Michael
Succow was born in 1941 and graduated in biology from the University
of Greifswald in 1965, where he became scientific assistant. He
became involved in nature conservation and started the organisation
Florenschutz, for which he organised a conference in Czechoslovakia
in 1972.
In 1969, because of his sympathies with the Prague Spring, Succow
left his post at the university, but continued working on nature
conservation issues at home and abroad. With perestroika in 1989
came Succow's opportunity. Appointed as a deputy minister in the
first post-Communist government, working with his colleagues Knapp,
Freude and Jeschke, a system of six biosphere reserves and five
national parks was set up during the last months of the GDR. Since
then the four colleagues (SKFJ) have worked hard to safeguard and
extend the areas of nature conservation, being prominent in the
(not always successful) struggle against destructive industrial
developments (e.g. the Baltic Sea Autobahn, mass tourism infrastructure
on Rügen Island, and extending the Elbe river bed). In 1990 Succow
was awarded the Lina-Haehnle-Medal for German Nature Conservation
and was made Vice-President of the organisation Naturschutzbund
(NABU) Deutschland.
Then followed an extraordinary period, still ongoing, when the 'Gang
of Four' (SKFJ) travelled all over the former Soviet Union, and
some other countries, helping to advise the new governments on land
use and setting up biosphere reserves and national parks. These
include seven in Georgia, covering a third of the country and others
covering a third of Mongolia. They have also been involved in establishing
programmes in Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan, setting up
three World Heritage Sites in Russia as well as reserves in Russia
and Michael Succow was born in 1941 and graduated in biology from
the University of Greifswald in 1965, where he became scientific
assistant. He became involved in nature conservation and started
the organisation Florenschutz, for which he organised a conference
in Czechoslovakia in 1972.
By now back at the University of Greifswald as a Professor, Succow
has developed a new integrated curriculum for teaching land use
and sustainable development and he is developing the first partnerships
with universities in Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan. The University of
Greifswald is setting up an ambitious new international programme
"to prepare landscape ecologists for the challenges of the 21st
century".
As a member of the expert advisory committee to the Federal Environment
Committee, Succow has helped design a general reform of land-use
policies in Germany, which would promote an environmentally sound
agriculture, limit urban areas, establish wilderness, bring economic
and social stability to rural areas and redirect EU subsidies to
ecologically productive services.
Succow and his colleagues have also lobbied for ecologically sensitive
land use in their home states of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern and Brandenburg.
In North-eastern Germany they have developed one of the most ecologically
sensitive land use policies in the world. The biosphere reserves
of Spreewald and, even more so, Schorfheider-Chorin, have already
become showcase areas for organic agriculture, sustainable forestry,
sensitive tourism, near-city recreation and the build-up of 'flowering
landscapes' in the former GDR.
"Our task is to consider and plan for a sustainable management of
all land and sea so that they carry as much as possible of the world's
genetic and ecological riches through the pressures of the next
century into what we must all hope will be a stable and sustainable
world beyond."
- Michael Succow
Contact Details:
Michael Succow
Botanisches Institut der Universität Greifswald
Grimmer Str. 88
17487 Greifswald
Germany |