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Luxemburg - natur&ëmwelt

BirdLife Partner
Founded in 1920
Members: 11000
Staff: 13
secretariat@naturemwelt.lu
Twitter
Members: 11000
Staff: 13
Kräizhaff, 5 Route de Luxembourg, Kockelscheuer, LU, LU-1899
Tel. +352 29 04 04-1; Fax +352 29 05 04secretariat@naturemwelt.lu
Mission of the organisation
To protect wild birds and their habitats, natur&ëmwelt works closely with its foundation Hëllef fir d'Natur, which is concerned with the purchase and management of habitats.
Key Activities
- Public relations
- Campaigns
- Nature education in schools
- Bird of the year
- National tree day
- The taste of the landscape
- Projects
- Conservation work on Black Stork
- Scientific work
- Youth clubs
- Consultation about birds and nature problems in general
- Publishing a newspaper and information bulletin
Did you know?
- “It is fair to say that without the BirdLife IBA project tens of thousands of people in the Caribbean would not have been exposed to bird and site conservation issues”
- National IBA books have been published in local languages in more than 40 countries, and made available to conservationists, politicians and concerned local people
- 136 bird species have been classified as extinct since 1500
- BirdLife has been working in tropical forest conservation in over 50 countries for decades
- Shared responsibilities/Sharing is caring: 99% of countries and territories worldwide support at least one globally threatened bird species
- 75% of all bird species are found in forests, chiefly in the tropics
- BirdLife Partners each year directly involve over 4 million children in conservation education activities
- In some cases, the simple inexpensive measures introduced to fisheries to dramatically reduce seabird kills, actually increase fish catches for the fishermen
- BirdLife-inspired mitigation measures have been shown to reduce long-lining seabird bycatch by an average of 80%
- BirdLife demonstrated the intimate link between biodiversity conservation and poverty reduction through community-centred projects at Important Bird Areas
- More than 2,000 local groups actively monitor and conserve "their" Important Bird Areas. They are BirdLife's eyes and ears on the ground, watchdogs of the state of IBAs, and passionate campaigners for their protection.
- 10,985 BirdLife Important Bird Areas (IBAs) have been created in over 200 countries and territories, with over 2000 Local Conservation Groups protecting “their” IBAs
- 129 Important Bird Area publications have been produced so far, covering all or part of 83 countries
- BirdLife's first ever World Bird Festival (2001) attracted over 300,000 people to more than 1,200 events in 88 countries
- When complete, the global network of Important Bird Areas is likely to comprise around 15,000 IBAs- covering 7% of the world's land surface (equivalent to the size of Europe!)
- 1,200 volunteers and a network of volunteer coordinators invested 30,000 hours in fieldwork for SEO/BirdLife’s Atlas of Wintering Birds in Spain
- The BirdLife Partnership’s programmes and projects rely on a global budget of over US$500 million
- 3/4 of threatened bird species on oceanic islands are affected by invasive species
- BirdLife Partners each year directly involve over 4 million children in conservation education activities
- The BirdLife Partnership owns or manages more than one million hectares of nature reserves in 25 countries (that’s equivalent to a third of the size of Belgium)
- 10,985 BirdLife Important Bird Areas (IBAs) have been created in over 200 countries and territories, with over 2000 Local Conservation Groups protecting “their” IBAs
- The IBA network in Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda captures nearly all (90-97%) of the region's threatened or endemic mammals, snakes and amphibians
- 75% of all bird species are found in forests, chiefly in the tropics
- “It is fair to say that without the BirdLife IBA project tens of thousands of people in the Caribbean would not have been exposed to bird and site conservation issues”
- BirdLife is able to assert that it has never knowingly turned its back while a bird species became extinct
- BirdLife has facilitated legally binding protection for more than 2,000 Important Bird Areas. Overall, 40% of all global 11,000 IBAs enjoy some degree of protection
- There is 1 member of BirdLife staff for every 1.4 species of bird; or 5.6 members of staff for every bird species threatened with extinction
- In a Norwegian longline fishing trial, the use of a bird-scaring line dropped bird bycatch to zero, while fish catch increased by 30%
- 70,000 hectares of Africa’s most threatened forests have been protected by BirdLife (Gola Rainforest National Park Sierra Leone)
- Shared responsibilities/Sharing is caring: 99% of countries and territories worldwide support at least one globally threatened bird species
- “It is fair to say that without the BirdLife IBA project tens of thousands of people in the Caribbean would not have been exposed to bird and site conservation issues”
- Locally, people take pride in their wildlife, especially if it is unique, and connections with nature are an important part of culture and identity
- BirdLife recognised early on that conservation has to enhance human well-being tangibly in order to be fully embraced by local people, and BirdLife Partners are very well positioned to engage with local communities in their countries
- 800,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions are to be avoided through forest protection in Paraguay
- No boundaries: from pole to pole, a staggering eighty thousand kilometres round trip is the migration that Arctic Terns make every year
- 66 globally threatened species are benefiting directly from our Preventing Extinctions Programme
- So far, Important Bird Areas have been identified in 200 countries
- In 1968, BirdLife purchased an entire island in Seychelles to save the Critically Endangered Seychelles Warbler and formed a brand new conservation NGO there
- 800,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions are to be avoided through forest protection in Paraguay
- BirdLife estimates that fishing gear killed two million seabirds between 2000 and 2010 in Europe alone
- Since biodiversity is not evenly distributed around the globe, the IBA approach can represent a cost-effective and efficient approach to conservation, because a relatively small network can support disproportionately large numbers of species
- 16 bird species were rescued from the brink of extinction in the last decade because of conservation action
- The BirdLife Partnership owns or manages more than one million hectares of nature reserves in 25 countries
- BirdLife inspired mitigation measures have been shown to reduce long-lining seabird bycatch by an average of 80%
- More than 2,000 local groups actively monitor and conserve "their" Important Bird Areas. They are BirdLife's eyes and ears on the ground, watchdogs of the state of IBAs, and passionate campaigners for their protection.
- 75% of all bird species are found in forests, chiefly in the tropics
- 7 million hectares of tropical forest are destroyed each year (the size of Ireland)
- Agricultural expansion has already impacted 87% of globally threatened bird species
- Over 600 bird species have already been impacted by climate change
- 20% of the world's birds occur in less than 1% of the world's land area
- The 117 civil society organisations forming the BirdLife Partnership have a wealth of knowledge and technical skills amounting to a total of 6,443 years of experience
- BirdLife is calling for the importance of healthy ecosystems to be written into national, regional and international climate change and development policy
- Asian vulture populations declined by 95% in less than a decade - BirdLife work has now halted this decline
- Bar-tailed Godwit travel 11,000km across the Pacific Ocean- the longest non-stop journey ever recorded for a bird
- BirdLife’s global education initiative “Save the birds, save the trees, save the earth” involved 2,000 schools and 15,000 children from 29 countries
- Access to nature and green spaces improves people’s physical and mental health, makes communities more attractive, and often contributes to local regeneration
- BirdLife is calling for the importance of healthy ecosystems to be written into national, regional and international climate change and development policy
- BirdLife demonstrated the intimate link between biodiversity conservation and poverty reduction through community-centred projects at Important Bird Areas
- 40% of the earth’s surface is comprised of ocean that no single nation has control over
- Due to BirdLife capacity building, four of the six BirdLife Partners in the tropical Pacific now have the technical knowledge, experience and support networks to undertake restoration of important islands
- Due to BirdLife capacity building, four of the six BirdLife Partners in the tropical Pacific now have the technical knowledge, experience and support networks to undertake restoration of important islands
- BirdLife coordinated the Migratory Birds Committee, which fostered cooperation between countries, enabling affluent European countries where the birds breed to provide funding and expertise to poorer African countries with important passage and wintering
- Between 1978 and 1988, BirdLife carried out more than 140 projects in Europe and Africa, building networks and supporting existing conservation bodies, and founding NGOs in countries where there had been no previous organisations devoted to the study and
- BirdLife coordinated the Migratory Birds Committee, which fostered cooperation between countries, enabling affluent European countries where the birds breed to provide funding and expertise to poorer African countries with important passage and wintering