Environmental Management: Principles and practice
Estuaries and enclosed or coastal seas
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5 2020 03 04!03 12 11 PM
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- Lessons the environmental manager can learn from study of sensitive environments
Estuaries and enclosed or coastal seas
World-wide, marine environments with restricted circulation have suffered from pollution and overfishing. The Baltic, Caspian, North Sea, Aegean and Japanese Inland Sea have suffered. Effective commercial management demands control over the catchment areas that contribute pollution and in many cases international co- operation (see chapter 3). Rivers Failure to take proper care of the environmental management of river systems can have severe consequences for the riverine ecosystem, adjoining floodlands, estuaries and nearby seas. Enclosed seas and lakes are especially vulnerable to poor river management. The Aral Sea is a clear example of the environmental degradation and socioeconomic misery which result from failure to co-ordinate and control developments within a river drainage basin (Kotlyakov, 1991). CHAPTER TEN 202 The main issues of concern to the environmental manager are pollution within the drainage basin which contaminates the river, and regulation of flow by dams or barrages. Dams pose a greater threat than barrages because they alter downstream flow and water quality far more and pose a greater barrier to migration of fish and other organisms. Dams are also more likely to impound an extensive reservoir, which has significant environmental impacts on an area and may force the relocation and disruption of livelihood for large numbers of people (Barrow, 1995a:221–241). Lessons the environmental manager can learn from study of sensitive environments A number of common points can be recognized in the environments just discussed: ♦ Damage often progresses covertly to become serious before the problem is accepted and action is taken (sometimes too late—as for the rainforests of West Africa). ♦ Adopting a careless approach to researching problems, often exacerbated by inadequate data and time, can lead to misassessment. Consequently, symptoms rather than causes of problems are focused upon and treated. It is sometimes convenient for those in power to make such mistakes: better for them to blame nature or the peasantry than admit misguided, perhaps personally profitable, policy decisions. ♦ Local resource users tend to be overlooked in favour of national interests, large companies and their investors. Worse, local people may be marginalized—rural folk are less likely to riot or vote out a government than their urban cousins. ♦ Long-term effects are overlooked as a consequence of pressure to maximize shorter-term gains. ♦ Each situation is special. It is dangerous and often difficult to generalize. ♦ A problem may be realized, but a ministry or other responsible body may lack power, funds or trained personnel to make a satisfactory attack on it. ♦ Crucial issues, like soil degradation, may fail to attract enough support. ♦ A number of the problems just listed, plus many others, are, at least in part, due to lack of adequate co-ordination and overview. ♦ Problems are increasingly transboundary, making it difficult for environmental managers to have jurisdiction or powers to enforce solutions (or even to assess the threat). There are clearly things which could be done to reduce, avoid or mitigate damage to vulnerable environments: 1 As far as possible leave them alone and find less damaging ways of getting the same resources (or, at the very least, ensure that some examples of the ecosystem are conserved). Environmental managers might do more to prompt those considering development to look at technology, or better use of areas already developed, or rehabilitation of degraded resources. DIFFICULT SITUATIONS 203 2 The environmental manager should pay attention to the local conditions, not generalize. (A point stressed by Johnson and Lewis (1995:303) is that it is important to build on local knowledge and local traditions and be aware of local constraints and opportunities.) However, co-ordination is needed to ensure that each local activity does not cause wider difficulties. 3 Planning tools like strategic environmental assessment could help to highlight risks where there are complex environmental and socioeconomic linkages. 4 Impact assessment can encourage policy makers and planners to check what they propose more carefully, and should identify most risks, so that they can be avoided or the development be modified or abandoned. 5 Risk and hazard assessment can encourage the timely development of contingency plans. 6 Better monitoring of environments and of socioeconomic conditions is important. 7 A problem is to achieve more willingness to consider long-term impacts, and to take preventive or remedial action. That is as much a problem for governments, NGOs, international agencies, the media and the public as for environmental managers, although the latter should be catalysts. 8 One of the key inputs from the environmental manager is to co-ordinate and to encourage and facilitate a thorough (holistic) overview of proposed developments and monitoring of the state of various ecosystems, even if they are not obviously being altered. Vulnerable environments (assuming they are recognized) deserve particular attention from monitoring bodies, more care from planners and greater vigilance from NGOs, media and international bodies. There are agencies or NGOs which focus on particular problem environments, or threatened organisms. Unfortunately, many lack sufficient funds and other resources to intervene effectively, and may find it difficult to tackle transboundary problems. Biodiversity conservation has generated a lot of debate, but not everybody supports it: marginalized people may clear forest to survive; businessmen may develop areas of scientific interest for profit (and generate employment in doing so); a government may be forced to weigh aid for the poor against protecting the environment; deer may fare better when hunted with hounds but public opinion finds the practice abhorrent; the ethics of conservation can be far from straightforward (for a discussion of the ethics of biodiversity conservation see Blench, 1998). Preservation of the environment is often not practicable, given commercial forces and a growing human population. Johnson and Lewis (1995:228) make the important point that human use of the Earth has two faces: ‘creative destruction, the process by which the natural world is modified and sustainable land-use systems are developed’. The second is ‘destructive creation’ characterized by ‘a failure to achieve long-term sustainability and by the initiation of progressively more serious patterns of land degradation’. An environmental manager has to accept that there will usually be environmental changes (good husbandry involves making changes). The crucial thing is to decide when ‘destructive creation’ has begun, or is likely, and to act to stop it or prevent it. |
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