OSPAR is the mechanism by which 15 Governments & the EU cooperate to protect the marine environment of the North-East Atlantic. OSPAR started in 1972 with the Oslo Convention against dumping and was broadened to cover land-based sources of marine pollution and the offshore industry by the Paris Convention of 1974. These two conventions were unified, up-dated and extended by the 1992 OSPAR Convention. The new annex on biodiversity and ecosystems was adopted in 1998 to cover non-polluting human activities that can adversely affect the sea. The fifteen Governments are Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Iceland, Ireland, Luxembourg, The Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and United Kingdom.
OSPAR is so named because of the original Oslo and Paris Conventions ("OS" for Oslo and "PAR" for Paris).
Now OSPAR is looking for a new Deputy Secretary of Biodiversity. Specific duties and responsibilities include:
Primarily responsible for the work under OSPAR’s Biodiversity Committee (BDC), including marine protected areas, coordination of marine biodiversity and monitoring, protection of species and habitats (ICG-POSH). In addition, the person appointed will provide support to OSPAR’s Committee on human impacts on the environment (EIHA[1]) and other areas of OSPAR’s work.
The primary function of the role is to advise BDC to deliver OSPAR’s agreed strategic objectives, ensuring the preparation of documents needed for its meetings, reports of those meetings, and appropriate follow-up.
If you are interested, please visit OSPAR's web page for more details.