“It’s a no brainerâ€: Ensuring just transitions in Iceland’s fishing industry

Iceland’s government intends to achieve carbon neutrality by 2040, aiming to target various economic sectors and industries for increased renewable-energy usage. One of its most important plans revolves renewable-energy usage in the fishing industry, which accounts for almost 12% of the country’...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bowers, Olivia
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: SIT Digital Collections 2024
Subjects:
Oil
Gas
Online Access:https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/isp_collection/3766
https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/context/isp_collection/article/4790/viewcontent/bowersolvia_It_s_a_no_brainer___Ensuring_just_transitions_in_Iceland_s_fishing_industry.pdf
id ftworldlearning:oai:digitalcollections.sit.edu:isp_collection-4790
record_format openpolar
spelling ftworldlearning:oai:digitalcollections.sit.edu:isp_collection-4790 2024-09-15T18:40:25+00:00 “It’s a no brainerâ€: Ensuring just transitions in Iceland’s fishing industry Bowers, Olivia 2024-04-01T07:00:00Z application/pdf https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/isp_collection/3766 https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/context/isp_collection/article/4790/viewcontent/bowersolvia_It_s_a_no_brainer___Ensuring_just_transitions_in_Iceland_s_fishing_industry.pdf unknown SIT Digital Collections https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/isp_collection/3766 https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/context/isp_collection/article/4790/viewcontent/bowersolvia_It_s_a_no_brainer___Ensuring_just_transitions_in_Iceland_s_fishing_industry.pdf Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection Agricultural and Resource Economics Aquaculture and Fisheries Climate Oil Gas and Energy Regional Economics Social Justice Sustainability text 2024 ftworldlearning 2024-07-30T23:37:47Z Iceland’s government intends to achieve carbon neutrality by 2040, aiming to target various economic sectors and industries for increased renewable-energy usage. One of its most important plans revolves renewable-energy usage in the fishing industry, which accounts for almost 12% of the country’s GHG emissions. This study aims to understand the perspectives of different stakeholders concerning renewable energy in the fishing industry, using these opinions and existing literature to provide recommendations for a just, equitable, and achievable energy transition. Additionally, this study particularly focuses on the opinions of actors in Vestmannaeyjar, an island community of 4,300 with an especially vibrant, significant, and energy-intensive fishing sector. Through interviews with fifteen stakeholders involved in all levels of Vestmannaeyjar’s fishing industry, as well as complementary data from a survey conducted in 2023 on Icelandic small-scale fisheries’ (SSFs) responses to renewable-energy usage, this project illustrates the importance of financial, technological, and political barriers to fisheries’ adoption of renewable energy and the divides between SSFs and large, industrial fisheries concerning knowledge-sharing, ecosystem management, and Iceland’s individual transferrable quota (ITQ) system. Using this data, this paper then provides recommendations for encouraging renewable-energy usage in the fishing industry – including financial incentives, mechanisms for greater inclusion of stakeholders in the policy process, and the transformation of practices and behaviors regarding energy usage. Text Vestmannaeyjar SIT Digital Collections
institution Open Polar
collection SIT Digital Collections
op_collection_id ftworldlearning
language unknown
topic Agricultural and Resource Economics
Aquaculture and Fisheries
Climate
Oil
Gas
and Energy
Regional Economics
Social Justice
Sustainability
spellingShingle Agricultural and Resource Economics
Aquaculture and Fisheries
Climate
Oil
Gas
and Energy
Regional Economics
Social Justice
Sustainability
Bowers, Olivia
“It’s a no brainerâ€: Ensuring just transitions in Iceland’s fishing industry
topic_facet Agricultural and Resource Economics
Aquaculture and Fisheries
Climate
Oil
Gas
and Energy
Regional Economics
Social Justice
Sustainability
description Iceland’s government intends to achieve carbon neutrality by 2040, aiming to target various economic sectors and industries for increased renewable-energy usage. One of its most important plans revolves renewable-energy usage in the fishing industry, which accounts for almost 12% of the country’s GHG emissions. This study aims to understand the perspectives of different stakeholders concerning renewable energy in the fishing industry, using these opinions and existing literature to provide recommendations for a just, equitable, and achievable energy transition. Additionally, this study particularly focuses on the opinions of actors in Vestmannaeyjar, an island community of 4,300 with an especially vibrant, significant, and energy-intensive fishing sector. Through interviews with fifteen stakeholders involved in all levels of Vestmannaeyjar’s fishing industry, as well as complementary data from a survey conducted in 2023 on Icelandic small-scale fisheries’ (SSFs) responses to renewable-energy usage, this project illustrates the importance of financial, technological, and political barriers to fisheries’ adoption of renewable energy and the divides between SSFs and large, industrial fisheries concerning knowledge-sharing, ecosystem management, and Iceland’s individual transferrable quota (ITQ) system. Using this data, this paper then provides recommendations for encouraging renewable-energy usage in the fishing industry – including financial incentives, mechanisms for greater inclusion of stakeholders in the policy process, and the transformation of practices and behaviors regarding energy usage.
format Text
author Bowers, Olivia
author_facet Bowers, Olivia
author_sort Bowers, Olivia
title “It’s a no brainerâ€: Ensuring just transitions in Iceland’s fishing industry
title_short “It’s a no brainerâ€: Ensuring just transitions in Iceland’s fishing industry
title_full “It’s a no brainerâ€: Ensuring just transitions in Iceland’s fishing industry
title_fullStr “It’s a no brainerâ€: Ensuring just transitions in Iceland’s fishing industry
title_full_unstemmed “It’s a no brainerâ€: Ensuring just transitions in Iceland’s fishing industry
title_sort “it’s a no brainerâ€: ensuring just transitions in iceland’s fishing industry
publisher SIT Digital Collections
publishDate 2024
url https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/isp_collection/3766
https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/context/isp_collection/article/4790/viewcontent/bowersolvia_It_s_a_no_brainer___Ensuring_just_transitions_in_Iceland_s_fishing_industry.pdf
genre Vestmannaeyjar
genre_facet Vestmannaeyjar
op_source Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection
op_relation https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/isp_collection/3766
https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/context/isp_collection/article/4790/viewcontent/bowersolvia_It_s_a_no_brainer___Ensuring_just_transitions_in_Iceland_s_fishing_industry.pdf
_version_ 1810484724911570944