Governance for Sustainability of Estuarine Areas—Assessing Alternative Models Using the Case of Ria de Aveiro, Portugal
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. A Literature Review on Estuary Governance
3. Theoretical Assumptions of Governance Models
4. Methods and Information
- Introduction to the main setting features of the case study area based on published literature and legislation on water resources governance in place;
- Identification of the main weaknesses of the current governance approach based on the legislation and focus group context;
- Identification and broad description of the alternative governance models based on the literature mentioned in Section 3 and on the analysis of the Portuguese legislation; and
- Assessment of the models, first, by identifying their major pros and cons, and second, by classifying them according to a set of governance factors obtained from the literature review [62], namely:
- if they require major institutional reforms, i.e., new rearrangements or tiers of government, competences, and scope of responsibilities;
- if they require new practices, i.e., learning new skills and improving the pursuance of current responsibilities and related processes;
- if they are easily understandable by communities and likely to reinforce trust relationships;
- if they are adaptable and open to uncertainty, risk, and new decision-making processes;
- if they are focused on the estuary as a spatial unit; and
- if they are capable of ensuring collaborative practices with all stakeholders.
5. Assessing Alternative Governance Models for Ria de Aveiro
5.1. Background Features
5.2. Current Major Governance Problems
- It is materialized in a complex, and often poorly articulated, network of policy objectives, plans, standards, and actions, dispersed by multiple entities with different affinities and closeness to the Ria de Aveiro.
- The responsibilities for the management of the water and wetland area, one of the most important management components in the Ria de Aveiro, are currently assigned to the Portuguese Agency of Environment, IP, based in Lisbon, putting into question the principle of subsidiarity. The implementation of tasks through decentralized services is carried out with insufficient human, technical, and financial resources. In addition, successive institutional metamorphoses of public agencies responsible for water resources management, in particular at the regional level, have contributed to degrading trust levels between public administration and water resources users.
- There are other relevant public agencies related to agriculture, fisheries, aquaculture, industry, spatial planning, navigation, or civil protection, which in the absence of an integrated reference framework to guide decision-making, lack coordination and cooperation and fail to deliver the necessary integrated governance approach.
- Stakeholders’ dissatisfaction with public administration has been quite evident. It also conveys a public perception that the lack of adequate management worsens the loss of value, not only environmental but also social and economic. In addition, the existing institutional mechanisms that would allow for more accountability and public participation are spread out in multiple procedures with few opportunities for a collective vision to be discussed and built in a consistent manner.
5.3. Assessment of Alternative Models
- The “centrally based compliance model” relies on the current governance framework, with the allocation of responsibilities to the various existing government agencies and associated procedures, but is enriched with an estuary plan, where goals and rules for the protection and use of the estuarine area are to be established.
- The “municipal community-based compliance model” is based on the delegation of the current powers from the central government agencies to the Inter-municipal Community of Aveiro Region (CIRA). It would also be supported by a decision-making reference framework, i.e., an estuary plan (as mentioned in the previous model).
- The “collaborative model” is based on a system of governance through the main users of Ria de Aveiro, equated by the creation of an association of water users. This model would require a decision framework plan built out of a collective building process.
- The “multi-sector government agency model” is based on the creation of a new multilevel government agency with its own resources and autonomy, merging the different expertise and government responsibilities with particular relevance to the Ria into a single organisation. A decision-making framework plan would also be needed.
6. Discussion
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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The Centrally-Based Compliance Model | The Municipal Community-Based Compliance Model | The Collaborative Model | The Multi-Sector Government Agency Model | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Pros | - It facilitates the link to European and national water and nature conservation programs - It has fewer drawbacks on legal grounds, as it is the state defining the principles and rules to guide the decision-making | - It earns from the experience of inter-municipal collaboration - It is close to the lagoon, its problems, and challenges - It is close to the local users and to the regional authorities | - It responds to the conveyed willingness of users to participate in decision-making - It may be less sensitive to political cycles - It may address adaptive resource management | - It may simplify permitting procedures of uses in the estuary - It may join the best procedures from different agencies into the new institutional framework - It facilitates institutional cooperation |
Cons | - It is unlikely to significantly change current rules in use - It is prone to gaps and rigidity problems which may hinder the necessary adaptive management required for strong environmental and economic dynamic contexts | - The delegation of powers from all the relevant agencies into Inter-municipal Community of Aveiro Region (CIRA) is unlikely - It does not assure effective institutional consultation - It requires a significant institutional capacity - It is vulnerable to political cycles - It requires significant supporting political | - It would not guarantee the inclusion of all relevant stakeholders - It would lead to a very complex collaboration process due to the wide variety of users - There is no experience with such collaborative practices | - It is unlikely under the political and administrative circumstances - It would raise legal and institutional difficulties - It would not guarantee, per se, the involvement of stakeholders - It would require high organizational resources |
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Fidélis, T.; Teles, F.; Roebeling, P.; Riazi, F. Governance for Sustainability of Estuarine Areas—Assessing Alternative Models Using the Case of Ria de Aveiro, Portugal. Water 2019, 11, 846. https://doi.org/10.3390/w11040846
Fidélis T, Teles F, Roebeling P, Riazi F. Governance for Sustainability of Estuarine Areas—Assessing Alternative Models Using the Case of Ria de Aveiro, Portugal. Water. 2019; 11(4):846. https://doi.org/10.3390/w11040846
Chicago/Turabian StyleFidélis, Teresa, Filipe Teles, Peter Roebeling, and Fayaz Riazi. 2019. "Governance for Sustainability of Estuarine Areas—Assessing Alternative Models Using the Case of Ria de Aveiro, Portugal" Water 11, no. 4: 846. https://doi.org/10.3390/w11040846
APA StyleFidélis, T., Teles, F., Roebeling, P., & Riazi, F. (2019). Governance for Sustainability of Estuarine Areas—Assessing Alternative Models Using the Case of Ria de Aveiro, Portugal. Water, 11(4), 846. https://doi.org/10.3390/w11040846