* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Renewable Energy and Marine Spatial Planning: Scientific and
Climate change mitigation wikipedia , lookup
German Climate Action Plan 2050 wikipedia , lookup
Climate change and poverty wikipedia , lookup
IPCC Fourth Assessment Report wikipedia , lookup
Open energy system models wikipedia , lookup
Public opinion on global warming wikipedia , lookup
100% renewable energy wikipedia , lookup
Low-carbon economy wikipedia , lookup
Global Energy and Water Cycle Experiment wikipedia , lookup
Energiewende in Germany wikipedia , lookup
Years of Living Dangerously wikipedia , lookup
Politics of global warming wikipedia , lookup
Business action on climate change wikipedia , lookup
Mitigation of global warming in Australia wikipedia , lookup
The Regulation of Continental Shelf Development Rethinking international standards, Halifax, Canada, 20-22 June 2012 Renewable Energy and Marine Spatial Planning: Scientific and Legal Implications Andreas Kannen & Hartwig Kremer Halifax, 21.06.2012 The Regulation of Continental Shelf Development Rethinking international standards, Halifax, Canada, 20-22 June 2012 Renewable Energy and Marine Spatial Planning: Scientific and Legal Implications Coasts and Shelves – Earth’s major live support system Global imperatives and change Shelves as opportunities for adaptation (contested views and priorities) Offshore wind and Marine Spatial Planning Challenges for transdisciplinary research Conclusions Population Consumption Trade Climate Sea level rise Tectonic quantitative Rivercatchment qualitative Target Descriptions Material fluxes biogeochemial fluxes, “Eco-functions” Schelf Politics & Institutional Reaction Sozioeconomic Implications changed Geomorphology River-Coast-Shelf „Watercontinuum“ – biogeochemical Cycles, Productivity & Biodiversity, 90% Fishery, Ecosyst. services: ~$17.5 trillion, (Global ES ~$33.3 trillion) Response to global imperatives: EU targets and outlook The EU climate and energy package has three main goals for 2020: • Reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 20 %; • improving energy efficiency by 20%; and • generating 20 % of energy consumption from renewable energy •Offshore wind energy capacity is projected to increase 17-fold 2010 and 2020, while wave/tidal power will increase over 11-fold Response to global imperatives: EU targets and outlook Technology Installed capacity 2010 (NREAP projections (GW) Aggregated projection for 2020 (GW) % change Onshore wind 82.2 168.8 104 Offshore wind 2.6 44.2 1 600 Tidal, wave and ocean energy 0.2 2.3 1 050 Hydroelectric (excl. pumped storage) 122.4 139.7 14 Solar photovoltaic 25.5 54.4 231 Geothermal 0.8 1.6 100 Concentrated solar power 0.6 7.0 1 066 Biomass electr. 22.6 43.6 93 Installed capacity of offshore wind farms in Northern Europe to 2030, OffshoreGrid scenarios (2011) In other words our traditional image of the oceans will see new developments to get used to Beach with tourists Nature Port Which picture do you see if you talk about Birds the ocean and the coast? Fishing Boats Dyke Perceptions and potential spatial configurations What do you see? Less CO2? Nature destruction? Bright Future? Spoilt view? Less Tourists? Colliding ships? Killed Birds? Money? © Siemens Pressebild Jobs? And what do you feel? Just awful! A miracle of technology Disaster! The end of the world! A future for my kids Great! © Siemens Pressebild Not nice, but necessary Nice! The driver for MSP in Germany Offshore Wind Energy as a renewable energy source is a national and regional strategy 2004 2006 Renewed EEG 2008 2010 Expansion Offshore: 3000MW Starting Phase 500 MW National German targets as an example 2020 2030 Continuing Expansion Offshore: 20.000-25.000 MW National and transnational MSP implications Transformation of shelves - dynamics of change Government Scenario 2030 (Coastal Futures) Situation without Planned and offshore wind farms approved (Source: BSH) offshore wind farms in spring 2010 (Source: BSH) Geplanter Ausbau bis 2030 nach Vorgaben der Bundesregierung Gesamtleistung 25.564 MW (Quelle: Burkhard 2008) Spatial Plans for sea areas The tradional spatial (land) planning solution: Zoning Spatial Plan for the German North Sea EEZ (Source: BSH, Federal Hydrographic and Maritime Agency) Policies and scales Non-EU context UNCLOS (EEZ, SeeAnl.Verordnung BSH) Environmental Conventions and Agreements (e.g. CBD) IMO Regulations Regional Seas Conventions (OSPAR, HELCOM, Barcelona, etc.) EU context EU Integrated Maritime Policy (Blue Book) Maritime Strategy Framework Directive Common Fisheries & Agricultural Policies Other environmental directives (Birds and Flora-Fauna Habitat = Natura 2000 areas, Water Framework Directive,…) Sectoral strategies and policies (Climate Change, Energy, Environment*, Cohesion, ) *EAP 7 to start in 2014 and to map onto EU 2020 Policies and scales National context Licensing procedures for activities in EEZ (national - SeeAnl.VO)) and territorial waters (Federal States/Laender - Federal Immission Control Act) Spatial Planning (terrestrial and in the sea), in EEZ (national BSH), in territorial waters and on land = Federal States/Laender Nature Conservation in EEZ (national), in territorial waters and on land = (Federal States/Laender) Sectoral policies for sand/gravel extraction, ports/shipping, local fisheries, environment, regional development, renewable energies at different administrative levels MSP enables to look at Coasts and Sea as Social-Ecological Systems … Marine MarineResource ResourceUse Use Marine MarineArea AreaUse Use Environmental policy & laws Ecological system Integrity functions Risk structures Energy/Climate/Resource usage policy & laws Societal system Norms & Values Social welfare Economic welfare Provision of Ecosystem Goods & Services Source: Kannen & Burkhard 2009 MSP – challenged to bridge competing knowledge and use claims; passing trad. boundaries Leadership, Politics and Policies How to agree on priorities and decisions? Planning Source: WWF 2010 Elements of power within MSP processes (dynamic actors analysis) Information power Legal security Financial power Investor WWF Distribution of Power in a negotiation situation Coastal/Marine Interest-groups Planning-group and Science Administration/ Public Authority Communication and negotiation power Social relations Expertise power Adapted from: Busch 2009 This doesn‘t happen in isolation - Scales Global, European, national, regional and local context global political commitments Globalisation Planning and Management need to be performed across scales regional integration and cohesion global Climate Change Map drafted by: Burkhard 2005 Upscaling the MSP Process: National – Transnational Processes Graphics: Gee, Kannen 2011 Building the European offshore grid; a call for transnational MSP The Queen’s Speech (9 May): “My government will propose reform of the electricity market to deliver secure, clean and affordable electricity and ensure prices are fair”- the UK Energy Bill – unlikely to be developed completely outside the EU context Benefits (http://www.solarpowerportal.co.uk/news/queens_speech_includes_electricity_mark et_reform_bill_2356) • Predictable energy output / energy security • Building a single EU electricity market benefits consumers • Connections to more than one country • Power trading between countries • Viable alternative to onshore grid construction • Connection to other marine renewable energy sources • More economical utilisation of grid through shared use www.ewea.org/fileadmin/ewea_documents/images/graphs_maps_tables/EuOffwind2011.pdf A coherent pan-European energy policy Spatial planning implications: A pan-European energy infrastructure (SuperGrid) to be put into place. Land- and sea-based grids well integrated. Cable connections and oil / gas pipelines are bundled in corridors. Enough space has been set aside to achieve the renewable energy aims. Co-uses promoted - but locations outside risk areas & sensitive areas. Source: EWEA 2009 Implementing transnational MSP Spatial Subsidiarity + appropriate structures and processes Vision as informing tool for national MSP activities and sectoral policies (e.g. BaltSeaPlan 2030); MSP understood as a cooperative practice; agreed principles and topics support cooperation; Transnational approach to transnational issues; Spatial challenges dealt with at lowest most appropriate spatial level; Involves several spatial & administrative levels; Formal and informal bodies are in place; Implications for research Underlying the new Five Grand Challenges of Future Earth system and Sustainability science Improve… forecasts of future environmental conditions and consequences for people Encourage innovation (incl. sound evaluation) in technological, policy, and social responses to achieve global sustainability Determine institutional, economic and behavioral changes to enable effective steps toward (global) sustainability Develop…integrate the observation... to respond to global/regional environmental change Determine how to anticipate, avoid and manage disruptive global environmental change http://www.icsu.org/news-centre/press-releases/2010/scientific-grand-challenges-identified-to-address-global-sustainability Underlying the new Five Grand Challenges of Future Earth system and Sustainability science Forecasting: (energy, markets, sea and shelf state, global, regional, local scenarios, risks/opportunities) Innovating: evaluating and promoting technical, institutional (legal), social opportunities of shelf use concepts incl. trade offs and risks) Values and social choice Responding: a collective vision for the co-use of continental shelves in adaptation to global drivers and pressures; e.g. Balt SeaPlan 2030) Observing: cumulative effects of multiple sea uses incl. biodiversity as well as value systems and world views – i.e. governance baselines) Process and interactions Confining: assessment of wind farm and cumulative effects as large scale experiments to determine impact, boundaries, thresholds – socio-ecological risks) Explore cumulative effects of multiple competing uses and implications in a SES perspective Provide fundamental research and research for action as appropriate Modelling of wake effects is an important field of basic research. How to bridge energy production and demand- Offshore Grid projection (Hub Based), technical, economic and legal implications Photo: Aeolus OFFShoreGRID zones in the European GRid Model for the hub base case 2030, from OffshoreGrid Final Rep. 2011 Conclusions continental shelves mirror the acceleration of human resource use globally they are also often subject to most rapid global environmental change shelf seas provide the majority of global ecosystem goods and services and reflect multiple transition efforts to adapt to global and climate change, e.g.: regional and global energy policy and technology mitigation of carbon emissions (CCS, renewable energy, food…) alternative options of coastal protection (building with nature) Marine Spatial Planning (MSP) can be central in new forms of governance if developed in a participatory way ideally relying on a collective future vision Scientific assessment and process studies need to apply a socio ecological system view to account for cumulative effects, scales and feedbacks research may support the step from simple zoning to dynamic multi and co – use concepts on the continental shelves research co-design, transparent knowledge, transfer and dialogue are key