Sensors and Systems
Breaking News
GIS Certification Institute Welcomes InterDev as a New GISCI Endorsing Employer
Rating12345Des Plaines, IL — The GIS Certification Institute (GISCI)...
Kongsberg Discovery and MacArtney partner for turnkey ROTV surveying and inspection capability
Rating12345Kongsberg Discovery and MacArtney Underwater Technology have signed a...
Looq AI Expands Global Partner Ecosystem to Advance Ground-Based Reality Capture in Surveying, Engineering, and Utilities
Rating12345Partnerships Across North America, Europe, and Asia Extend Survey-Grade...

March 6th, 2012
First Study to Measure Value of Marine Spatial Planning

  • Rating12345

The ocean is becoming an increasingly crowded place. New users, such as the wind industry, compete with existing users and interests for space and resources. With the federal mandate for comprehensive ocean planning made explicit in the National Ocean Policy, the need for the transparent evaluation of potential tradeoffs is now greater than ever. A study published in the March 5 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) shows for the first time that incorporating multiple stakeholder interests in a comprehensive approach to ocean planning (Marine Spatial Planning or MSP), actually reduces conflict and enhances cultural, conservation, and economic benefits. Using a model of Massachusetts Bay, the authors found that by designing offshore wind farms with multiple ocean users in mind, managers could prevent over $1 million dollars in losses to the incumbent fishery and whale watching sectors, limit impacts on biodiversity conservation, and generate more than $10 billion dollars in extra value to the wind energy sector. Read More