Objectives and international cooperation
The BSPC strives to achieve open, practical and future-oriented cooperation among its members. It strives to create new contacts and take advantage of synergies in decision-making. Since the 2000s work has mainly concentrated on the following areas: combatting eutrophication, promoting safe shipping and energy cooperation, dealing with the effects of climate change, green growth and energy efficiency, maritime policy, civil society, employment and social welfare, preventing human trafficking, and supporting innovation in social and health care. Promoting regional cooperation in the fields of culture, youth and science has traditionally played an important role.
The roots of modern cooperation in the Baltic Sea region can be traced back to Finland. At the beginning of the 1990s Kalevi Sorsa, who was Speaker at that time, called for parliamentary cooperation among the states around the Baltic Sea. The first Baltic Sea Parliamentary Conference took place in Helsinki in 1991. The participants called on their governments to establish an intergovernmental body to strengthen cooperation. Early conferences dealt mainly with the shift to a market economy following the collapse of the Soviet Union and the region's political future. Quite soon, however, protecting the Baltic Sea's vulnerable environment became a key priority.
Nowadays the BSPC is a highly networked international actor that cooperates closely with the Baltic Marine Environment Protection Commission (HELCOM), the EU, the Nordic Council, the Northern Dimension Partnership in Public Health and Social Well-being, the Baltic Assembly, the Baltic Sea Cooperation Forum, the Baltic Development Forum and the Parliamentary Assembly of the Black Sea Economic Cooperation, among others.