ESPON 2.1.5: Territorial Impacts of ESPON 2.1.5: Territorial Impacts of European Fisheries PolicyEuropean Fisheries Policy
Final Revised ReportPrepared for the Espoo Seminar 14-15 November 2006Ove Langeland, Norwegian Institute for Urban and Regional Research, (NIBR), Norway
Objectives and research questions
• Objectives:– Strengthen the knowledge of territorial, social and economic
cohesion through an analysis of territorial impacts of the CFP - fisheries and aquaculture sector:
• A European coastal typology• Spatial effects at European level and individual
countries and their coastal areas• Territorial impacts in relation to ICZM• Policy recommendation
• Hypothesis:– General territorial impact hypotheses– Social and economic impact hypotheses– ICZM/environment hypotheses– Fishery hypotheses
• Example studies:– Central for hypotheses on urban-rural impacts of CFP– Unit of analysis (NUTS 3) unfit for studying territorial
impacts, only LAU fishery dependent areas
Key findings
• Diagnosis – development of the Fisheries sector– CFP: Main territorial impacts of the conservation policy:
• Capture fisheries sub-sector: EU: Fleet reduction, decreased value of landed catch, employment reduction. EFTA: Resource situation relatively good, reduced employment due to technological changes
• Aquaculture: Increased volume, value and employment in both EU and EFTA
• Processing industry: EU: Employment reduction in some countries and regions, increased landings from non-EU countries (globalisation). EFTA: More difficult situation - factory trawlers, globalisation effects
• Environmental impacts and ICZM• Fishery: Fleet reduction, but chronic overexploitation of fishery
resources is still the greatest environmental concern of CFP• Aquaculture: Challenge to minimize negative environmental impacts
and balance aquaculture interests with other coastal interests • ICZM: Demands both horizontal and vertical co-ordination in order to be
effective • Spatial planning systems must cover both the terrestrial and the marine
part of the coastal zone in order to be an effective tool for ICZM.
Key findings
• Social cohesion Impacts– Different territorial fisheries systems/groups of coastal regions – a
North/South dimension in Europe, some of these territories are strengthened, others weakened, also different development trends within the systems
– Coastal regions with a large fisheries sector experience population declining processes more frequent than other coastal regions.
– Lack of co-ordination between the implementation of economic measures in the CFP and the fish resource regulation policy.
– Lack of integration between fisheries polices on national and European level, and a need for adjusting European sector policies of fisheries in accordance with European territorial policies.
Economic cohesion Impacts– The effectiveness of FIFG programmes depends heavily on the
region’s initial economic conditions and on the quality of national and regional administrations (absorptive capacity)
– In general FIFG funds have been distributed progressively among regions, but the progressiveness decreased from the 1994-99 programming period to the 2000-06 period.
Policy options/recommendations
• General policy recommendation– Policy measures to promote cohesion, territorially balanced development and
polycentrism - but not one size fits all
• Policy recommendations related to environmental impacts and ICZM– Integrate the terrestrial and marine environment in coastal planning and
other ICZM activities.– Combine the best elements of the statutory spatial planning system with the
best elements of the voluntary partnership approach - integrated solutions at the regional level of government.
• Policy recommendations related to social cohesion– Better co-coordination of the implementation of the economic measures in
CFP (the FIFG) and the fish resource regulation policy. – The interplay between fisheries policies implemented on national and
European level should be better integrated.– The fisheries policy should be adjusted in accordance with the European
territorial policies
• Policy recommendations related to economic cohesion– Stronger focus on disparities due to proximity to resources, economic
alternatives and administrative efficiency– Use example of dynamic regions as guides for the best practice.
Typologies, data and recommendation for ESPON 2013
• Typologies on ESPON space should try to combine European typologies with national typologies (national average) as a combined macro and micro typologies approach in territorial analyses.• One should compare several sector policies in different coastal regions (area studies) in order to analyse territorial impacts in a more comprehensive way, and search for possible potentials and obstacles in different regions. The typology for coastal regions (NUTS 3) developed in 2.1.5 could be used for selecting the different regions.• Develop a better specification of the concept related to fishery dependency• One should strive for a better organisation of collection and use of data, for instance by developing a common Eurostat/ESPON database which is divided in a statistical database and an indicator database. Data should also be regionalised as far as possible.
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Canarias
Madeira
Acores
Guayane
Guadeloupe Martinique Réunion
This map does notnecessarily reflect theopinon of the ESPONMonitoring Committee
© NIBR - Project 2.1.5. 2005
Sofiya
Roma
Riga
Oslo
BernWien
Kyiv
Paris
Praha
Minsk
Moskva
Lisboa Skopje
Zagreb
AnkaraMadrid
Tirana
London Berlin
Dublin
Valletta
Athinai
Tallinn
Nicosia
Beograd
Vilnius
Kishinev
Sarajevo
Helsinki
Budapest
Warszawa
Ljubljana
Stockholm
Reykjavik
København
Bucuresti
Amsterdam
Bratislava
Luxembourg
Bruxelles/Brussel
500 km
Typology of coastal regions (NUTS 3)
NUTS 3 Coastal Typology
No coast
Hinterland 1
Hinterland 3
Regional/local 1
Regional/local 2
Regional/local 3
Regional/local 4
Transnational/national 1
Transnational/national 2
Mega
Future research
• Study how territorial impacts can vary with:
• The potential and preconditions for innovation and restructuring in different coastal regions and fisheries dependent areas, for instance between economically diversified regions, and more economically specialised regions, in urban and peripheral territories
• Different kinds of fisheries management, CFP on macro level, RAC on meso level and national implementation on micro level, and the interplay between the different management systems
• Differences in national implementation of sector policies, including fisheries policy
• How different ICZM approaches can function as tools for a sustainable and balanced development in coastal regions, with particular focus of the aquaculture industry.