Terese Thoni
Programme coordinator
Making Blue Carbon : Coastal Ecosystems at the Science-Policy Interface
Author
Summary, in English
To understand the making of Blue Carbon it is, I argue, necessary to situate it in relation to broader processes within and related to climate science and policy. I identify three logics of the climate regime – the global, scientific and neoliberal logics – that I find useful for this purpose. I describe how these logics are articulated and reproduced in material, institutional, and discursive dimensions of the climate regime. I find that science, and more precisely a specific type of science, plays a particularly important role in the making of Blue Carbon, and in the context of climate policy generally. In the context of coastal ecosystems, science is needed to know the size of carbon stocks, which in turn is the foundation for creating policy mechanisms. I show that the making of Blue Carbon is indeed rendering coastal ecosystems governable in the context of climate change, which in turn opens the door for new governance mechanisms and funding sources. However, my study also reveals the complexities around measuring carbon in these ecosystems, and the challenges associated with collapsing something as dynamic as an ecosystem into a standardised protocol. This in turn raises questions regarding the possibility to address important uncertainties embedded in the making of Blue Carbon, not least given that these ecosystems are also vulnerable to the effects of climate change. There is a risk that an exaggerated focus on carbon services makes other values invisible, which could lead to a devaluation of these important ecosystems. There is also a risk of creating competition between ecosystems, with negative consequences for their management and wellbeing. I argue that these risks merit further consideration. A broader, more diverse, and more inclusive approach to knowledge-making in this context could be a first step, not least to be able to bring forward alternative ways of governing coastal ecosystems, or make more of the alternatives that already exist, depending on the desired outcome.
Department/s
- BECC: Biodiversity and Ecosystem services in a Changing Climate
- MERGE: ModElling the Regional and Global Earth system
- Centre for Environmental and Climate Science (CEC)
Publishing year
2019-09
Language
English
Publication/Series
Doctoral Theses Published in Environmental Science
Issue
30
Full text
Document type
Dissertation
Publisher
Lund University (Media-Tryck)
Topic
- Environmental Sciences
Keywords
- climate change
- UNFCCC
- science-policy interface
- Blue Carbon
- coastal ecosystems
- klimatförändringarna
- kustnära ekosystem
- blått kol
- relationen mellan vetenskap och politik
- UNFCCC
Status
Published
Project
- The Role of Science in International Climate Change Negotiations: Pedal or Break?
Supervisor
- Markku Rummukainen
- Johannes Stripple
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISBN: 978-91-7895-280-9
- ISBN: 978-91-7895-281-6
Defence date
18 October 2019
Defence time
09:15
Defence place
The Blue Hall, The Ecology Building, Sölvegatan 37, Lund
Opponent
- Anders Blok (Associate Professor)