Periodic Reporting for period 2 - PADDLE (Planning in A liquiD worlD with tropicaL StakEs: solutions from an EU-Africa-Brazil perspective)
Periodo di rendicontazione: 2019-07-01 al 2023-04-30
Sustainably managed oceans can stimulate economic growth and employment and allow the international community to meet its global targets, including the reduction of poverty and hunger. To this end, new frameworks like Marine spatial planning are needed to regulate and optimize the range of feasible uses of marine spaces and resources.
In some countries, political instability and the economic strength of transnational companies affects the balance of power in decision-making processes. For instance, MSP could open the way for ocean grabbing, i.e. « the dispossession or appropriation of use, control or access to ocean space or resources from prior resource users, rights holders or inhabitants » (Bennett, 2015; Wolf, 2015; Flannery et al., 2016). The risk of ocean grabbing is particularly high in tropical countries.
This project aimed at questioning the opportunities and limits of MSP in a Tropical Atlantic context, giving particular attention to the role of local communities like artisanal fisheries. There are three case study countries: Cabo Verde, Senegal and Brazil.
Realised secondments and organised events allowed scientific exchanges, capacity-building and the reinforcement of collaborations, contributing to the creation of a interdisciplinary network of experts on MSP in tropical Atlantic.
During the whole project, 5 workshops, an international conference, two official meetings and 1 summer school were organized and involved 420 participants. The summer school is certainly the event that has most contributed to this specific objective by training future researchers and MSP actors in tropical areas. The highlight of the second period was the training workshop for parliamentarians at the National Assembly of Senegal. This training workshop held in 2022 with 27 parliamentarians and members of the Network of Parliamentarians for the Environment of Senegal (REPES) contributed to strengthen the skills of prospective thinking and anticipation on marine spatial planning of parliamentarians.
Furthermore, the workshops and conferences (D1.5 D3.1 D4.1 D5-2) held in Cabo Verde, Senegal, France and Brazil, respectively, made it possible to launch multi-partner experiences and to have reflections that transcend traditional sectors of activity.
During the project, several secondees have seen their careers evolve very favorably. Some students have been able to find funding for their theses (i.e. Marianna Schiavetti from Brazil, who has been doing her thesis in France since 2020). Doctoral students have been able to carry out expert work in the field of MSP (i.e. Philippe Fotso). Managers/technicians have joined the academic world (i.e. Odeline Billant). Several secondees have also been appointed in the government of their respective countries (i.e. Fatou Ndiaye and Souleye Ndao in Senegal, Falvia Lucena-Fredou in Brazil).
Films highlighting the work of various participants in the project have also been produced. They allow to reinforce the visibility of the people and their research. They are available on the project website.
The members of the project have participated in several international congresses and international publications. The list of the 148 publications is presented in the report.
Mapping of uses in marine environments plays an important role by giving a picture of spatial allocation of uses, but still needs some improvement in order to fully represent the three dimensions of maritime uses (the sea surface, the water column, the seabed) and timeline. PADDLE Project has helped to understand the involvement and equilibrium of Tropical Stakeholders, their views on- and potential involvement in – the development of the maritime economy and in the emergence of conflicts. It will also focus on exchanges concerning innovation in stakeholder interactions.
In fine, Marine Spatial Planning can be understood as a problem of optimization (of uses and spaces) under constraint (reduction of conflicts, preservation of biodiversity, etc.). To achieve this optimization objective, institutions in charge of governance and management generally rely on spatially explicit decision support tools (DST, Decision Support Tools) that incorporate data describing ecological, legal, economic and social systems, and transparently assess management alternatives and trade-offs.
Different tools exist to date, whose strengths and limitations depend on the community and the issue that guided their development. However, their proliferation, the diversity of their approaches, and their varying degrees of technical accessibility, make it difficult to develop standardized strategic impact studies. PADDLE project has proposed ways to take into account local communities and the marine environment in public policies for Marine Spatial Planning, in particular through the handbook presenting the challenges and opportunities of marine spatial planning in the tropical Atlantic.