Risk frames and multiple ways of knowing : Coping with ambiguity in oil spill risk governance in the Norwegian Barents Sea

The opening of new areas for offshore drilling in the Arctic is highly controversial. As ice cover in the region is melting at an alarming rate, new areas have been opened for petroleum industry in the Norwegian Barents Sea. Our qualitative analysis examines risks related to the petroleum operations...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Environmental Science & Policy
Main Authors: Parviainen, Tuuli, Lehikoinen, Annukka, Kuikka, Sakari, Haapasaari, Päivi
Other Authors: Helsinki Institute of Sustainability Science (HELSUS), Fisheries and Environmental Management Group, Marine risk governance group, Ecosystems and Environment Research Programme, Creative adaptation to wicked socio-environmental disruptions (WISE STN), University Management, Environmental Sciences, Staff Services
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10138/302004
Description
Summary:The opening of new areas for offshore drilling in the Arctic is highly controversial. As ice cover in the region is melting at an alarming rate, new areas have been opened for petroleum industry in the Norwegian Barents Sea. Our qualitative analysis examines risks related to the petroleum operations in the newly opened areas and provides insight into the complex and socially constructed nature of the risks. With the use of visual influence diagram- based mental modelling approach, we demonstrate the multiple ways in which the risks are understood and defined. We also analyse the type of knowledge that the risk frames are based on. The influence diagrams present the risk frames in a clear, visual, form. The study indicates that the existing governance framework fails to treat the ambiguity around oil spill risks: the current risk assessments and risk management do not reflect on the multiple ways in which the participants in this study 1) frame the problem situation, 2) how they identify different measures to manage risks, and 3) what are considered as key knowledge needs and knowledge producers by the participants. We suggest that social learning and collaborative knowledge production are needed to move towards developing shared understanding of the problem situation. Finally, we suggest that the rigorous examination and the unveiling of ambiguity may help developing deliberative risk governance measures and moving towards sustainability transformations. Peer reviewed