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The Great Lakes/Baltic Sea Partnership Program
    
Baltic Fellows Fact Sheet

Background

Together with the U.S. EPA, the Great Lakes Commission is working on placing Baltic scientists (up to 6 months) with US and Canadian host institutions conducting environmental research on the Great Lakes.

The objective of the Baltic Fellows Program under the Great Lakes/Baltic Sea Partnership is to improve the water quality of the Great Lakes and the Baltic Sea by sharing information, expertise, and management approaches. The fellowship program will focus on the problems of persistent toxic substances, the invasion of exotic species, and the specific impacts of these on the Baltic Sea and Great Lakes ecosystems.

Common environmental threats include: pollution from toxic chemicals, including pesticides; eutrophication and oxygen depletion (resulting, in part, from nutrient runoff from agricultural lands); runoff from urban waste sites; deposition of atmospheric pollution; loss of habitat; and the introduction of exotic species.

Participants

Proposed participants in the Partnership are the United States, Canada, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Russia, Sweden, Norway, Finland, Poland, Germany, and the governments of the Great Lakes States.

Partnership Goals

  • to improve the water quality of the Great Lakes and the Baltic Sea by sharing information, expertise, and management approaches;
  • to strengthen the institutional relationship among scientific organizations, professional associations, governments, and non-governmental organizations seeking to address environmental concerns in the Great Lakes and Baltic Sea regions;
  • to improve the capabilities of both sides to more effectively manage the two watersheds;
  • to enhance environmental decision-making through better use of environmental information.

Fellowship and Exchange Program

The Fellowship and Exchange Program proposes to support the visit of scientists and government officials from the Baltic Sea countries to the Great Lakes region to study and conduct a technical exchange on research with a variety of scientists and professionals in U.S. and Canadian governmental agencies, U.S. State governments, non-governmental organizations, and academic and scientific institutions.

US and Canadian host institutions will benefit from hosting Baltic scientists by increasing their Great Lakes scientific knowledge of solutions to common environmental problems. Host organizations will be able to expand their expertise in toxics, exotics and watershed management research and retain the knowledge gained from the Baltic program by partnering in field practicums and through publication of a final report to the project.

Persistent Toxic Substances

The Partnership would promote technical transfer and dissemination of data, through which the Great Lakes and Baltic Sea communities could significantly contribute to the reduction of toxic substances and to improved understanding of the threats they pose to human health and the natural environment. Joint areas of scientific inquiry on persistent toxic substances could include identification and inventory of toxic substances, analysis of mechanisms to prevent and control toxic pollution, and identification of cost-effective options to achieve this reduction in the level of toxic substances in the environment.

Exotic Species Invasion

In the Great Lakes, invasions of exotic species have not been effectively prevented. Because many of the exotic species in the Great Lakes ecosystem have also found their way to the Baltic Sea -- probably through similar paths such as ship ballast water -- Great Lakes and Baltic Sea scientists stand to benefit from sharing experiences and data and by collaborating on research projects and efforts to develop new technologies. This increased collaboration can also serve as the basis for an "early warning system" to detect the presence of new exotic species. Information on new invasions and probable means of introduction should be shared immediately to prevent additional infestations.

For further information on applying to this program, either as a scientist or as a host agency, please contact:

Julie Wagemakers
Great Lakes Commission
Tel:  (734) 665-9135
Fax: (734) 665-4370

or Great Lakes/Baltic Sea Partnership website
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