Jacqueline E Tamis, Ruud H Jongbloed, Marcel J Rozemeijer, Anne Grundlehner, Pepijn de Vries, Annaïk Van Gerven, Robert G Jak, and Gerjan J Piet (2024)
Assessing the potential of multi-use to reduce cumulative impacts in the marine environment
Frontiers in Marine Science, 11(1420095):1-11.
The intentional combination of two or more marine activities with the purpose of
sharing space, infrastructure, resources and/or operations, referred to as multiuse,
is gaining attention as a means to reduce the spatial footprint of human
activities but possibly also its ecological footprint. In this study, the Spatial
Cumulative Assessment of Impact Risk for Management (SCAIRM) method was
adapted and applied to assess whether multi-use can reduce the ecological
footprint in terms of the cumulative impacts on the marine ecosystem, by
integrating multiple offshore activities in different configurations as compared
to these activities separated in space, referred to as single-use. These
configurations combine renewable energy, aquaculture, nature restoration and
tourism activities, in different combinations. For the sake of this multi-use
assessment these activities were subdivided into actions, their allocation in
space and time represented in scenarios (e.g. single-use versus multi-use)
which were then evaluated in terms of their ecological footprint (i.e. Impact
Risk). The main finding is that the calculated Impact Risk in multi-use is often
lower than that in single-use and in any case never higher. This study also shows
that there is still much to be gained in terms of further reduction in Impact Risk
through an optimization of the multi-use design by comparing the scenario
based on actual pilots deemed more realistic (i.e. co-existence with limited
synergies) with a hypothetical optimal scenario (i.e. multi-functional).
multi-use, offshore, cumulative impact assessment, cumulative effect assessment,, footprint, human activities, marine spatial planning, environmental benefit
- DOI: 10.3389/fmars.2024.1420095
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