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An NGO perspective to Blue Growth Rencontres internationales de la biodiversité marine et côtière Nicolas Fournier | 13/14 Nov 2012
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2 Oceana – Who are we? › MARINE-FOCUSED: Oceana is 100 % dedicated to restoring and protecting oceans to return them to former levels of abundance. › GLOBALLY-LOCATED: Campaign teams are located in North America; Europe (Madrid, Copenhagen, Brussels); South America and Central America. › CAMPAIGN-DRIVEN: Our resources support a small number of strategically-chosen campaigns that achieve specific policy outcomes and help protect the marine environment. › SCIENCE-BASED: Science is essential to identifying problems and finding solutions that matter, which is why Oceana’s campaigners work closely with marine biologists and other ocean scientists. Habitats protectionResponsible fishingClimate, energy, pollution
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Oceana – our approach › Expeditions › Documentation of vulnerable species and habitats / illegal fishing › Scientific reports › Lobby and advocacy to achieve policy changes › Awareness campaign (media, events, marketing strategies) 3
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› Recent EC Communication on Blue Growth, fail to recognize the current degradation of EU seas › NGOs concerned with some of its priorities Good Environmental Status by 2020 is a prerequisite for blue growth agenda, as healthy marine environment is the foundation for the development of a sustainable maritime economy. No reference to the precautionary principle to avoid to support activities that deplete marine resources and risk irreversible damages. Limits to growth – technology, efficiency and innovation are not enough. Inspired by the imperative of constant growth, but need to focus on prosperity for society instead. Marine Spatial Planning is not the panacea – a mix of policy instruments is necessary to ensure human activities developments do not compromise environmental legislations. 4 Blue Growth VS Sustainable Blue Economy
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› Implementation of the Marine Strategy Framework Directive As an overarching and guiding objective Initial assessment report 2012, and national strategies by 2015 › Integrate environmental dimension into planning tools (MSP/ICZM) › Appropriateness of actions at local and regional levels Good balance political/ecological scale Driving force of policy developments in coastal territories Vulnerability of coastal areas to climate change Opportunity to « re-connect » nature with people Attractiveness of maritime regions through improved quality Why should local authorities care? 5
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› EU coasts often major population center with high usages › Coastal MPAs to engage sucessfully with local users Better social acceptability and understanding Enhance local involvement in management issues, sense of ownership and responsibility Show-case tangible benefits felt locally: fisheries recovery, ecotourism, water quality, climate resilience, community benefits Opportunities for innovative funding schemes (private/public), develop financial independence Communicate benefits of marine biodiversity (awards, labels) › One’s own action can make a difference ! MPAs as an effective contribution to conservation approaches 6
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Thank you! nfournier@oceana.org
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