The 3rd International Conference on
Priorities and Distinctive Features of Development in the Baikal
Region opened in Ulan-Ude on July 31, 2008. The conference
was held with the support of the Government of the Republic of
Buryatia, the Irkutsk Oblast and Zabaikal Territory Administration,
and the Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences.
The grand opening ceremony was attended by the following speakers:
Republic of Buryatia President V. V. Nagovitsyn;
M. V. Slipenchuk, Head of METROPOL Group of
Companies and Chairman of the Guardianship Board of the Fund for
Protection of Lake Baikal; and A.M. Sagalevich,
Director of the Manned Submersibles Laboratory of the P. P.
Shirshov Institute of Oceanology of the Russian Academy of
Sciences.
Conference objectives:
• develop specific recommendations for ways to create an efficient
mechanism of Lake Baikal preservation;
• determine the economic and environmental priorities of Baikal
regional development;
• introduce new hi-tech resource- and energy-saving industries that
preserve the unique ecosystem of Lake Baikal;
• provide forthcoming projects with their required level of
scientific, information, analytical and technical support, and
introduce systemic project management to new hi-tech
industries;
• resolve the local population’s economic and social
problems.
Main conference topics:
• A strategy for
developing the region’s economic potential; the factors of
sustainable development.
• Russia’s cooperation with Central and East Asia: problems and
prospects.
• Geology and commercial deposit extraction and processing.
Ensuring the ecologically- and technologically-safe development of
Zabaikal region mining.
• The prospects of ensuring improvements in Asian Russia’s
transportation system.
• Fuel and energy resource development in the Baikal region: its
terms, conditions, and potential reliance on renewable sources of
energy.
• The status, problems and prospects of Baikal tourism.
The conference was attended by members and representatives of: the
Russian Academy of Sciences, the Federation Board and the State
Duma of the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation, the Russian
Foundation for Basic Research, federal ministries, the Government
of the Republic of Buryatia, the Irkutsk and Zabaikal District
Administration, the ministries and academic institutions of
Mongolia, the heads of industrial enterprises and companies, public
environmental organizations, along with scientists and experts from
Russia, China, Mongolia, the United States, Sweden, Germany,
Britain, Monaco and other countries. The conference succeeded in
drawing more than 200 people in its work. The final list of
conference participants included more than 200 people.
The reports covered a broad range of subjects, including: how the
Baikal region fits into Russia’s overall development strategy amid
ongoing globalization; the economic development priorities of
Siberia and the Far East; the economic activity characteristics of
the Baikal Nature Reserve; methods for improving the Republic of
Buryatia’s investment appeal; the foreign economic relations of
Russia’s border regions; using regional and interregional
development zones to create new centers of dynamic economic growth;
and using public-private partnerships to develop economic projects
in the Baikal region: their prospects and problems. The reports
particularly highlighted the importance of investing in human
resources – one of the main factors responsible for unleashing the
region’s economic potential and achieving the sustainable
development of Lake Baikal.
The event’s seminars, display presentations and round tables
analyzed how the regions’ economic development will respond to new
environmental restrictions, and discussed the best methods for
economically managing the regions. Conference participants agreed
that it was time to introduce zoning restrictions on the central
section of the Baikal Nature Reserve: this would not only help
unleash the region’s natural resource potential, but also ensure of
the sustainable and balanced development of the Baikal region as a
whole. The participants noted that only basic science and high
technologies could provide the resources necessary to ensure the
environmentally-safe management of the Baikal Nature Reserve’s
(BNR) natural resources. They particularly highlighted the need to
develop a set of regional policy priorities regulating the economic
activities undertaken in the various environmental zones of BNR.
They also examined the prospects of the various investment projects
proposed for the region. Finally, the participants underscored the
importance of remembering that the Baikal meridian represented a
unique field of environmentally-safe economic development study,
providing solutions that could be used in both the region and the
world as a whole.
The conference participants concluded their collegiate planning
sessions by developing a systemic action plan for resolving the
various problems that have recently surrounded Lake Baikal.