Environmental Management: Principles and practice
Adaptive environmental assessment and adaptive environmental
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5 2020 03 04!03 12 11 PM
Adaptive environmental assessment and adaptive environmental
assessment and management Impact assessment generally adopts a static, ‘snapshot’ approach, yet causal relationships are often not constant, e.g. monetary units may be devalued, the environment may alter, decision-making objectives may change, attitudes of people shift; such an approach can therefore be ineffective. There is also a risk that a one- off impact assessment could discourage planners from adequate monitoring. There is thus a need to ensure that assessment is continuous or repeated regularly (Holling, 1978; Gilmour and Walkerden, 1994). Two approaches have evolved: adaptive environmental assessment (AEA), and adaptive environmental assessment and management (AEAM). These are broader than mainstream EIA, and have a bias ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT, HAZARD AND RISK MANAGEMENT 119 towards coping with uncertainty. In addition, AEAM seeks to integrate environmental, social and economic assessment with management. AEAM was pioneered by Holling and colleagues (Holling, 1978), Environment Canada, the University of British Colombia, Vancouver (Canada), and the Austrian- based International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA). The Holling approach was applied to the Obergurgl Valley (Austria), starting in 1974, by a UNESCO (Man and Biosphere Program)/IIASA/University of British Columbia team. It uses a series of carefully designed research periods followed by multidisciplinary modelling workshops which include science and social science experts, planners, managers, resource users and locals. The workshops develop alternative scenarios and management strategies which are then compared to arrive at the best problem- solving approach. The workshops seek to ensure that the assessment team and participants continually review efforts to predict and model policy options for decision makers, and also provide a bridge for different disciplines and competing perceptions. The end result is a computer-based systems model that can be tested and tuned until it supports adaptive management and can help identify indirect impacts (Jones and Greig, 1985). AEAM can be useful where baseline data are poor. It also encourages and facilitates multidisciplinary assessment. However, it can be demanding in terms of research expertise and time for completion. Some see AEAM as particularly supportive of sustainable development (Grayson et al., 1994). Download 6.45 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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