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Ecological risk assessment for deep-sea mining

Ecological risk assessment for deep-sea mining
Ecological risk assessment for deep-sea mining
Ecological risk assessment for deep-sea mining is challenging, given the data-poor state of knowledge of deep-sea ecosystem structure, process, and vulnerability. Polling and a scale-intensity-consequence approach (SICA) were used in an expert elicitation survey to rank risk sources and perceived vulnerabilities of habitats associated with seabed nodule, sulfide, and crust mineral resources. Experts identified benthic habitats associated with seabed minerals as most vulnerable to habitat removal with a high degree of certainty. Resource-associated benthic and pelagic habitats were also perceived to be at risk from plumes generated during mining activities, although there was not always consensus regarding vulnerabilities to specific risk sources from different types of plumes. Even for risk sources where habitat vulnerability measures were low, high uncertainties suggest that these risks may not yet be dismissed. Survey outcomes also underscore the need for risk assessment to progress from expert opinion with low certainty to data-rich and ecosystem-relevant scientific research assessments to yield much higher certainty. This would allow for design and deployment of effective precautionary and mitigation efforts in advance of commercial exploitation, and adaptive management strategies would allow for regulatory and guideline modifications in response to new knowledge and greater certainty.
0964-5691
24-39
Washburn, Travis W.
72e27981-6e6f-4635-9b26-1d76c31c3c86
Turner, Phillip J.
f431dc56-23e0-4f15-bdc2-758aa2b410b6
Durden, Jennifer M.
d7101246-b76b-44bc-8956-8ca4ae62ae1f
Jones, Daniel O.b.
44fc07b3-5fb7-4bf5-9cec-78c78022613a
Weaver, Philip
8ba26937-b62e-474b-bc48-59a7eb5587ea
Van Dover, Cindy L.
ae91402f-83d9-462c-98c8-b699cee716ea
Washburn, Travis W.
72e27981-6e6f-4635-9b26-1d76c31c3c86
Turner, Phillip J.
f431dc56-23e0-4f15-bdc2-758aa2b410b6
Durden, Jennifer M.
d7101246-b76b-44bc-8956-8ca4ae62ae1f
Jones, Daniel O.b.
44fc07b3-5fb7-4bf5-9cec-78c78022613a
Weaver, Philip
8ba26937-b62e-474b-bc48-59a7eb5587ea
Van Dover, Cindy L.
ae91402f-83d9-462c-98c8-b699cee716ea

Washburn, Travis W., Turner, Phillip J., Durden, Jennifer M., Jones, Daniel O.b., Weaver, Philip and Van Dover, Cindy L. (2019) Ecological risk assessment for deep-sea mining. Ocean & Coastal Management, 176, 24-39. (doi:10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2019.04.014).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Ecological risk assessment for deep-sea mining is challenging, given the data-poor state of knowledge of deep-sea ecosystem structure, process, and vulnerability. Polling and a scale-intensity-consequence approach (SICA) were used in an expert elicitation survey to rank risk sources and perceived vulnerabilities of habitats associated with seabed nodule, sulfide, and crust mineral resources. Experts identified benthic habitats associated with seabed minerals as most vulnerable to habitat removal with a high degree of certainty. Resource-associated benthic and pelagic habitats were also perceived to be at risk from plumes generated during mining activities, although there was not always consensus regarding vulnerabilities to specific risk sources from different types of plumes. Even for risk sources where habitat vulnerability measures were low, high uncertainties suggest that these risks may not yet be dismissed. Survey outcomes also underscore the need for risk assessment to progress from expert opinion with low certainty to data-rich and ecosystem-relevant scientific research assessments to yield much higher certainty. This would allow for design and deployment of effective precautionary and mitigation efforts in advance of commercial exploitation, and adaptive management strategies would allow for regulatory and guideline modifications in response to new knowledge and greater certainty.

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Accepted/In Press date: 15 April 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 25 April 2019

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 432212
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/432212
ISSN: 0964-5691
PURE UUID: c42d8092-f34c-480f-bfe0-e3816c6080fe

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Date deposited: 04 Jul 2019 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 02:34

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Contributors

Author: Travis W. Washburn
Author: Phillip J. Turner
Author: Jennifer M. Durden
Author: Daniel O.b. Jones
Author: Philip Weaver
Author: Cindy L. Van Dover

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