The ecological transition requires a reduction in our greenhouse gas emissions. The development of decarbonated energy, including marine renewable energy, is one of the solutions recommended to reduce these emissions. However, the presence of these offshore wind farms in coastal areas and their management methods have direct or indirect effects on fishing, particularly through the additional occupation of space in an environment that is already actively sought after, and through the effects and impacts that their installation and operation induce in the areas where these farms are installed. Both Japan and Europe will develop or are developing these energy production methods. Hence the importance of reflecting on the management of conflicts of use and on possible compensation in a win-win negotiation in order to preserve the traditional activities affected.
Key words: MRE; coastal fishing; conflicts of use; impacts of MRE on traditional activities, France and Japan.
EDF Renewables’ offshore wind development perspectives in Japan
Evolution of the coastline and extraction of marine aggregates: a review of current knowledge and practices in France.
The GIS ECUME: a multidisciplinary consortium to assess cumulated impacts of human activities in the English Channel
Contributing to scientific knowledge in the context of an industrial project: The Eolien en mer GIS.
Co-existence of OffshoreWind and other Users of the Sea: 20 Years of Learning What to Do (and not to Do!)
Ecosystem services spatially linked to environmental and socio-economic stakes in the context of offshore wind-farm development.
Interdisciplinarity and Coastal Management: Innovations also originates from Unconventional Approaches.