Perceptions, knowledge claims and managements of coasts

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
1 Regional climate services – the case of Hamburg and the Elbe estuary Hans von Storch Institut of Coastal Research, Helmholtz Zentrum Geesthacht Germany.
Advertisements

BlackSea Region Meeting Varna Points raised by the EU Maritime Strategy of relevance for PlanCoast.
INDUSTRIAL ECONOMICS, INCORPORATED Oregon Coastal Atlas Coastal web atlases are among the best sources of GIS data for marine spatial planning Primary.
PP4SD & Science Council Workshop 27th November 2006 Skills for Sustainability. Skills Needs: An Employers perspective Richard Howell Sustainable Development.
New opportunities for regional development through cross-border cooperation Ministry of Environmental Protection and Regional Development November 16,
CHERPLAN Mid-Term Conference, , Podgorica, Montenegro CHERPLAN Enhancement of Cultural Heritage through Environmental Planning and Management.
First Marine Board Forum – 15 May Oostende Marine Data Challenges: from Observation to Information From observation to data.
Climate Change and Future Scenarios in the Arctic A Canadian Perspective Venezia, December 2014.
Spatial planning in the marine environment Gillian Glegg and Jonathan Richards.
 Sustainable development : one of the most important features of modern society, meeting our needs without threatening the needs of future generations.
Coastal Community Resilience Elements Governance, Risk Knowledge, Land Use Management and Structural Design, and Coastal Resource Management Russell Jackson.
W w w. b a l t i c m a s t e r. o r g WORK PACKAGE 2- FINAL RESULTS WP2 Seminar / Baltic Master II Partner Search The 19th of Dec., 2007 Prepared by Jakub.
Cape Town, 27. August 2009 Page 1 Science and ethics of climate scientists Hans von Storch Institute of Coastal Research, GKSS Research Center Geesthacht.
1 Issues of regional climate service H. von Storch*, F. Zwiers, I. Meinke, C. Devis and W. Krauss *Institute of Coastal Research, Helmholtz Zentrum Geesthacht,
Lithuanian Integrated Marine Science, Studies and Business Centre (Valley) Zita Gasiūnaitė Coastal Research and Planning Institute, Klaipėda University.
Community Resilience: It Takes A Village Civil Society Leadership Symposium December 8, 2009 Margaret A. Davidson NOAA’s Coastal Services Center.
Part-financed by the European Union (European Regional Development Fund) WP4: Transnational MSP Governance – dialogue and institutional building Palanga,
South Africa’s Policy on National Environmental Management of the Oceans Green Paper Presentation to Portfolio Committee 16 slides (15-20 minutes) 13 February.
Part-financed by the European Union Management of the Baltic Sea as a common resource Bo Löwendal, Sweden Member of the BSR INTERREG IIIB Steering Committee.
Part-financed by the European Union (European Regional Development Fund) Pan-Baltic stakeholders’ dialogue on MSP: Synthesis report Anda Ruskule, BEF Berlin,
BC Ministry of Environment Oceans and Marine Fisheries Division 1 British Columbia’s Oceans and Marine Interests Presentation to Oceans Governance Workshop.
8 th SIPAM Annual Meeting Split, Croatia, june 2005 Constraints and future developments towards enhancing SIPAM at National and Regional level Carla.
Towards a future Maritime Policy for the Union: Martin F. Diez-Picazo Martime Policy Task Force - European Commission.
Scientific tools for coastal zone management Hans von Storch with the help of Burkard Baschek, beate ratter and Tamara Kleber-Janke.
MSDI OPEN FORUM MSDI in the Baltic London, Tuesday 3rd March 2015 Jens Peter Hartmann Chair BSMSDIWG Denmark.
Storm surges – the case of Hamburg, Germany Hans von Storch Institute for Coastal Research GKSS Research Center, Geesthacht Parallel 26: Global environmental.
1 Keynote: Knowledge generation vs. decision processes - the issue of regional climate service Hans von Storch Institute of Coastal Research, Helmholtz.
Long-term monitoring and the perspective of detection and attribution of long-term change Hans von Storch Institute of Coastal Research Helmholtz-Zentrum.
Perceived Climate Change Impacts and Exposure Units ASTRA Conference May 2006 Klaipeda Jürgen Kropp & Klaus Eisenack Potsdam Institute for Climate.
1 Anna Wypych-Namiotko Undersecretary of State Ministry of Infrastructure, Poland European Maritime Day 2010 Innovation for growth and jobs Ministerial.
Engineering Adaptation Strategies and Infrastructure Design Requirements to Deal with Climate Uncertainty – Uncertainty, Certainty (and the Case of Coastal.
An NGO perspective to Blue Growth Rencontres internationales de la biodiversité marine et côtière Nicolas Fournier | 13/14 Nov 2012.
Conference on MSP, Split, September 2007 MSP: An introduction Presentation September 2007 / Split Kira Gee sustainable projects.
Scientific tools for coastal zone management Hans von Storch.
INTEGRATED ARCTIC MANAGEMENT Brendan P. Kelly Assistant Director for Polar Sciences Office of Science and Technology Policy
Georgia Climate Change Summit antruth Al Gore: an inconvenient truth IPCC: 4th Assessment Report 2007 Nobel Peace Prize.
1 Regional climate service in a postnormal context Hans von Storch Institute of Coastal Research, Helmholtz Zentrum Geesthacht, KlimaCampus, University.
Elements of regional climate science- society interaction in Germany Hans von Storch Institut für Küstenforschung, GKSS Forschungszentrum Geesthacht clisap-Exzellenzzentrum,
1 Climate research under post- normal conditions Hans von Storch Institute of Coastal Research, Helmholtz Zentrum Geesthacht,
1 Climate services under post- normal conditions Hans von Storch Institute of Coastal Research, Helmholtz Zentrum Geesthacht, KlimaCampus, University of.
1 Climate services under post- normal conditions Hans von Storch Institute of Coastal Research, Helmholtz Zentrum Geesthacht, KlimaCampus, University of.
Comments by Hans von Storch Director of Institute for Coastal Research, GKSS Research Center, Germany, and Professor at the Meteorological Institute, University.
Lithuanian Integrated Marine Science, Studies and Business Centre (Valley) Zita Gasiūnaitė Coastal Research and Planning Institute, Klaipėda University.
Using Analysis and Tools to Inform Adaptation and Resilience Decisions -- the U.S. national experiences Jia Li Climate Change Division U.S. Environmental.
COLLABORATION IN CLIMATE POLICY ASSESSMENT:IRELAND AT RISK(Homework 6)
Strategy 12.
National Seminar on Blue Economy
Law and Policy for Arctic Maritime Domain Awareness
PSC Climate & Extreme Events: Shared Lessons – Day 1
Approaches and instruments for sustainable rural development
Indigenous Peoples’ Prospects: Creating new partnership
Addressing sustainable development by enhancing Black Sea fisheries
Marine conservation and ecotourism
National Environment Policy Presentation
Global design FUTURE Natasha Vita-More.
The EU WATER POLICY.
The EU Strategy for the Atlantic Region
AquaSpace Case Study North Sea, Germany: Issues and Tools
Progress of the preparations for a White Paper on Adaptation to Climate Change Water Directors’ meeting Slovenia June 2008 Marieke van Nood, Unit.
Hydrographic awareness and the benefits of hydrography
The Directive on Maritime Spatial Planning DG ENV, European Commission
Hans von Storch Institute for Coastal Research
The social construction of the coast: conflicting images and perceptions of the coast, and their implications for coastal science Hans von Storch Institute.
Regional climate services – the case of Hamburg and the Elbe estuary
The social construction of the coast: conflicting images and perceptions of the coast, and their implications for coastal science Hans von Storch Institute.
Instruments for advising on regional climate change
Hydrographic Awareness and Its Economic Benefits
Addressing the challenge of water scarcity and droughts
Accelerating the Deployment of Offshore Renewable Energy Technologies - Project Proposal - Michael Paunescu Renewable and Electrical Energy Division.
INTEGRATED ARCTIC MANAGEMENT
Presentation transcript:

Perceptions, knowledge claims and managements of coasts Hans von Storch Institute for Coastal Research GKSS Research Center, Germany Twelfth Pacific Congress on Marine Science and Technology, PACON 2006: Marine Science and Technology in Asia, Yangon, Myanmar, June 11-15, 2006

The coastal zone ... Most people live here. Provides a large variety of services and goods (e.g., fisheries, energy, aestetic pleasure) Is continuously changed by man.

RADARSAT ScanSAR Image 9.June1996

Shipping

Fishing

Off shore industry

Energy

mariculture

tourism

Deposition of waste

Military use

The coastal zone ... Needs a sustainable development for ongoingly providing goods and services. Is undergoing a change of utility, from industrial („mature“ economy) to high-quality lifestyles (information based „new“ economy).

Coastal Research Coasts need to be managed. Management needs a scientific basis. Natural and social/cultural sciences needed for guiding the process of exploiting the full potential of the coastal zone in future economies and societies.

Natural and Anthropogenic Coastal Management Research Traffic and Off-shore work safetiness Transport of matter Tourism Climate change Monitoring Eco- systems Coastal protection Marine resources Flood forecast Safety in coastal traffic and offshore structures Natural and Anthropogenic long term trends

Task: Monitoring the state and the change of the coastal environment Affordable Reliable Holistic High-tech economic enterprise.

EUROROSE: Gijón Experiment WaMoS II HF Radar WaveBuoy Gijon ERS-2 SAR EUROROSE: Gijón Experiment Waves mapped by SAR onboard of the ERS-2 Satellite

WERA VHS radar VTS Gijón Heinz Günther, Coordinator of EUROROSE WaMoS II WERA VHS radar Heinz Günther, Coordinator of EUROROSE

User interface: current speed and direction Institut für Küstenforschung I f K User interface: current speed and direction

Challenge: Climate Change (and other anthropogenic impacts) Man-made climate change is underway. Part of the recent climate change is due to natural processes, another part is man-made. Climate change may presents stress on society and economy, which may be sometimes healthy as it enforces modernization and improvements.

Scenario for North Sea in 2085 Change of strong westerly winds (m/s) Change in wind-related water levels (99%iles; m)

Problem: Postnormal Science Postnormal science: high stakes, high uncertainty. Competition of different knowledge claims. Environmental science is in most cases postnormal science. The problem is not insufficient natural science knowledge about details but about the integration of a variety of vested interests and their related knowledge claims.

For a long time, the „market of knowledge“ was dominated by science, specifically by natural science. Today various forms of knowledge claims are competing on this market. This is in particular so with respect to knowledge about the environment, which is widely used to support various normative views of different stakeholders.

Competing knowledge forms are Prescientific and outdated, or discredited, scientific knowledge. Reinterpreted knowledge (media), resulting from a selection and metamorphosis of scientific knowledge for public information. Science specifically designed to represent vested interests. Ideological, religious and ethical knowledge. Everyday knowledge. Traditional (indigenous) knowledge.

manageable Natural science Institut für Küstenforschung I f K „The coast can be computed and is manageable.“ manageable

endagered Environmentalists „Man is destroying nature.“ Institut für Küstenforschung I f K „Man is destroying nature.“ endagered Der Mensch zerstört die Küste

unadulterated Health industry / tourism Institut für Küstenforschung I f K „The coast is natural. Its purity and originality makes it a place for relaxation, mental and bodily recovery.“ unadulterated

externally controlled Local interests externally controlled Institut für Küstenforschung I f K „Locals know what is best for their region. They don‘t need governmental regulations.“

threatening Coastal safety Institut für Küstenforschung I f K threatening „Nature needs to be controlled to ensure safety.“

Conclusion The different forms of knowledge claims compete in daily conversations and the public discourse. For a knowledge claim to „win“ on the knowledge market, it must allow for practical implementation. Also, it must be plausible, i.e. be consistent with traditional knowledge. Natural science knowledge often lacks both characteristics (applicability, plausibility), because this type of knowledge is disaggregated without allowing an overall assessment of a problem and its solution. What is needed is the integration of different knowledge aspects, instead.

Institut für Küstenforschung I f K Coastal research should be designed to assist the public in gaining an understanding of the phenomena and perspectives. This task needs: Interpretive analysis of risks Presentation of scientific concepts and notions in a cultural and social context. For accomplishing these needs, cooperation between natural scientists and social and cultural scientists is urgently required.