The measures under the EU-funded LIFE project ‘Riverscape Lower Inn’ include the promotion and development of high-quality grassland areas on the embankments.
The Inn dams and dykes are not only technical facilities for damming and indispensable for flood protection, they are also home to flower-rich meadows. These form a blooming ribbon along the Inn and are a habitat for many rare and protected animal and plant species.
The LIFE project Riverscape Lower Inn is creating species-rich meadows and dry grasslands of European importance along the German-Austrian border.
On the dams of the Braunau-Simbach, Ering-Frauenstein, Egglfing-Obernberg and Schärding-Neuhaus power stations, species-rich meadows and dry grasslands are being developed and maintained according to ecological criteria.
Habitats and species that were once typical of (dry) barren sand and gravel habitats are now restricted to secondary habitat sites such as the flood protection dams. These demanding species have been severely pushed back by intensive agriculture and land sealing and are hardly found there anymore.