Adaptation to climate change–related ocean acidification:An adaptive governance approach

Climate change-driven ocean acidification (OA) is causing rapid change to global ecosystems and poses a significant threat to marine life. However, predicting ecosystem effects remains highly uncertain and governance responses to OA are not yet forthcoming. Adaptive governance can provide a means to...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Ocean & Coastal Management
Main Authors: Greenhill, Lucy, Kenter, Jasper O., Dannevig, Halvor
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pure.uhi.ac.uk/en/publications/a5dfed92-af94-4ca3-bfc0-1b22258318c5
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2020.105176
https://pureadmin.uhi.ac.uk/ws/files/8225712/Pre_Print_Greenhill_et_al_Ocean_Acidification_and_Adaptive_Governance.pdf
https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0964569120300867
Description
Summary:Climate change-driven ocean acidification (OA) is causing rapid change to global ecosystems and poses a significant threat to marine life. However, predicting ecosystem effects remains highly uncertain and governance responses to OA are not yet forthcoming. Adaptive governance can provide a means to deal with this uncertainty and we consider its application to the polycentric governance of adaptation responses to OA in Scotland, focussing on the aquaculture industry as a vulnerable sector. A workshop was used to develop potential responses to OA and to gain information about present and potential capacity for adaptive governance at national and regional levels. Scottish legislation, policy and planning documents were subsequently analysed to enable description of how governance and management arrangements constrain or enable adaptation responses. Legislative and policy analysis indicates convergence across emerging mechanisms in support of adaptive governance and identified interventions. Recent advances in climate change adaptation in Scotland promotes integration of adaptation into wider Scottish Government policy development and functions, based on iterative and collaborative processes across scales. Alongside this, new models of coastal and marine governance, including a partnership-led regional marine planning process and devolution of seabed management rights under Crown Estate Scotland, seek to advance new models of locally-led and learning-based planning and management which can support adaptation responses. However, adaptation measures at operational scale requires flexibility in the aquaculture licensing regime which is currently of low adaptive capacity. Further, expansion of the industry faces social and ecological constraints which limit spatial measures, and are complicated by uncertainty in predicting local OA effects. Expanding the use of holistic and co-operative management tools such as Aquaculture Management Areas could support adaptation across wider spatial scales. Better integration across ...