Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/39495
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| Title: | Assessment of Cumulative Effects for Environmental Management of Deep-sea Areas Targeted for Resource Extraction |
| Authors: | Radziejewska, Teresa Madureira, Pedro Mianowicz, Kamila |
| Editors: | Sharma, Rahul |
| Keywords: | Deep-sea mining Environmental management Cumulative effects assessment Cumulative impacts assessment |
| Issue Date: | 2025 |
| Publisher: | Springer |
| Citation: | Deep-Sea Mining Management, Policy
and Regulation;
Data Management, Environmental
Monitoring, Techno-Economic Assessment,
Law of the Sea and Regulatory Regimes |
| Abstract: | Deep-sea mining (DSM) is viewed as a nascent industry which, while
providing resources necessary for the transition to “green economy,” will make it
possible to avoid political and environmental challenges of terrestrial mining. On
the other hand, DSM is also perceived as an unwelcome intervention into the deep sea environment and an activity that poses a strong environmental risk as it may be
a driver of substantial harm to the marine environment. It is also increasingly fre quently pointed out that the environmental stressors acting upon the deep-sea envi ronment will not occur or act separately, in isolation, but will instead interact and
intertwine to produce consequences (effects) resulting from cumulation or synergy
of impacts. The effects may propagate and affect multiple ecosystem components.
The assessment of cumulative effects from impacts in any marine environment con stitutes a major challenge for both science and management, the challenge being
made more acute in the deep-sea environment because of the prevalent data paucity
regarding deep-sea ecosystems. Nevertheless, there is a universal agreement that
cumulative effects have to be assessed to minimize uncertainties and to increase the
reliability of models and projections of future developments in a deep-sea area sub jected to human intervention. This chapter explores how the assessment of cumula tive impacts/effects features in the ecosystem approach toward anthropogenic interventions (including DSM) in the marine environment and in the adaptive man agement, how it is approached in various deep-sea settings, and how it can be, and
has so far been, implemented. |
| URI: | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-92737-9 http://hdl.handle.net/10174/39495 |
| Type: | bookPart |
| Appears in Collections: | GEO - Publicações - Capítulos de Livros
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