The paper, with lead author Jacek Zaucha, and co-authored by Margarita Stancheva (CCMS), takes stock of the impact the Maritime Spatial Planning Directive 2014/89/EU has had on developing maritime spatial planning (MSP) practice in Europe. Drawing on the practical experience of 22 Member States, it analyses how countries with varying political, planning and regional contexts, as well as varying MSP experience prior to 2014, have chosen to implement the Directive and what lessons they have learned in the process. A key lesson is that while the Directive provides a normative framework for approaching MSP, this has been variously adapted to national contexts. MSP in Europe is thus characterised by varied territorial coverage of plans, different national institutional arrangements for MSP, a variety of planning processes, and a variety of sectors covered by maritime spatial plans.
While planners identify a range of challenges associated with each of these topics, countries have also developed practical solutions, although these are constrained by the respective remit and capacity of MSP as a process. The sheer diversity of maritime spatial plans and approaches, differing overall visions for MSP and methodological challenges, such as cumulative or socio-economic impact assessment, feature among the key challenges for achieving greater coherence in MSP within sea basins and beyond.
This Open access paper is published in Marine Policy. Read and download the full paper here!