Considerations of Use-Use Interactions between Macroalgae Cultivation and Other Maritime Sectors: An Eastern Baltic MSP Case Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- (a)
- To what extent have macroalgae cultivation interests been recognised as well as socially and spatially represented in the existing MSPs in these countries?
- (b)
- To what degree have interactions between macroalgae cultivation and other maritime sectors and opportunities for co-location been considered during the implementation of these MSPs?
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Sites
2.2. The Conceptual Approach, Data Gathering, and Analysis
2.2.1. Theoretical Background
2.2.2. Qualitative Content Analysis and Observer Knowledge: Sector Inclusion in MSP
2.2.3. Classification of Co-Location Opportunities in MSP
- Environmental links—uses affect the environment and resource needs of another use.
- Location links—marine activities take place at the water surface, within the water column and on the seabed and at different times, and can at times overlap, which can result in sharing or competition over marine space.
- User attraction links—change in the number of users due to the proximity of activities.
- Technical links—concerning infrastructure, tools, or safety.
3. Results
3.1. Macroalgae Sector Inclusion in the MSP Processes
3.1.1. Recognition
A Formally Recognised “Future Use”
Environmental Benefits and Risks
Limited Socio-Economic Significance
3.1.2. Representation
Varying Degrees of Actor Representation
Spatial Macroalgae Cultivation Representation during the Planning Process
3.1.3. Technical Challenges and Knowledge Gaps as Barriers for Sector Recognition and Representation
3.2. Potential for Sector Co-Location
3.3. Spatial Representation of Use-Use Interactions and Potential for Co-Location
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Estonia | Latvia | Poland | |
---|---|---|---|
Status and scope | Legally binding, national scale plan for the entire marine area under the Estonian jurisdiction expected to be adopted in early 2022. Pilot plans for the Pärnu and Hiiu county territorial waters had been developed before the launch of the national scale plan and have now been integrated in the national plan. National MSP based on the Planning Act 2015 and the pilot plans for Pärnu and Hiiu counties, on the earlier version of the Planning Act. | A national scale plan for the entire marine waters under the national Latvian jurisdiction and the 2 km strip of internal waters mandated to coastal municipalities was adopted in May 2019. It is not legally binding. The plan is based on the Spatial Development Planning Law (1 December 2011) and Regulation No. 740 of the Cabinet of Ministers on the Procedures for the Development, Implementation and Monitoring of the Maritime spatial plan (30 October 2012). | A legally binding plan for the entire area was developed based on the Act on Sea Areas of Poland and Maritime Administration 2015 and has been in force since 21 May 2021. The Polish MSP provides the legal basis for decision-making and management of marine space and has a direct impact on the legal status and rights of sea users. Before the adoption of the EU MSP Directive, pilot plans were developed in 2008–2012 for: the western Gulf of Gdańsk, the Middle Bank, and the Bay of Pomerania. The pilot plans were non-binding but informed the Polish Maritime Administration decision-making process as a source of best available knowledge. Separate, more detailed plans for the Szczecin, Kamień, and Vistula lagoons as well as port areas are also being developed due to the high levels of existing or potential conflicts in the areas. The final draft plan for the Szczecin and Kamień Lagoons was ready in 2019 but is still under consultation. The first out of three drafts for the Vistula Lagoon and the Gulf of Gdańsk have been prepared. Once approved, the gulf of Gdańsk plan (at a scale of 1: 25,000), will override the coarser MSP of the area. |
Key drivers | The plan will be the strategic basis for all decisions regulating sea use. Its aim is to “attain and maintain a good status of the marine environment and to promote the maritime economy” while securing a “good environmental status, diverse and balanced use” [63]. The two pilot plans were started on one hand, because of the wind farms, as more competing interests were emerging, which were in conflict with each other and there was a need to find a balanced solution. The explanatory memorandum on the initiation of plans states that an important outcome of MSP is the avoidance or minimisation of conflicts between activities carried out and planned at sea, as well as between marine uses and nature. On the other hand, the aim was precisely to pilot the maritime planning process, as such plans have not been made in Estonia before. The experience of these two plans, although with a slightly different approach, has been used in the preparation of the national plan. | The key criteria for defining uses of the sea outlined in the first draft were: “Rational use of the sea space and minimising of the sea use conflicts”, maintenance of the “ecosystem integrity”. Further consideration of “possibilities of combined uses with similar demands for environmental conditions and infrastructure, not disturbing each other” and promotion of “synergies between different uses: Encouraging coexistence of the complementary or interdependent (functionally related) sea uses.” [72] (p. 33) | |
Description of the planning approach | The plan focuses on the principles of spatial development, and the activities are not planned on a detailed scale. The plan provides guidelines and states conditions for the next stages of planning the activities, including at the local government level. The planning solution was drafted on the basis of environmental considerations and the best available knowledge. The inclusion of the best available knowledge is ensured by a broad-based expert group, cooperation with other countries, authorities and stakeholders, and further analyzes. As in many traditional uses (e.g., fishing, maritime transport), the rules of marine uses have predominantly been established; the plan focuses primarily on the combined use of the marine area and new uses of the sea. Guidelines are provided for all areas of activity to accommodate all different uses in the marine space [60] | In the first draft of the MSP, the marine space and permitted uses are divided into four categories—“areas of priority interest” and uses of strategic importance; “areas of potential development” focused on new uses with elements on uncertainty; “other types of uses of the sea and marine features”—all activities with pre-existing legal basis; and “areas of general use”, which permit uses of any nature if they do not impact the environment and are legally permitted [72]. | The national marine plan at a scale of 1:200,000 divides the Polish marine space into 95 basins. In line with legislation, every basin has been assigned a “main function”. Other activities—“allowed functions”, may occur simultaneously within the basin as long as they do not disturb the main activity. Activities not listed are not permitted within the basin. In addition, each basin must be described in detail in terms of the existing conditions, the pressures occurring, the legal acts in force and the detailed principles of management and use of the resource, including the relationship between the different functions. The planning process of the final MSP involved the preparation of a study of the conditions and four versions of the draft plan. All versions of the plan were subject to an Environmental Impact Prediction as a part of strategic environmental impact assessment. A preliminary version of the “Study on the conditions of Spatial Development of Polish Maritime Areas with spatial analysis” was prepared in 2015, covering the exclusive economic zone, territorial sea and internal waters of the open coast [78]. This document describes the environmental aspects and aspects resulting from various forms of space use, also legal ones. It was the first source of knowledge to start the main MSP, first formal identification of actors and conflicts, but the solutions. |
Authorities responsible | The Ministry of Finance | The Ministry of Environmental Protection and Regional Development (MoEPRD) with the support from other ministries and sector authorities responsible for the national MSP. Local coastal municipality councils—coastal plan. | Polish Maritime Area is territorially divided between Maritime Offices in Gdynia, Szczecin, and, until 2020, Słupsk. The Directors of Maritime Offices are the local maritime administrative bodies of the Ministry responsible for maritime affairs and they are responsible for preparing and consulting the plans before implementation |
Public and sector consultation process | All interested parties were able to propose their suggestions on the values and uses of the maritime space during the planning phase. They were invited to map their ideas during the almost one-year period on the official MSP website. http://mereala.hendrikson.ee/ideekorje.html (accessed on 10 November 2021) The planner has used a broad approach in stakeholder engagement using a variety of channels. All invitations for stakeholder meetings were published in national and regional newspapers; on Facebook; on the webpage of Ministry of Finance and the dedicated planning webpage; e-mail invitations were sent to interested parties through mailing lists that included professional associations, participants from other similar meetings and people who had subscribed to the e-mails. Furthermore, physical posters were posted on frequented places such as notice boards in the town central squares. Content articles were published in several publications. A round of thematic meetings with stakeholders was carried out during the preparation of the MSP, to validate the solution before they are made public and to discuss specific issues with relevant stakeholders. MSP solutions were introduced at various international and national meetings, including introduction to aquaculture at the Baltic Blue Growth conference. | Detailed plan for public, sector and expert engagement [71]. “Priority sectors” such as shipping, and the offshore wind energy sector had targeted consultations with sectoral representatives [65]. | There were four draft plans, each one was subject to public review. In total, 2053 requests for change were submitted and the number of applicants was 232. There were also eight sectoral (~8*50 participants), four major national (~700 participants), and three international consultation meetings (~33*12 participants). |
Priority or strategically important sectors | Existing and well-established uses have had a clear preference when accommodating new uses. New uses need to be accommodated where the old ones do not exist. The wind energy sector has had the strongest influence out of the new uses and much clearer objectives. For example, an environmental NGO won a court case, and the offshore wind energy theme was removed from the Hiiu MSP by ruling of the National Court of Estonia [98]. | Existing strategically important sectors include shipping, fishing, tourism, national security, and nature conservation. Offshore wind farm development is also foreseen in the near future, and the sector is considered a “priority sector” despite currently not existing. |
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Country | Planning Document Description/Title | Date of Publication |
---|---|---|
Estonia | Estonian Maritime Spatial Plan [60] | 2020 |
Hiiu maakonna merealade planeering (Hiiu County Maritime Spatial Plan) [61] | 2018 | |
Pärnu maakonnaga piirneva mereala maakonnaplaneering (County plan of the maritime area bordering Pärnu County) [62] | 2017 | |
Põllumajanduse ja kalanduse valdkonna arengukava aastani 2030 (Development plan for agriculture and fisheries until 2030) [63] | 2021 | |
Summary table of proposals submitted to the Estonian Maritime Spatial Plan and the positions of the Ministry of Finance [64] | 2021 | |
Consultations table for Estonian MSP [65] | 2021 | |
Protocols of public consultation meetings (2019–2020) [66] | 2019–2020 | |
Latvia | Ministry of Agriculture of the Republic of Latvia. Multiannual Framework for Aquaculture Development 2014–2020 [67] | 2013 |
Maritime Spatial Plan 2030, The Maritime Spatial Plan for the Marine Inland Waters, Territorial Sea and Exclusive Economic Zone Waters of the Republic of Latvia [68] | 2019 | |
Ministry of Agriculture of the Republic of Latvia. Operational Programme for fisheries development [69] | 2021 | |
Maritime Spatial Plan 2030 Environmental report [70] | 2019 | |
Summary of public consultations [71] | 2018 | |
Maritime Spatial Plan for the Internal Marine Waters, Territorial Waters and Exclusive Economic Zone of the Republic of Latvia, 1st draft [72] | 2016 | |
Developing a Pilot Maritime Spatial Plan for the Western Coast of Latvia (BaltSeaPlan Report 16) [73] | 2011 | |
Poland | Plan zagospodarowania przestrzennego Polskich Obszarów Morskich w skali 1:200,000 (Spatial Development Plan of Polish Maritime Areas at scale 1:200,000) [74] | 2021 |
Projekt planu zagospodarowania przestrzennego Szczecin and Kamieński Lagoon (Draft Spatial Development Plan for the Szczecin and Kamieński Lagoon) [75] | 2021 | |
Projekt planu zagospodarowania przestrzennego Zalewu Wiślanego (Draft Spatial Management Plan for the Vistula Lagoon) [76] | 2021 | |
Szczegółowy projekt planu zagospodarowania przestrzennego Zatoki Gdańskiej (Detailed design of the spatial development plan for the Gulf of Gdansk) [77] | 2021 | |
Study of Conditions of Spatial Development of Polish Sea Areas [78] | 2016 |
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Armoškaitė, A.; Bārda, I.; Andersone, I.; Bonnevie, I.M.; Ikauniece, A.; Kotta, J.; Kõivupuu, A.; Lees, L.; Psuty, I.; Strāķe, S.; et al. Considerations of Use-Use Interactions between Macroalgae Cultivation and Other Maritime Sectors: An Eastern Baltic MSP Case Study. Sustainability 2021, 13, 13888. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132413888
Armoškaitė A, Bārda I, Andersone I, Bonnevie IM, Ikauniece A, Kotta J, Kõivupuu A, Lees L, Psuty I, Strāķe S, et al. Considerations of Use-Use Interactions between Macroalgae Cultivation and Other Maritime Sectors: An Eastern Baltic MSP Case Study. Sustainability. 2021; 13(24):13888. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132413888
Chicago/Turabian StyleArmoškaitė, Aurelija, Ieva Bārda, Ingrīda Andersone, Ida Maria Bonnevie, Anda Ikauniece, Jonne Kotta, Anneliis Kõivupuu, Liisi Lees, Iwona Psuty, Solvita Strāķe, and et al. 2021. "Considerations of Use-Use Interactions between Macroalgae Cultivation and Other Maritime Sectors: An Eastern Baltic MSP Case Study" Sustainability 13, no. 24: 13888. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132413888
APA StyleArmoškaitė, A., Bārda, I., Andersone, I., Bonnevie, I. M., Ikauniece, A., Kotta, J., Kõivupuu, A., Lees, L., Psuty, I., Strāķe, S., Sprukta, S., Szymanek, L., von Thenen, M., Schrøder, L., & Hansen, H. S. (2021). Considerations of Use-Use Interactions between Macroalgae Cultivation and Other Maritime Sectors: An Eastern Baltic MSP Case Study. Sustainability, 13(24), 13888. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132413888