Coordination and Participation Boards under the European Water Framework Directive: Different Approaches Used in Some EU Countries
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. River Basin Planning under the EU Water Framework Directive
3. Conceptual Framework to Analyse CPBs
4. Materials and Methods
5. Results
5.1. Centralized Approach for WFD Implementation
5.1.1. Denmark
5.1.2. England and Wales
5.2. (Decentralized) Federal Approach for WFD Implementation
Germany
5.3. (Decentralized) Traditional River Basin Approach for WFD Implementation
5.3.1. Italy
5.3.2. France
5.3.3. Spain
5.4. (Decentralized) Adaptive River Basin Approach for WFD Implementation
Sweden
6. Discussion
6.1. Denmark and England: Softening the Top-down Approach (Apparently?)
- Scale. Denmark and England have both reformed their water governance structures moving from the first to the second implementation cycle. Interestingly, both countries opted for the sub-RBD scale as the optimal level for enhancing coordination and participation rather than the RBD scale. In England, the appropriateness of the sub-basin scale was endorsed both by the government and the involved organizations [50]. In Denmark, the large-scale river basin approach is perceived as a limiting factor since the size of the RBD is considered to be too broad to facilitate access to local knowledge [47].
- Type of coordination. As Figure 1 shows, in either case, the structure for WFD implementation is top-down, with the NA and EA leading the planning process. The presence of WCs and CPs certainly softens the hierarchical approach to coordination; in Denmark, as it will be discussed in the next point, collaborative planning has occurred in some cases. In alignment with Wegrich and Stimac [31], we could argue that in Denmark, a mix of hierarchical coordination and of positive horizontal coordination achieved through CPBs, is in place. In England, the hierarchical approach seems to still dominate in the implementation process as it is discussed in the next point.
- Type of participation. The three dimensions of participation identified by Newig and Koontz, display quite differently in the two countries. Concerning representation and information flow, in Denmark, decisions on who can have access to the process are defined within the fixed regulatory framework given by the NA. Participation was limited to stakeholder organizations, with an uneven representation of interest groups, generally in favor of agricultural water users [72]. The strict framework provided by the NA, defining timing, funding allocations, competences and influence of WCs on PoMs elaboration, allowed WCs and municipalities to work effectively [47] but limits these participatory processes to ‘expanded stakeholder consultation’ and does not provide any possibilities for active public involvement [72]. Concerning the influence, in Denmark the measures concerning stream management proposed through the collaboration of the municipalities and WCs were adopted by the NA for the development of RBMPs [47]. In this case, CPBs were given a deliberative power to identify the most cost-effective measures and the clear regulatory framework provided by the NA, together with funding allocation, allowed an effective co-production of PoMs [47]. However, a second factor explains this successful collaborative planning and relates to the role of municipalities in the planning process. Municipalities, in fact, by acting as facilitators and intermediaries between the central level and lower level of decision-making, established a link between the loci of knowledge production and those of policy formulation. Scholars highlight the need for institutions that act as ‘interface’ to ensure that the results of collaborative planning are integrated into the decision-making processes [73] and for the active participation of decision-makers in continuous learning processes [74]. In the Danish case, municipalities fulfill both needs and this may explain the elaboration of collaborative planning.
6.2. Germany: To Change or Not to Change?
- Scale. In Germany, long-term participatory institutions have been established at the sub-RBD scale to comply with WFD requirements. These CPBs, together with the Lander, determine how the policies are shaped and implemented in practice, despite the WFD requirement of large-scale river basin management [57].
- Type of coordination. Cross-administrative coordination in Germany occur at supra-federal state level, within the LAWA, and at sub-basin level, though AC and WGs. However, since the development of joint RBMPs among Lander belonging to the same RBD is not general practice, we consider only coordination carried out at sub-basin scale. The authors found that the AC supported the ‘mutual understanding of the views and positions of stakeholders and even help to develop a shared perception of problems’ [76]. This may suggest the achievement of positive horizontal self-coordination within the AC.
- Type of participation. CPBs in Germany usually include several interest groups from both public and private domains. Municipalities, local water authorities, farmers and fishery associations, environmental NGOs, water boards and state representatives usually participate in AC or WGs [20]. However, many authors highlight the uneven representation of environmental concerns compared to agricultural interests and highlight the risk for ‘co-optation’ of environmental actors from stronger interest groups [42]. Participation through AC has similar characteristics with the WCs in Denmark in terms of expanded stakeholder consultations and is found to be effective in promoting social outcomes such as networking, satisfaction of participants, mutual understanding and shared perceptions of environmental problems [20,76]. Concerning influence, the extent to which the decisions made by the CPBs are actually considered by the federal ministries of environment for the development of RBMPs and PoMs is questionable. Scholars found a limited impact of the measures identified by the WGs or AC on the final draft elaborated by the federal ministry for the environment [20,34,42,57]. There may be strategic reasons behind the decision of using measures identified by the CPBs only as a general reference [34]; in addition, water planning in larger and aggregated management units cannot be, by nature, as specific as local water planning [42]. However, authors identify other reasons that may explain the low capacity of the CPBs to influence decision-making. The first relates to the unclear framework provided by the federal state environmental agency to define CPBs’ functioning. Koontz and Newig [34] indicated that the guidelines given by the federal state environmental agency to AC in Lower Saxony were vague and unclear about how the CPBs could structure their work. This caused performance to vary across working groups of AC even for substantial aspects, such as how to propose measures and how to decide which ones to include in the final draft [34]. The second aspect is intrinsic of the complex shift from administrative-based to hydrological-based water planning. Germany, like almost all EU countries, should consider who decides ‘in this complex balance between local basin bodies and federal national administrations’ [3]; otherwise, it runs the risk of creating two disconnected governance levels, which will end up in confusion, conflicts and overlaps [73].
6.3. Italy, France and Spain: Keeping the Status Quo?
- Scale. Italy, France and Spain established planning and the management of water bodies along hydrological boundaries before the WFD. Moreover, all these countries set up competent authorities and CPBs at the RBD scale to comply with the Directive’s requirements.
- Type of coordination. Despite these commonalities, the results in terms of coordination for river basin planning are rather different. After the first implementation cycle in Italy, RBMPs were a simple collection of regional water protection plans without clear coordination mechanisms at RBD in place [13]. Regional administrations in Italy have had competences in water protection and management since the 1970s; consequently, it would be illogical, even risky, to completely change the water governance structure. However, as Rainaldi [60] explains, problems emerge because a number of planning tools, such as the river basin plans established by Law 183/1989 and regional water protection plans established with the Legislative Decree 152/1999, coexist and overlap with RBMPs without the law clearly defining the roles and hierarchies of these different planning instruments. These overlaps, together with the great delay in providing RBDAs with their full functions, significantly affected the capacity of coordination for RBMPs development. Using Wegrich and Stimac definitions [31], Italy shows the features of negative horizontal coordination although improvements from the first to the second cycle are evident at least for some RBDs (see for example the second implementation cycle in Alpi Orientali RBD at http://www.alpiorientali.it/).
- Type of participation. In contrast to the other countries analysed, in Italy, the implementation of the WFD has not prompted the creation of CPBs at the sub-RBD level, where participation would deliver more effective results. Certainly, a number of participatory initiatives do exist within regional administrations, but it is not evident how these are related to the development of RBMPs and PoMs. Official planning for the WFD remains structured with top-down and technocratic approaches, as proven by the inclusion of few stakeholders in the decisional bodies of RBDAs. In France, both the BC and CLE provide robust platforms for stakeholders’ consultation. Although citizens are not directly engaged in the decision-making processes, both the BC and CLE are composed of elected representatives, giving an indirect voice to citizens.
6.4. Sweden: Is full Compliance Enough?
- Scale. Sweden has established functional water jurisdictions, the RBDAs, and participatory bodies, the WCs, at hydrological scales to comply with the WFD. At least in terms of formal adaptation to EU requirements, Sweden can be considered the ‘the leap-frog’ [14], questioning traditional implementation theories, such as the goodness-to-fit approach, which hypothesizes that when domestic policy arrangements diverge from European requirements, implementation effectiveness is likely to be low [81].
- Type of coordination. However, in this new governance setting, the municipal level is still relevant in terms of water and land-use planning. The addition of the new governance layer for water planning, the RBD, is causing problems of coordination because competences that were exclusively under the jurisdiction of municipalities are now shared with the RBDAs [69]. Despite the WFD implementation enhanced coordination within and between municipalities, as well as positive coordination between concerned parties at different administrative levels, there is a risk of a ‘disintegrative process’ between water planning and land-use planning [69].
- Type of participation. Participatory process in Sweden reflects the technical/scientific approach for WFD implementation that the country has undertaken (for instance, the environmental quality standards are legally binding in the country). For this reason, public participation in Sweden is more conceived as stakeholder consultation rather than active involvement of civil society, despite that large representation of interest groups is provided by WCs [71]. WCs are based on pre-existing water associations and their effectiveness in engaging local stakeholders and undertaking measures seems to be related to the legacy of cooperation capacity that was in place under pre-existing organizations [71]. A recent study highlighted the need to refine the role of WCs as municipalities do not consult WCs to ask advice on implementation [70]. According to Dawson et al. [16], the WCs provide a good basis for improving the integration of multiple kinds of knowledge into decisions, but this collective knowledge production is still separated from decision-making procedures. Combining scientific and local knowledge to develop RBMPs and PoMs is not an easy task, as evidenced by Hammer et al. [82]. Some authors argue that the technocratic structure for the implementation of WFD, which is focused on water quality goals and data-oriented, somehow conflicts with learning and knowledge integration that WCs should enhance [16].
7. Conclusions
- in water governance, there are no ‘one-size-fits-all’ solutions, and the analysis of the countries confirmed that CPBs have to fit existing governance structures;
- if coordinated and participatory planning is needed to safeguard and improve the quality of water bodies, then the sub-RBD level should be given a primary role by the European Commission. The rule established by Article 13 that ‘...decisions should be taken as close as possible to the locations where water is affected or used’ (WFD) can be effectively achieved only at a level lower than the RBD;
- to avoid losing the knowledge acquired through the CPBs, a clearer linkage between the top-down and bottom-up dimensions of WFD implementation is fundamental regardless of the institutional legacy of the country. The EC should encourage, and Member States should establish, a connection between the arenas engaged in learning, networking and knowledge exchange and those where decisions are made;
- there is a lack of knowledge on how planning and implementation activities carried out at sub-RBD are aggregated and coordinated for the entire District. In our opinion, the requirement of the WFD that all PoMs are ‘coordinated for the whole of the river basin district’ (Article 3, WFD) cannot be achieved only by a formal aggregation of measures established at different levels of the RBD but requires a greater effort of coordination among public administrations concerned with the implementation. Research could further contribute to this issue, by focusing on coordination mechanisms and problems that occur at the RBD level.
- the conceptual framework we adopted in in this paper could provide guidance for empirical research on the topic. Quantitative methods, such as the Social Network Analysis, could support the analysis of what type of coordination strategies exist among the set of actors engaged with decision-making. Moreover, specific indicators on the type of coordination and participation among public and private stakeholders could be applied: e.g., for coordination, the number and frequency of interactions among public authorities as well as the scope and the frequency of joint activities, while, for participation the degree of stakeholders’ satisfaction for participatory processes [83].
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Theoretical Background | Factors | Research Question | Options |
---|---|---|---|
Spatial fit | Scale | At what scale are CPBs established? | Administrative RBD Sub-RBD |
Coordination in public management and administration | Type of coordination | How is coordination among administrations within the same RBD achieved? | Hierarchical coordination Negative horizontal self-coordination Positive horizontal self-coordination |
Participatory governance | Type of participation | How are civil society’s interests included in RBMPs? | Representation Information flow Influence on decision-making |
Country | CPB | Scale | Type of Coordination | Type of Participation |
---|---|---|---|---|
Denmark | Water Council | Sub-RBD | Hierarchical + positive horizontal coordination | Representation: Medium Information flow: Stakeholders consultation Influence: High |
England and Wales | Catchment Partnership | Sub-RBD | Hierarchical coordination | Representation: Low Information flow: Stakeholders consultation and active engagement Influence: Low |
Germany | Area Cooperation Working Group | Sub-RBD | Information not available for the RBD, While positive horizontal coordination within AC | Representation: Medium Information flow: Stakeholders consultation Influence: Low |
Italy | RBD Authority | RBD | Negative horizontal coordination | Representation: Low Information flow: Stakeholders consultation (mostly regional and state representatives) Influence: Low |
France | Basin Committee Water authority | RBD and Sub-RBD | Positive horizontal coordination | Representation: Medium Information flow: Stakeholders consultation Influence: High |
Spain | National Water Council Confederaciónes Hidrográficas | National and RBD | n.a. (not available) | Representation: High Information flow: Stakeholders consultation and active engagement Influence: mixed results |
Sweden | RBD Authority Water Council | RBD and Sub-RBD | Positive horizontal coordination at municipal and RBD level. No clear coordination between the two levels | Representation: Medium Information flow: Stakeholders consultation Influence: Low |
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Pellegrini, E.; Bortolini, L.; Defrancesco, E. Coordination and Participation Boards under the European Water Framework Directive: Different Approaches Used in Some EU Countries. Water 2019, 11, 833. https://doi.org/10.3390/w11040833
Pellegrini E, Bortolini L, Defrancesco E. Coordination and Participation Boards under the European Water Framework Directive: Different Approaches Used in Some EU Countries. Water. 2019; 11(4):833. https://doi.org/10.3390/w11040833
Chicago/Turabian StylePellegrini, Emilia, Lucia Bortolini, and Edi Defrancesco. 2019. "Coordination and Participation Boards under the European Water Framework Directive: Different Approaches Used in Some EU Countries" Water 11, no. 4: 833. https://doi.org/10.3390/w11040833
APA StylePellegrini, E., Bortolini, L., & Defrancesco, E. (2019). Coordination and Participation Boards under the European Water Framework Directive: Different Approaches Used in Some EU Countries. Water, 11(4), 833. https://doi.org/10.3390/w11040833