AQUA 2024

August 26 - 30, 2024

Copenhagen, Denmark

WHICH ENVIRONMENTAL MINIMUM REQUIREMENTS COULD QUALIFY CERTAIN AQUACULTURE ACTIVITIES AS LEGITIMATE NATURE-BASED SOLUTIONS?

Riisager-Simonsen C.*, Flensborg, C. L., Petersen, J.K., Lusseau, D.

 National Institute for Aquatic Resources, Technical University of Denmark, 2800. Kgs. Lyngby Denmark. Email: chrii@aqua.dtu.dk

 



 Proposed marine and coastal Nature-Based Solutions (NbS) are presently being implemented across the European  Union in various contexts . Yet, what different stakeholders perceive as relevant NbS and  their  potential impacts and risks m ay vary greatly ,  compromising  the implementation and effectiveness of NbS .  Even worse, it may lead to misuse of the concept, providing a slippery slope for greenwashing either deliberately or accidentally. While general guidelines for NbS implementation exist (IUCN, 2020), several critical uncertainties remain about the detailed interpretation in marine and coastal ecosystems -  including  aquaculture activities  (Riisager-Simonsen et al. 2022). To overcome this, the recently launched  EU  Horizon project TRANSEATION, will address  the  risks and challenges  facing the different project phases in the development of marine and coastal NbS - including aquaculture .  A core deliverable from this project will be a set of  environmental minimum require ments which future marine and coastal NbS should align wi th. This presentation will share the first insights on  environmental minimum requirements from several expert workshops, interviews as well as literature and policy reviews . Addition ally, we invite Aqua24 participants  to  contribute with their knowledge and ideas, for how such minimum requirements could be implemented and documented in a relevant way. The aim is to cover the full project cycle from documentation to investors, environmental agencies and beyond.

 The final draft minimum requirements for marine and coastal NbS , will be put into public online consultation in the beginning of 2025, before being finalized as guidance for  actors ranging from companies, municipalities and capital asset managers towards  Hence, improving the implementation , effectiveness and document ation  impacts which underpin ecosystem-based marine management.

 In the coming years the project will go beyond minimum requirements and draft a marine and coastal NbS building rating system based on the LEED certification scheme.