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Making the Ecosystem Approach Operational Mark Dickey-Collas, Ellen Johannesen ICES, Jason Link, Becky Shuford NOAA, Gabriella Bianchi FAO, M. Robin Andersen DFO, Erik Olsen, IMR
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Mark Dickey-Collas MSEAS 2016 Ecosystem approach

Apr 12, 2017

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Page 1: Mark Dickey-Collas MSEAS 2016 Ecosystem approach

Making the Ecosystem Approach OperationalMark Dickey-Collas, Ellen Johannesen ICES, Jason Link, Becky Shuford NOAA,

Gabriella Bianchi FAO, M. Robin Andersen DFO, Erik Olsen, IMR

Page 2: Mark Dickey-Collas MSEAS 2016 Ecosystem approach

Workshop January 2016

ObjectiveExplore strengths & weaknesses of recent implementation of Ecosystem Based Management, focus on challengesfor cross sectoral approaches.

Page 3: Mark Dickey-Collas MSEAS 2016 Ecosystem approach

Method• case studies• online survey• workshop sub groups54 participants

No forum or metrics to quantitatively compare examples

Case Studies

Page 4: Mark Dickey-Collas MSEAS 2016 Ecosystem approach

Why use Ecosystem Approach?

Political need – international and national commitmentsOperational benefits - trade-offs explicit, ownership of process, spectrum of approaches able to adapt to complex challenges

Page 5: Mark Dickey-Collas MSEAS 2016 Ecosystem approach

Shared common understandingBalancinghuman activities & environmentalstewardship in amultiple use context.

Image: ICES

Page 6: Mark Dickey-Collas MSEAS 2016 Ecosystem approach

Shared common understanding

• Evidence based, trans-multidisciplinary • Participatory • Adaptive management• Setting boundaries & limits• Evaluation

Picture Icelandic Wilderness

Page 7: Mark Dickey-Collas MSEAS 2016 Ecosystem approach

Properties of success

• transparent & trusted evidence base - honest brokers• mechanisms for setting objectives/priorities• players understand their role in the process• realistic ambitions • governance framework honours outcomes• “right” people at the “right” tables with equity• limits to understanding acknowledged • recognise existing sectoral objectives & incentives• participatory tool development

Most trusted in America

Page 8: Mark Dickey-Collas MSEAS 2016 Ecosystem approach

Short of expectations - governance

Differing expectations& time frames

Trust

Governance honouring outcomes

No shared articulated need

Incentives & stakeholder buy-in

Images: NOAA

Page 9: Mark Dickey-Collas MSEAS 2016 Ecosystem approach

Example: role of politcal leadership

Barents Sea, Norway LOMAs, Canada

Page 10: Mark Dickey-Collas MSEAS 2016 Ecosystem approach

Short of expectations – framework, methods

Role of science in an applied process

No clear framework for implementation

Few transferable metrics & shared currency for trade-offs

Policy ahead of science

Images: NOAA

Page 11: Mark Dickey-Collas MSEAS 2016 Ecosystem approach

Example: Policy ahead of understanding

Rice 2011Australia Oceans Policy 1998David Smith

OSPAR & MSFD EmilyCorcoran

but different on other areas

Page 12: Mark Dickey-Collas MSEAS 2016 Ecosystem approach

Example: buy-in & incentives

Small scale fishers, Ecuador

Celtic Seas Partnership

Shipping & whales, USA

Mark Monaco

Page 13: Mark Dickey-Collas MSEAS 2016 Ecosystem approach

Options for progress

• Develop frameworks for implementation • Acknowledge power of/ownership between sectors • Trade-offs • Use whatever governance mandate exist • Find a honest champion• Use momentum but temper expectations

See Sardà et al 2014, Ecosystem-based management system

Page 14: Mark Dickey-Collas MSEAS 2016 Ecosystem approach

Options for progress – personal note,from a scientist’s perspective

As they leave the science closet, knowledge brokers need to be aware& empathetic to the arena they are entering

Page 15: Mark Dickey-Collas MSEAS 2016 Ecosystem approach

Conclusions1. Broad agreement of concepts and best practices2. Successes - mechanisms for setting objectives & priorities, getting buy-in

while understanding respective roles and responsibilities, realistic ambitions & tangible knowledge base.

3. Failures - misunderstanding incentives, poor stake-holderbuy-in, and institutional & governance issues.

4. Greater attention to developing appropriate governanceframeworks & leadership, roles of actors in process

Picture Icelandic Wilderness

Page 16: Mark Dickey-Collas MSEAS 2016 Ecosystem approach

THANK YOU