Noise pollution from Arctic expedition cruise vessels: understanding causes, consequences and governance options
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/35677Date
2024-10-10Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Mannherz, Fabienne; Knol-Kauffman, Maaike; Rafaly, Vonintsoa; Ahonen, Heidi; Kruke, Bjørn IvarAbstract
Significant increase in shipping in the Arctic has caught international and national attention. The rising
presence of touristic expedition cruise vessels might describe a special case for noise as a marine
pollutant while they seek exclusive opportunities to experience the Arctic first-hand. This
interdisciplinary study develops a conceptual framework to investigate context-specific vessel noise
cause-effect dynamics and how this knowledge can assist policymakers and industry in increasing
environmental safety. The study comprehensively reviews noise-emitting activities from Arctic cruise
expeditions and potential adverse consequences for Arctic endemic marine mammals. It further
discusses governance options for mitigating these consequences. Internationally, legal adaptations in
the shipping conventions MARPOL and SOLAS should recognise noise as harmful energy. This could
facilitate the uptake of noise-level-based certification schemes in the Polar Code. These legal actions
can be strengthened by extended collective self-governance and through introducing economic
incentives at the port level.
Publisher
Springer NatureCitation
Mannherz, Knol-Kauffman M, Rafaly, Ahonen H, Kruke BI. Noise pollution from Arctic expedition cruise vessels: understanding causes, consequences and governance options. npj Ocean Sustainability. 2024;3(1)Metadata
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