Planning for Sustainable Ocean Use in Antarctica Under Global Environmental Change

ERC (European Research Council)HORIZON-ERCID: 101117443
EC Contribution
€14,998
Consortium Size
2 orgs
Start Year
2024
Summary

Planning of marine areas is being developed worldwide to support ocean sustainability. However, few existing marine spatial planning (MSP) initiatives consider climate change explicitly. This is a critical oversight in a rapidly changing world.At the same time, no formal MSP initiatives are envisioned for Antarctica; it is the only ocean basin globally without MSP under development. Antarctica is changing rapidly with potential repercussions around the planet, particularly for sea-level rise, climate regulation, and marine ecosystems functioning. Developing integrated, sustainable MSP for Antarctica is now more fundamental than ever.Excluding climate effects from MSP will lead to plans that are maladaptive and inefficient in sustaining marine ecosystems and their use under change. By contrast, if designed with climate objectives, MSP can provide substantial benefits while requiring few trade-offs. Efforts must be thus put together to effectively move towards climate-smart MSP in Antarctica and globally.Yet, contextual idiosyncrasies (political, social, economic) limit the effectiveness of such efforts. Understanding what challenges hinder the development of climate-smart MSP, in Antarctica and globally, and pointing ways to overcome such challenges is key. PLAnT will take up, for the very first time, such critical task. It will assess social-ecological vulnerabilities; build future scenarios; support area-based climate action and dynamic solutions; conduct governance analyses; and foster a paradigm shift on how to plan for sustainability and equity under change.Research on complex social-ecological systems rarely leads to one-size solutions, and there is a risk that solutions identified in PLAnT are context specific. Still, PLAnT will inspire nations worldwide to finding pathways and solutions to support ocean sustainability. At a time when the latter is firmly established in the international agenda, taking a leap forward on this topic is ground-breaking.

Consortium (2)

Project Results (3)

Source: CORDIS, the EU research results database.

Publications (3)
Marine spatial planning and marine protected area planning are not the same and both are key for sustainability in a changing ocean
npj Ocean Sustainability· 2025DOI
Frazão Santos, Catarina; Wedding, Lisa M.; Agardy, Tundi; Reimer, Julie M.; Gissi, Elena; Calado, Helena
Ocean Planning and Conservation in the Age of Climate Change: A Roundtable Discussion
Integrative Organismal Biology· 2024DOI
C Frazão Santos; T Agardy; L B Crowder; J C Day; A Himes-Cornell; M L Pinsky; J M Reimer; E Gissi
Taking climate-smart governance to the high seas
Science· 2024DOI
Catarina Frazão Santos, Tundi Agardy, Cassandra Brooks, Kristina M. Gjerde, Cymie Payne, Lisa M. Wedding, José C. Xavier, Larry B. Crowder