Sessions
Connecting HELCOM Baltic Sea Action Plan and Agenda2030
Asta Puodziuniene, Lotta Samuelson, Monika Stankiewicz, Ottilia Thoreson
Thursday March 8, 2018 13:35 - 14:30 Main Stage
Coffee, exhibition and mingle and opportunity to visit Allt för Sjön-fair at Stockholmsmässan
Thursday March 8, 2018 16:30 - 17:10 Exhibition area
Coffee, exhibition and mingle
Thursday March 8, 2018 10:40 - 11:10 Exhibition area
showing #IamtheBaltic campaign by Coalition Clean Baltic
Coffee, exhibition and mingle
Thursday March 8, 2018 14:30 - 15:00 Exhibition area
Coffee, exhibition and mingle
Friday March 9, 2018 10:15 - 10:45 Exhibition area
Coffee, exhibition and mingle
Friday March 9, 2018 13:50 - 14:20 Exhibition area
Closing of Baltic Sea Future 2018
Magnus Breitholtz
Friday March 9, 2018 15:25 - 15:30 Main Stage
Thank you – Magnus Breitholz on part of the foundersWelcome back 6-7 March 2018
Climate change adaptation - Plenary session in cooperation with partner CBSS
Christian Kind, Elena Visnar-Malinovska, Gregor Vulturius, Lotta Andersson, Valdur Lahtvee
Thursday March 8, 2018 15:00 - 16:30 Main Stage
(Plenary session in cooperation with partner CBSS)(Moderator: Valdur Lathvee, CBSS Baltic 2030)
EU Climate Change Adaptation policy after Paris Agreement Ms. Elena Visnar-Malinovska, Head of Adaptation Unit DG CLIMA, EU Commission
Implementation of Baltic Sea Climate Adaptation Strategy and Action Plan Ms. Valdur Lathvee (Baltic 2030 Unit CBSS) and Lotta Andersson (SMHI).
Mainstreaming Climate Adaptation - What works? Mr. Gregor Vulturius, Research Fellow, Stockholm Environment Institute
Monitoring adaptation measures and climate resilience in German Cities Mr. Christian Kind, senior project Manager, ADELPHI
BSF workshop on climate change, agriculture and eutrophication
Airi Kulmala, Alena Bartosova, Eva Salomon, Gun Rudquist
Thursday March 8, 2018 17:10 - 18:40 T3
Day 1 - Vision of a sustainable Baltic Sea – Ambitious implementation cases - Parallel sessions and workshops
Climate change will and has already affected the Baltic Sea. The prognosis is that the sea will be less of a sea and more of a lake. The levels of salt will change. The temperature will rise and the run off from land increase.
Climate change will change the weather. In the Baltic Sea region the areas with high precipitation will get more rain and drier areas even less. In the wetter areas increased rain/snowfall risks increasing the run off from agricultural land giving higher amounts of nitrogen and phosphorous reaching the Baltic Sea and thereby increasing eutrophication.
How must agriculture adjust to avoid increased impact on eutrophication? What kind of agricultural systems will stand a better chance of reducing run off? Can necessary changes go hand in hand with other environmental or production benefits?
Baltic Sea region vs world – are we as sustainable as we think?
Olof Gränström
Thursday March 8, 2018 11:50 - 12:05 Main Stage
Baltic Sea ecosystems under changing climate
Andris Andrusaitis, Jonas Pålsson, Maciej Tomczak, Riikka Puntila-Dodd, Prof. Kevin Noone
Thursday March 8, 2018 17:10 - 18:40 T4
Day 1 - Vision of a sustainable Baltic Sea – Ambitious implementation cases - Parallel sessions and workshops
17.10 - 17.25 Dr. Andris Andusaitis, Programme Manager, BONUS EEIG
17.25 - 17.40 The fate of fish and fisheries at the Baltic Sea?Dr. Maciej Tomczak, Stockholm University Baltic Sea Centre -
17.40 - 17.55 Blue Growth boundaries in novel Baltic food websDr. Riikka Puntila-Dodd, Finnish Environment Institute (SYKE)
17.55 - 18.10 Climate refugia in Marine Spatial PlanningDr. Jonas Pålsson, Swedish Agency for Marine and Water Management -
18.10 - 18.40 Joint questions and discussions
Baltic 2030 Action Plan - the framework for the achievement of 2030 Agenda in the Baltic Sea Region
Krista Kampus
Thursday March 8, 2018 13:20 - 13:35 Main Stage