Impact assessment
Anthropogenic activities have the potential to impact
in some way the coastal environment and tourism is not
an exception. Impact assessment is a process of reviewing
and evaluating the impact of any activity (such as construction
of tourist facilities: hotels, lodges, public beaches,
highway, etc., on the coastal environment or on the
natural resources, culture, economy, etc.) Without knowing
and being aware of negative environmental effects it
would be impossible to plan and take any effective,
reasonable measures aimed at protecting the quality
of the coastal environment and human life.
The only legal tool currently applied in practice for
assessing the negative environmental impacts of concrete
projects is environmental impact assessment (EIA). The
procedure that extends the concept and principle underlying
EIA is called strategic environmental assessment (SEA).
There are some other tools and instruments used to assess
impacts on the coastal environment and humans for example,
risk assessment, etc. |
The main objectives of EIA in the context of sustainable
tourism in coastal regions are (UNDP 2003):
- Make decision makers aware of the significant environmental
effects of proposal projects;
- Outline alternatives with different environmental
impacts;
- Identify approaches how to avoid or reduce environmental
damage and other impacts on coastal regions;
- Prevent coastal degradation by requiring implementation
of feasible alternatives and mitigation measures;
- Disclose to the public the reason for approval of
a project with significant environmental effects;
- Foster coordination among stakeholders;
- Enchance public participation in decision-making
processes connected in a coastal area.
|
Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA):
Environmental Impact Assessment is an integrative and
systematic process, used for identifying the environmental
effects of development projects. As a result of Directive
85/337/EEC (as amended 1997), this is now a legislative
procedure within the European Union to be applied to
the assessment of the environmental effects of certain
public and private projects which are likely to have
significant effects on the environment. An EIA requires
a scoping study to be undertaken in order to focus the
assessment. This can be carried out in the field or
as a desk study depending on the nature/scale of the
project.
glossary
|
Strategic Environmental Assessment
(SEA):
Strategic Environmental Assessment is a high level
procedure that extends the concept and principle underlying
EIA, but normally applied to policies, plans, programmes
and groups of projects. SEA provides the potential opportunity
to avoid the preparation and implementation of inappropriate
plants, programmes, projects nad assists in the identification.So
there is a evaluation of project alternatives and identification
of cumulative effects. SEA comprises two main types:
sectoral SEA (applied when many new projects fall within
one sector) and regional SEA (applied when broad economic
development is planned within one region).
(definition source: European Commission. 1999. Integrating
environment concerns into development and economic cooperation.
Draft version 1.0. Brussels Glossary)
(based on UNDP 2003 and Participatory_SEA.pdf)
In the context of sustainable tourism in coastal regions
the SEA process should review the following factors:
existing problems (environmental and health) in a coastal
region covered by proposed strategy; goals and targets
of the strategy; their links to sustainability; key
alternatives to the strategy; environmental and health
impacts of supposed implementation measures; and system
for monitoring the potential impacts relevant to the
strategy.
|