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The Danube River Protection Convention forms the overall legal instrument for co-
operation on trans boundary water management in the Danube River Basin. The
Convention was signed on June 29 1994 in Sofia (Bulgaria) and came into force in 1998.
It aims to ensure that surface waters and groundwater within the Danube River Basin are
managed and used sustainably and equitably.
The Convention on Co-operation for the Protection and Sustainable Use of the River
Danube (Danube River Protection Convention) forms the overall legal instrument for co-
operation and transboundary water management in the Danube River Basin.
The Convention was signed on June 29 1994, in Sofia, Bulgaria, by eleven of the Danube
Riparian States – Austria, Bulgaria, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Germany, Hungary,
Moldova, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia and Ukraine – and the European Community, and
duly came into force in October1998, when it was ratified by the ninth signatory.
The main objective of the Danube River Protection Convention (DRPC) is to ensure that
surface waters and groundwater within the Danube River Basin are managed and used
sustainably and equitably.
This involves:
the conservation, improvement and rational use of surface waters and groundwater
preventive measures to control hazards originating from accidents involving floods, ice
or hazardous substances
measures to reduce the pollution loads entering the Black Sea from sources in the
Danube River Basin
The signatories to the DRPC have agreed to co-operate on fundamental water managementissues by taking "all appropriate legal, administrative and technical measures to at least
maintain and where possible improve the current water quality and environmental
conditions of the Danube river and of the waters in its catchment area, and to prevent and
reduce as far as possible adverse impacts and changes occurring or likely to be caused."
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The lower section of the Danube, he continued, was "more than an internationalized river"
because the CED wielded independent administrative powers.[1]:1154
He concluded that thecommission:
falls short of being a bona fide member of the family of nations because its existence is largely
de facto and not de jure. . . . It is safe to predict that the need for protecting the integrity of thecommission will some day lift it out of the twilight of statehood and accord it full membership in
the League of Nations.[1]:1154
To the contrary, Joseph L. Kunz, a professor of international law at the University of Toledo in
Ohio, wrote in 1945 that international river commissions were organized on the collegiateprinciple, composed of "persons appointed by the contracting states, representing them and
having to act in conformity with the instructions of their states." They were, he concluded,
objects, not subjects, of international law.[2]
Stanford University history professor Edward Krehbiel suggested in 1918 that other
"international administrative agents" like the Danube Commission would eventually be createdto handle specific problems. Their activities would "develop a whole body of rules which will in
effect be the foundation of the super-state itself."[3]:55 The commission, he said:
offers an organ through which nations can approach one another on the basis of common or
united action, instead of as rivals, as is the case in an ambassadorial conference .[3]:48
In regard to the CED, he noted that the tariffs were to be settled by a majority vote of the
commissioners and that "Majority rule results in making law for the minority, and . . . it therefore
represents a truly profound abasement of national sovereignty."[3]:52
The establishments of the CED were guaranteed to be neutral (promulgated in 1865) and free of the restraints of the territorial authorities. It owned and operated a hospital for seamen of allcountries, and it flew a flag ("composed of five parallel strips . . . arranged in the following order
of colour: — red, white, blue, white, and red, the blue strip having a height double that of each of
the other strips, and bearing in white the letters 'C.E.D.' ")[4]
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Modern map of the Danube. Click here for a larger version of the map.
[edit] Organizing
The CED began its work by fixing the seat of the commission in the port of Galatz and orderingtemporary improvements of the Sulina. Under the chairmanship of Sir John Stokes, Crimean
War hero of the British Royal Engineers, the commission hastened to get the job done within the
two years originally alloted by the treaty. It was under a mandate to:
designate and to cause to be executed the Works necessary below Isatcha, to clear the mouths of
the Danube, as well as the neighbouring parts of the Sea, from the sands and other impediments
which obstruct them, in order to put that part of the River and the said parts of the Sea in the bestpossible state for Navigation....[5] It is understood that the European Commission shall have
completed its task . . . within the period of two years.[6]
At the end of the two years, the powers that signed the treaty were to "pronounce the dissolution
of the European Commission", and the so-called "permanent", upstream, IDC was then to extend
its supervision to the Lower Danube. The latter commission was supposed to consist of Austria-Hungary, Bavaria, the Sublime Porte (Turkey), Württemberg and the two Danubian principalities
(Moldavia and Wallachia). The IDC did draw up an Upper Danubian Navigation Act in
November 1857, but it was not accepted multilaterally because of opposition of all the powers
except Austria.[7]:52
It was, however, applied to parts of the river by conventions betweenAustria, Bavaria, and Württemberg. The river-bordering states, Krehbiel stressed in his 1918
article, "were eager to get control of the river into their own hands", but the non-riparian states
were "loath to lose control." As a result, the CED was constantly strengthened, and the IDCnever came into power, but "was presently abandoned."[8]
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Modern photo of the meandering Danube at Schlögener Schlinge in Austria (outside the
jurisdiction of the CED)
The CED gradually extended its power until it became an international entity glimmering in what
Blackburn called "the twilight of statehood." It expanded its functions until it was ranked s "the
most successful" such agency until the League of Nations. At the start, though, it had no funds,
"it had no basis for an opinion as to the best way to attack the river problem; it found river trafficparalyzed."[3]:55 At the end of the two years, Sir Charles Hartley, war comrade of Stokes, had
been appointed chief engineer (a post he was to hold for forty-nine years) but large-draft vessels
were unable to sail unimpeded up the meandering river. These meager results led the powers toextend the life of the commission for another two years, over the objection of Austria .[9]
[edit] Finance
Funds were borrowed from Turkey to pay for improvements, but they came irregularly.
Sometimes the CED had to contract short-term, high-rate loans. By 1860, though, traffic hadincreased enough so the commission could fix a tariff and get a good amount of money. There
was no opposition from the vessels, thanks to a provision in the Treaty of Paris that each of thepowers had "the right to station, at all times, Two Light Vessels at the Mouths of the Danube. "
[10]
What resulted was the establishment of the CED as "an international financial agent withconsiderable independence . . . the novel prerogative was that it could go into the money market
and contract loans."[3]:53
In 1866, the commission found itself in financial trouble because of the just-ended Austro-
Prussian War. But it secured money by issuing bonds, offering the river tolls as security. "To be
sure, the rate of 10 per cent was high, but the significant fact is that the joint agent of the nationswas developing a real identity and personality. Its venturesomeness was rewarded with complete
solvency.[3]:53
[edit] Public Act of 1865
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The Palace of the Danube Commission in Sulina, Tulcea County, Romania, from 1868 to 1921
On November 2, 1865, a public act signed by Austria, Britain, France, Italy, Prussia, Russia, and
Turkey placed the CED, its officers, works and establishments "under the protection of international law" (Article I). Two annexes were appended — one on navigation regulations and
the other on a tariff of "navigation dues to be levied at the mouth of the Danube." The new tariff,
principally the work of John Stokes, established a Danubian rule or Danube rule of measurement.[11]
The unique provision of the 1865 act was that either of the two annexes could be changed by amajority vote of the commission but the changes would be automatically binding on the member
nations, without need for additional consent. Duties of the officers were spelled out, neutrality of
the buildings, records, and funds was ordered, and certain portions of Turkish territory were
reserved for exclusive use of the CED. Its life was extended for another five years, but Russia
protested that this "should be the outside limit not to be exceeded in any case."[3]:46
[edit] London Conference of 1871
In 1871 at a conference in London, Russia agreed with Austria-Hungary, Britain, Germany, Italy,
and Turkey to extend the commission's term for another twelve years, which coincided with theredemption period of a large loan floated in 1865.[12] The conference also:
1. Rejected Britain's suggestion to extend the commission's jurisdiction farther up theriver.[13]
2. Agreed to a "reassembling of the Riverain Commission" — but at no set time.
3. Gave Austria the authority to set up a toll-collecting agency at the dangerous Iron Gates
section to pay for improvements there.4. Extended the neutrality spelled out in the Treaty of 1865 to the staff of the CED, as well
as the buildings and works.
[edit] Treaty of Berlin of 1878
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In 1878, Romania, which had been an autonomous principality within the Ottoman Empire since
1861, was admitted to an expanded CED as a free country as a result of the Treaty of Berlin(1878). It replaced Turkey as the sovereign power on the delta and was given a seat on the CED.
Turkey remained a member of the body.
Russia was the winner of the Russo-Turkish War, and she took over an old strip of Bessarabiadetached from her in 1856. This placed Russia again on the banks of the Danube. The other
Danubian arrangements were:
1. The jurisdiction of the CED was extended from Isatcha to Galatz.
2. The powers agreed that regulations would be formulated for the upriver stretch fromGalatz to the Iron Gates by a "mixed" European commission, "assisted by Delegates of
the Riverain States, and placed in harmony with those which have been or may be issued
for the portion of the river below Galatz." In the end, a new scheme was adopted for the
IDC — Austria, Romania, Serbia, and Bulgaria would each have a representative on theIDC, and each of the members of the other commission, the CED, would serve
alternating terms on the IDC for six months at a time. Austria would be chair, but with notie-breaking vote.[14]:268
Southeastern Europe after the Congress of Berlin
[edit] Additional Public Act of 1881
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In 1881, the interested countries gathered at Galatz to promulgate another treaty, or, as it was
termed, a public act, that spelled out details of the CED's relations with Romania, which wasstriving for more authority. It was then that Russia withdrew her territory from the EDC's
jurisdiction — the left bank of the Kilia, over which the CED had so far not exercised its right of
control.[14]:268
Russia's action was a last-minute affair, done through a reservation to the treaty.
[edit] Treaty of London of 1883
In 1883, Austria, Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Russia, and Turkey were represented at
another conference, this time in London. A majority decided to admit Romania and Serbia in a
consultative capacity only and that Bulgaria could be represented only through Turkey, the
nominal suzerain. Serbia accepted, but Romania and Bulgaria protested, taking no part in theconference.[15]:257
After a month of discussion, the delegates decided to:
1. Extend the jurisdiction of the CED from Galatz some twenty miles upstream to Ibraila[nowadays known as Brăila].
2. Authorize the establishment of the reorganized "mixed" commission (the IDC), with the
hope that Romania and Bulgaria would agree.
3. Prolong the term of the CED for twenty-one years, after which it would continue forthree-year periods, unless changes were proposed by one of the major powers.
4. Accede to Russia's request regarding the Kilia — that is, allow that country and Romania
joint control over the branch, provided the CED reviewed any plans for
improvement.[15]:257
Detailed and liberal rules drawn up in this convention for the Danube between Ibraila upstream
to the Iron Gate were never applied. Romania did not agree, "and the stretch of the Danube wasadministered by each riparian state, with due regard, however, to the principle of free
navigation."[7]:51
As conditions in the delta improved, shipping increased and more funds were received by the
CED. Conditions improved: There were 111 shipwrecks of seagoing vessels between 1861 and
1881, but only five wrecks between 1909 and 1929[1]:1154
[edit] World War I
The European Commission of the Danube, the CED, continued functioning during at least thefirst two years of the war. For a long time the Allied and enemy delegates actually sat on it
together.[16]:293
When Germany attacked Romania in 1916, the Central Powers (Germany,
Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria, and Turkey) kept the commission in operation for a short time — butwithout the British and the French.
Indeed, the Germans attempted to legalize a commission that would have perpetually excluded
the Allied powers. on May 7, 1918, they concluded a separate peace with the Romanians,
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changing the EDC into a Commission of the Mouth of the Danube; its competence was
maintained, but membership was restricted only to Danubian or Black Sea countries;[7]:52
aboveBraila control was "to be in the hands of the countries bordering the river", that is, Romania,
Bulgarian, Serbia, Austria, and Germany.[3]:47
Germany, Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria, Turkey, and
Rumania obtained the right to keep warships on the river; this led, as a reaction, to
internationalization of the river between Ulm and the Black Sea after the war.
[16]:294
The samestipulations were included in the peace treaty between Germany and Russia in 1918.
These treaties were negated upon Allied victory. In November 1918 the victors established a
Commandement de la Navigation du Danube, with Sir Ernest Trowbridge as commander. The
Allies' Supreme Committee decided on May 22, 1919, that "despite the existing uncertaintyconcerning the frontiers and the ownership of the floating material, normal conditions of traffic
on the Danube should be established as soon as possible." An Inter-Allied Danube Commission
was formed under Trowbridge. Later in the year, non-enemy states were admitted in equality
with the great powers; the group met with some success in reopening the river, despite thedifficulties.[17]:241
Peace treaties imposed by the Allies set up new regulations for the river: The old EuropeanCommission resumed its power over the mouths of the river, but its membership was
"temporarily" limited to Britain, France, Italy, and Romania (excluding, then, Russia and
Turkey). In addition, an International Commission was thenceforth to regulate traffic on theUpper Danube from Ulm to Braila. A general conference was planned for the future .[7]:53
[edit] Reorganizing
The conference convened in Paris in September 1920 to draw up a definitive statute for the river.
Represented were Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, France, Germany, Great Britain,
Greece, Hungary, Italy, Romania, and Yugoslavia, Absent from a full-dress Danubianconference for the first time were Russia, then in the first years of rule by the Bolsheviks, and
Turkey. It took six months, but on July 23, 1921, the basic convention was signed. It followed to
a large extent the temporary framework built just after the war. The European Commission of theDanube was re-established, and all the old treaties and regulations were confirmed.
The International Danube Commission (upriver) was finally given a permanent status, made asubject of international law like the EDC, and provided with regulations that gave it life. It,
however, had no law courts of its own; it was obliged to surrender transgressors to the territorial
authorities for trial and punishment. Members included all the riparian states, as well as Great
Britain, France, Italy, and Romania.
Otto Popper of Bratislava, secretary of the IDC in 1920-29, said this about the statute when
viewing it twenty years later:
Unfortunately this fundamental document was drafted during a period when much of the originalspirit of [President Woodrow] Wilson's Fourteen Points was beginning to fade. As it stands the
Statute is a somewhat unsatisfactory compromise between broad conceptions and narrow-
mindedness. Its text gave rise to varying interpretations[,] and some of its important stipulations
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were therefore not applied, as had been hoped, in the best interests of the river and of its
navigation.[17]:244
John C. Campbell, Eastern European specialist with the U.S. State Department, wrote in 1949
that just as the Paris conference in 1856, had strived to block "Russian domination" in
Southeastern Europe after the Crimean War, so the 1921 convention "stood for an effort to block the resurgence of German or Russian power."[18]
[edit] Reconstruction
The European Commission, again ensconced in its quarters at Galatz, found things very badindeed at the mouths of the Danube after the war. Silt had choked the channel again, and it
seemed as though attempts to improve the situation was continually going awry.[17]:244
Economic affairs along the entire river were so bad that the League of Nations instituted in 1922an inquiry by a special committee, headed by an American, Walker D. Hines (Wilson's wartime
chief of railroads). His report was issued in August 1925, stating that the river fleet carried 25percent more tonnage than before the war, but traffic was only 56 percent of normal. Thisreduction was largely due to an economic depression but also by the breakup of Austria-
Hungary's large duty-free area. Hines scored the "petty attitudes" of the multitude of free
governments and complained of the frontier formalities and the exclusion of non-nationals frominternational trade.[19] Despite the existence of the EDC and the IDC, the situation had "changed
but little since the end of the war."[20]
This report led the Commercial and Financial Chronicle of New York City to suggest, in
particular, the reduction of "dues which it [the EDC] has imposed."[21]
British interests since
1918 had turned the Danube into a virtual European Thames. Before the war, reported Clair
Price of the New York Times,
the Danube was in the hands of riverain [river-bordering] groups, but since then Furness, Withyand Co., large United Kingdom shipholders, have obtained a virtual monopoly. . . . It operates a
steamer service from British ports to the Levant [Eastern Mediterranean], the Black Sea and to
Sulina, Galatz and Braila, where British tonnage has long been preponderant.[22]
The company had obtained this monopoly by refinancing the war-stricken prewar firms, most of
which were owned by Austrian or Hungarian interests (the losers in the war). A holding
company, the Danube Navigation Co., was organized, and astute financial maneuvering gave toFurness, Withy "the practical control of the traffic of the navigable length of the Danube."[16]:300
[edit] Romania's struggle for control
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Carol I of Romania
Meanwhile, Romania desired the outright abolition of the CED, having made the suggestion forthe first time in 1881, when King Carol said he would insist on the mouths being "exclusively
controlled by Rumanian officials."[16]:300 This statement led to a break with Austria-Hungary, andCarol was forced late in the year to dispatch a message of " 'deep regret' for the offense that hadbeen given to Austria."[14]:268
The country renewed its demands in 1919 at the Paris Peace Conference and in 1921 at theDanube conference. On both instances, it was overruled. Romania changed tactics, but not
motives, at the Conference of Lausanne in 1923, when affairs of the Middle East were discussed.
On this occasion, Romania suggested that the powers of the CED should be expanded; it would
also be given control over the Bosporus and the Dardanelles.
Of course the acceptance of this proposal would have meant the end of effective control of the
Danube, for the Commission, far from the mouths of the Danube and charged with new tasks,would have hardly been able to fulfill its primary tasks, and the actual control of the Lower
Danube would have devolved upon Rumania.
wrote Joseph D. Somogyi in 1948.[7]:56
A 2004 photo of the Sulina Channel of the Danube River, leading to the Black Sea
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In 1924, Romania suggested that the activities of the commission be limited; that country would
be charged with trial and punishment of shipping violators, similar to the method used by thenewer, upriver International Danube Commission. This suggestion also was rejected by the other
powers. Balked internationally, the Romanian government began an internal propaganda
campaign in 1926 to nationalize the Sulina channel, even without the concurrence of the other
nations. Spokesmen claimed the CED had failed to keep the channel clear, resulting in a situationwhere only empty boats could cross it; the commission replied that the silt had piled up during
the war when Romania had full control.[23]
Meanwhile, Romania resorted to a lawsuit to assert its jurisdiction over an upriver stretch. It
noted that the jurisdiction of the CED had been extended up the river from Galatz to Ibraila bythe Treaty of London of 1883, in the framing and signing of which Romania had not participated.
In 1921 two vessels collided in the disputed sector, and the CED's inspector assumed police and
jurisdictional powers over Romania's protest. The case was taken to the League of Nations,
which in 1926 sent the matter to the Permanent Court of International Justice at the request of Britain, France, Italy, and Romania. The latter country lost on all counts. The court decided the
CED's powers "extend over the whole of the maritime Danube."
[1]:1157 – 58
[edit] End of the prewar commissions
See main articles Nazi rule over the Danube River (1938 – 1945) and Danube Commission (after
1945)
In 1938, a committee of experts inspected the Sulina and found it was almost impassable by that
time.[24]
And in August of that same year, the regime of the two commissions was swept away byrise of German power on the river. A series of treaties put control in the hands of the Germans,
who maintained it until the Nazi retreat in 1944 and ultimate defeat in 1945. In 1948 a Danube
river conference was held, and a new treaty was adopted, putting governance of the river undercommissions composed only of the riparian powers, ending more than four decades of Western
European presence in the control of the important waterway.[25]
[edit] References and notes
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Summary History of the Commissions of the River Danube 1856 - 1948
· 1856 Treaty of Paris: European Commission of the Danube established; Russian boundary withdrawn 20km north of the Danube
· 1857 Riparian states meet in Vienna to regulate whole river from Ulm to Braila - largely unsuccessful due to
the dominance of Austria-Hungary
· 1870 Sulina declared a freeport - therefore cargo could pass up the river without formality
· 1878 Treaty of Berlin: European Commission's rights and privileges extended; lower Danube neutralised;
Romania becomes full member of the Commission following her independence; Russia again a Danubian
country after war with Turkey in 1877
· 1895-99 Blasting and canal construction along the Iron Gates section of the river somewhat improves
navigation
· 1902 Final Sulina arm cut-off completed, thus shortening the river by 11 nautical miles
· 1919 Treaty of Versailles grants four rivers including the Danube "international" status
· 1921 European Commission of the Danube resumes operations; new International Commission of the
Danube set up for the "fluvial" river from Ulm to Braila
· 1939-44/5 Danube under German control
· 1948 Treaty of Belgrade: new Danube Commission is established to regulate whole navigable river,
composed only of riparian states, except for Germany (or Austria, at first)