Project News and Events
15 April 2019 The final Hungarian DriDanube event, the National Drought Seminar was held on 15 April 2019 at OMSZ in Budapest. |
Read more |
4 April 2019 DriDanube news about Danube Drought Risk Assessment Here you can freely download the R E D software package which is developed by Tamás Szentimrey (Varimax Bt) to common drought risk assessment of DriDanube countries. |
Read more |
29 March 2019 Invitation: DriDanube National Drought Seminar which will take place on 15 April 2019 at OMSZ in Budapest, Hungary |
|
12 December, 2018 DriDanube national training and consultation about optimal drought management was held on 3 December, 2018 at OMSZ in Budapest, Hungary |
Read more |
13 November, 2018 Invitation: DriDanube national training and consultation with stakeholders about optimal drought management on 3 December, 2018 at OMSZ |
Read more |
6 November, 2018 Training course on drought risk assessment 6–8 November, 2018 Budapest, Hungary Organizers: Hungarian Meteorological Service (OMSZ) and Disaster Risk Management Knowledge Center (DRMKC) of the European Commission |
Read more |
4 November, 2018 DriDanube - regional training on drought risk and impact assesment 10-12 October, 2018 Bucarest, Romania |
Read more |
12 July 2018 Invitation and Guide for Hungarian DriDanube Reporting Network |
Read more |
17 June 2018 DriDanube Drought Watch 2018 section started in June 2018, where you can follow development of drought in the Danube region. The bi-weekly Regional Drought Bulletin you can reach on this link: |
Read more |
May 2018 Subscribe to project newsletter |
Read more |
28 May 2018 DriDanube - National reporting networks |
Read more |
09 April 2018 DriDanube - Let’s talk about drought |
Read more |
05 October 2017 DriDanube - WHY, HOW and WHAT we do |
Read more |
03 October 2017 DriDanube - Drought User Service - an innovative tool for drought management |
Read more |
19 June 2017 Hungarian DriDanube National Briefing Seminar was held on 12th June 2017 in Budapest, Hungary. |
Read more |
19 May 2017 National Briefing Seminars held in 10 partner country in May and July 2017 |
Read more |
07 February 2017 The Kick-off event of Drought Risk in the Danube Region (DriDanube) project take place on 16 March 2017 in Ljubljana, Slovenia |
Read more |
Introduction
Water scarcity and droughts hit the Danube region frequently and have had large impacts on the economy and welfare of the people. Despite damages in last decades, drought is still not considered as an issue of high priority and people are not aware of its impacts. The main objective of DriDanube project is to increase the capacity of the Danube region to manage drought related risks. The project aims at helping all stakeholders involved in drought management become more efficient during drought emergency response and prepare better for the next drought.
From reactive to proactive drought management
Currently the drought management is reactive, dealing mainly with losses and damages, cooperation between key actors is missing and formal legislation mostly does not exist. Proactive approach on the other hand counts on drought prevention, mitigation, vulnerability reduction, planning and preparedness. Focus hence shifts from recovery to protection, i.e. from crisis management to risk management.
Expected outcomes
One of the main products of the project will be Drought User Service, which will enable more accurate and efficient drought monitoring and timely early warning. The service will integrate all the available data, including large volume of the most recent remote sensing products.
DriDanube will harmonize the currently heterogeneous methodologies for risk and impact assessments, based on the existing achievements in participating countries and on EU guidelines in the frame of the Civil Protection Mechanism.
The current slow reactions during drought will be sped up with the improved decision-making process in all parts of the drought management cycle (monitoring–impact assessment–response–recovery–preparedness) which will strengthen capacities of the stakeholders (policy, professional, end users) at different levels. This will lead to an increased culture of preparedness throughout the Danube region.
DriDanube’s main expected result is improved drought emergency response and better cooperation among operational services and decision making authorities in a Danube region on national and regional level.
General information
Start date: 01-01-2017
End date: 30-06-2019
Budget in Euro
Overall: 1.974.750
ERDF Contribution: 1.434.757,5
IPA Contribution: 243.780
ENI Contribution: 0
Call number
Call 1
Priority
Environment and culture responsible Danube region
Specific objective
Improve preparedness for environmental risk management
Library
As soon as the project achieves an output, it will be published in this section.
Check the project webpage for more information
Partners
Slovenian Environment Agency |
Lead partner |
Slovenia |
|
EODC Earth Observation Data Centre for Water Resources Monitoring GmbH |
ERDF partner |
Austria |
|
Global Change Research Institute CAS |
ERDF partner |
Czech Republic |
|
Hungarian Meteorological Service |
ERDF partner |
Hungary |
|
Vienna University of Technology |
ERDF partner |
Austria |
Work Packages
Deadlines
National contact points
- Zita Bihari, Hungarian Meteorological Service, Budapest
- Sándor Szalai, University of Szent István, Gödöllő
- ASP - Ministry of Agricultural, Budapest
Project co-funded by European Union funds (ERDF, IPA)