Workshop 4: Environmental and Cultural Assets - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 9
About This Presentation
Title:

Workshop 4: Environmental and Cultural Assets

Description:

Fisheries, environment, culture and tourism are assets which give places ... Trends: more, shorter trips; urban tourism; cheap flights. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:49
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 10
Provided by: markshu
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Workshop 4: Environmental and Cultural Assets


1
Workshop 4 Environmental and Cultural Assets
  • Rapporteur Professor Mark Shucksmith

ESPON Seminar, Espoo, 14-15 November 2006
2
Introduction
  • Fisheries, environment, culture and tourism are
    assets which give places potential to achieve
    objectives of competitiveness, cohesion and
    sustainability (part of an array of tangible and
    intangible assets).
  • Tension between conservation and exploitation
    one challenge is to develop a balanced strategy
    how can ESPON help provide the evidence to assist
    this?
  • How to combine tangible and intangible assets?
  • How to build the capacity of places to manage
    these?

3
Tangible Intangible Assets
  • EU FP5 Dynamics of Rural Areas project shows how
    tangible and intangible assets can work together.
    Tangible resources now less important than
    intangibles.
  • Key to economic performance were
  • Institutional and governance structures
  • Social capital
  • Entrepreneurial spirit (presence of creative
    class?)
  • Education and skills
  • Attractive environment
  • Cultural resources

4
Fisheries (2.1.5)
  • Overexploitation of resource - fleet reductions.
  • Growth in aquaculture, but environmental impacts.
  • NUTS3 unfit for studying spatial impacts - LAU.
  • Spatial planning systems must cover both
    terrestrial and marine part of the coastal zone.
  • Lack of coordination between policies
    programmes.
  • Effectiveness of FIFG programmes depends heavily
    on absorptive capacity of regions (governance and
    institutional capacity resources alternatives)
  • Combine best elements of the spatial planning
    system with best elements of voluntary
    partnership.
  • ESPON 2013 area studies to unravel causality.

5
Cultural Assets (1.3.3)
  • Data difficulties, inconsistent databases
    ESPON 2013.
  • Base indicators heritage assets, landscapes,
    museums (commodities) creative class
    (productive) cultural diversity, education level
    (capacity).
  • Three classifications developed
  • Market comparing visitor numbers with cultural
    assets
  • Functional specialisations how well do regions
    pursue conservation production and valorisation
    of assets?
  • Cross Thematic Analysis with other ESPON
    measures.
  • Circular relation between culture and economic
    development suggests some strategies shown in
    diagram..

6
Low P, high S Under-exploitation of heritage
High P, high S Potential for valorisation of
heritage
Increase demand (higher gear in cultural
marketing)
POTENTIAL DEMAND FOR HERITAGE RESOURCES
Balance
Create alternative cultural products to satisfy
existing demand
Capacity building increase new cultural assets
and use them in regional promotion strategies
Reduce pressure levels (e.g. extreme protection)
Low P, low S Cultural capacity deficit
High P, low S Heritage at risk (excess demand
pressure)
SUPPLY OF HERITAGE RESOURCES
7
Impact of Environmental Policies (2.4.1)
  • Territorial trends urban growth unevenly related
    to population ? loss of natural semi-natural
    areas not correlated with GDP ?.
  • Can urban growth have positive environmental
    impact?
  • TIA methodology environmental policy -
    environment and territorial trends and so -
    territorial objectives (eg. Natura 2000
    designation reduces mining and quarrying
    especially in peripheral areas.)
  • Studied on different spatial levels local,
    regional, national, transnational, and European
    level.
  • Method mainly mapping of two superimposed
    variables rather than multivariate analysis.
    Causality?

8
Tourism pilot project (1.4.5)
  • Trends more, shorter trips urban tourism cheap
    flights.
  • But data only on international travel and
    includes business trips.
  • Future proposed work under ESPON 2013
  • Travels and flows
  • Who is travelling where, for how long, and why?
    What mode?
  • Economic effects and employment
  • Demand side (tourist expenditures and
    consumption)
  • Supply side (accommodation, transportation,
    facilities, attractions)
  • Job creation and economic development
  • Environmental and social effects
  • Harmonise data to increase comparability
    Eurostat data on bed spaces is not only useless
    but dangerous.
  • Address future challenges for tourist regions.
    Some case studies
  • Implications of Stern Report on Climate Change?

9
Discussion
  • How does management (and planning) of
    environmental and cultural assets affect spatial
    development?
  • Natural Heritage is viewed as an asset for
    attracting economic activities does this require
    limitations on development? Tension between
    enabling and regulatory roles of spatial
    planning.
  • Are there virtuous circles eg. does good scenery
    and culture attract creative class who generate
    growth? How can this be promoted?
  • For ESPON 2013 a pilot study is advised focusing
    on the use of management and planning tools to
    see how intervention might protect, build and
    valorise these assets.
  • Common issue of data deficiencies suggest need
    both for data harmonisation and for complementary
    approaches.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com