A promise to the future: Lake Crivitz is “Living Lake of the Year 2024”
The Global Nature Fund and the Living Lakes Network Germany have named Lake Crivitz in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania “Living Lake of the Year 2024”.
The award is presented on the occasion of World Water Day on 22 March and is a recognition of the work on the ground to restore the habitat.
The small lake is a living memorial to how drastic the consequences of war are for an ecosystem and its environment.
Radolfzell / Crivitz, 22.03.2024: The Global Nature Fund (GNF) and the Network Living Lakes Germany (NLSD) nominate Lake Crivitz in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania as “Living Lake of the Year 2024”. The award is presented on the occasion of World Water Day today, March 22, and is in recognition of the ongoing efforts of committed citizens to restore the lake, which has been heavily polluted by war and sewage.
A piece of German history is hidden beneath the surface of Lake Crivitz: According to eyewitness accounts, weapons, explosive devices of all kinds, entire vehicles and even small tanks were dumped in the 37-hectare lake after the end of the Second World War – with devastating consequences for the ecosystem. The untreated sewage from the GDR era made the situation worse. In 2015, the Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania Ministry of the Environment classified the lake in the west of the state as contaminated with nutrients and pollutants in an expert report.
Renaturation with citizen participation
But despite the heavy impact, nature is slowly and painstakingly regaining its place at Lake Crivitz: greylag geese, great crested grebes and some species of duck are once again at home here; a diverse world of insects and fish has developed. Citizens’ initiatives have been campaigning for the renaturation of the lake for years, and the founding of the “ZU NEUEN UFERN” association is planned for this year. The association will unite the citizens’ initiatives and take over the planning of the renaturation process and a socio-cultural development concept for the lake and the region, with active citizen participation and the involvement of various experts.
“The award as “Living Lake of the Year” by the Global Nature Fund is a promise to the future of Lake Crivitz. BUND is happy to be a partner in this network and to contribute its experience in lake nature conservation,” says Corinna Cwielag, Regional Director of the German Federation for the Environment and Nature Conservation in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. BUND plans to set up its own group at Lake Crivitz in 2024, which will cooperate with the BUND group in Schwerin and benefit from their experience. “Lake Crivitz is a treasure for the town that needs committed friends,” says Corinna Cwielag.
Environment as a silent victim of war
Lake Crivitz is just one of many ecosystems worldwide affected by war. Between 1999 and 2009, the
United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) studied the environmental impact of over 20 wars and conflicts – from Kosovo to Afghanistan, Sudan and the Gaza Strip. The UNEP has established that armed conflicts cause considerable long-term damage to the environment and communities that depend on natural resources.
The small lakeside town of Crivitz is now a member of the global organization “Mayors for Peace”, which has almost eight thousand member towns in 164 countries and is particularly committed to nuclear disarmament. Every year on August 6, the peace bell rings at the lake – in memory of the atomic bombs dropped on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and the horrors of the Second World War. In the context of current conflict situations and the new challenges associated with them, Lake Crivitz also becomes a memorial for people and at the same time a symbol of a strong community and what it can achieve.