only surviving European wild cattle has belonged to the region for thousands of years and fits in well with a national park. The bison can of course only be kept in a large gate. Local, agricultural partners should take over this task in a tried and tested manner, and we will encourage and support them to the best of our ability, true to our principles. ”
Thomas Berg
CEO