Title: CARIBBEAN SEA ECOSYSTEM ASSESSMENT CARSEA Project Summary
1CARIBBEAN SEA ECOSYSTEM ASSESSMENTCARSEAProje
ct Summary
- Angela Cropper
- The Cropper Foundation
2- CARIBBEAN SEA STATES AND THEIR CLAIMED
EEZs - many actors with overlapping interests in and
outside the region impact on this LME - Intended audience of CARSEA Inter-governmental
bodies and regional decision makers
3Time information
- 1. Condition and Trend Assessment
- 1. Fish production 1950-2000
- 2. Amenity (Tourism) 1990-2003
- 3. Biodiversity (Coral Reefs) 1977-2002 4.
Desalinated water 1992-2000 - 5. Climate regulation (Cyclones) 1900-2000
- 2. Scenarios 2004-2050
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4Provisioning Services
5St Lucia
Barbados
6Fisheries jobs, income and fish protein
- 504,913 jobs
- US1.6 billion in exports
- 7 of total protein consumption in Caribbean
Will Caribbean fisheries collapse? If they do
what are the likely effects on human wellbeing?
7Desalinated Water
- 667,053 m3/d from 15 Caribbean countries
- 3 of world total desalinated water
- US 317 million in sales revenue generated
- What is the cost-benefit of investment in
desalination technology compared with investment
in watershed management?
8Amenity value service
9Tourism jobs and income
- Direct impact
- 567,870 jobs
- US 6.5 contribution to GDP
- Indirect impact
- 1,857,000 jobs (12 of total employment)
- US 23.1 billion contribution to GDP (13 of total
GDP (1 in the world relative to size) - How can the Caribbean capture more of the
resource rents locally without the negative
effects of mass tourism?
10Biodiversity service Long-term region-wide
declines in Caribbean coral cover
What are the consequences of the decline in
Caribbean coral cover for human wellbeing?
11Caribbean Scuba Dive Tourism
- Caribbean attracts 57 of world scuba dive tours
- Most Scuba Dive tours in the Caribbean have
shifted to the Netherland Antilles due to better
coral reef health as a consequence of the
establishment of MPAs
12Selected Trends Tropical Cyclone activity in
the Caribbean 1901-2000
13Trans-Atlantic Sahara dust clouds May 11th 2003
as recorded by the TOMs satellite
14 Population living within 100 km of coast
(1995)
Insular Caribbean 99.9 Central
America 41.5 South America 48.7
After CIESIN, Columbia University
15CARSEA SCENARIOS
- Approach used to develop story-lines for the
Caribbean Sea (CARSEA) - Part I Stakeholder involvement (conducted
separately in small breakout groups) - Assess the current knowledge and current state of
the system - List key historical eras, key actors, external
forces affecting the region, and ecosystem
services. - Identify a focal issue or issues
- List hopes and fears for the future to determine
focal questions that might drive scenario
development - Identify alternative trajectories and branch
points - Identify key sources and threats to the
resilience of the region (ability to adapt to
coming surprises). We developed focal questions
for Caribbean marine ecosystems based on What is
the biggest concern for the region in the future?
What are the factors that do or can make this
region more able to cope with whatever the future
brings? - Build scenarios
- Ask breakout groups to come up with a set of
storylines, based on the focal questions and
considering the major eras and vulnerabilities of
the region. They were asked to do this in 1 hour
to create a sense of urgency. Each group was then
asked to present their set of scenarios to the
entire group in a Plenary.
16- Part II Refine and test the scenarios (conducted
by a single small focus group) - 5. Assess the scenarios
- Are there certain themes emerging? Can we come
up with a set of 4 or so that seem to make sense
together? What are the critical contrasts among
the scenarios? What are the recurring themes? Are
the trends/events plausible? What trends/events
are useful for illustrating key themes or
concepts? Does the set address the focal
question. - 6. Shocks and surprises Come up with a list of
shocks and surprises that might happen and ask
how the world would respond under each of the
scenarios. - 7. Use this analysis to refine a final set of
scenarios. - We discussed the major drivers in the region and
constructed the stories around them packaged as
clusters of issues. In the final analysis we
choose from the large set of possible scenarios,
those that addressed the focal questions whether
they fell neatly into the quadrants or not. We
also discussed the key tipping points that might
change the direction of any storyline. These
tipping points included a regional governance
framework, fisheries collapse etc.
17Four Scenarios for Caribbean Sea
- Neo-Plantation economy
- Exploitation, short-term gain vs long-term costs
- Quality over Quantity
- know your own limits, Niche tourism
- Diversify Together
- Regional Cooperation and diversification
- Growing Asymmetries
- Selective permeability, FTAA
18Exploring uncertainty-Focal questions
- What governance mechanisms for the Caribbean Sea
can be used to reduce economic, social and
environmental vulnerability of the region - How can economic activity be organized and
managed so that natural resource benefits are
distributed equitably relative to the costs? - Will current trends in the decline of Caribbean
Sea coastal and marine ecosystems exceed
ecological thresholds that may result in
significant consequences for human well-being?
19CARSEA Scenario Storylines
Quality Over Quantity
Neo-Plantation Economy
Focus Niche
Growing Asymmetries
Focus Free Trade Area
Focus Regional Cooperation
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21- an investment led boom 2007-2017- sow the
seeds of a subsequent bust in 2040
Tourism in the Neo-Plantation Economy
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26Growing Asymmetries
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28- Major Findings
- Only the Quality over Quantity Scenario benefits
ecosystems through its explicit policies and
institutions to address the environment,
otherwise there will be high negative impacts on
ecosystems.
29Relationship between MA Global Scenarios and
CARSEA Regional Scenarios