GLORIA

GEOMAR Library Ocean Research Information Access

feed icon rss

Your email was sent successfully. Check your inbox.

An error occurred while sending the email. Please try again.

Proceed reservation?

Export
  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham :Springer International Publishing AG,
    Keywords: Shipping-Environmental aspects. ; Electronic books.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (527 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9783030693251
    Series Statement: Strategies for Sustainability Series
    DDC: 333.9164
    Language: English
    Note: Intro -- Contents -- Chapter 1: Introducing Sustainability in the Maritime Domain -- References -- Part I: Moving to the Green-Blue Economy -- Chapter 2: Greening the Blue Economy: A Transdisciplinary Analysis -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Sustainability Actions -- 2.1 Sustainability Action 1: Standardize Inspection and Enforcement -- 2.2 Sustainability Action 2: Promote Solutions to Reduce Greenhouse Gas (GHG) and Other Atmospheric Pollutant Emissions Generated by the Maritime Transportation Sector -- 2.3 Sustainability Action 3: Design and Build Greener Ships -- 2.3.1 Energy Efficiency -- 2.3.2 Life and Safety at Sea -- 2.3.3 Automation -- 2.3.4 End of Life/End of Service -- 2.4 Sustainability Action 4: Treating Ballast Water with Low (or No) Impact Technology -- 2.5 Sustainability Action 5: Making Onboard Water Treatment Systems Safer for People and the Ocean -- 2.6 Sustainability Action 6: Greening Port Facilities -- 2.7 Sustainability Action 7: Improve Ship Safety and Emergency Response to Shipping Accidents -- 2.8 Sustainability Action 8: Make the Ocean Quieter -- 2.9 Sustainability Action 9: Operate to Avoid Whale Strikes -- 2.10 Sustainability Action 10: Expand Maritime Transportation Sector Engagement in Oceanic Data Collection and Monitoring -- 3 Looking Ahead: Establish a Framework for Maritime Transportation Governance That Supports All Life on Earth -- 4 Concluding Remarks -- References -- Chapter 3: Regional Marine Spatial Planning: A Tool for Greening Blue Economy in the Bay of Bengal -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Blue Economy -- 3 Marine Spatial Planning -- 4 Blue Economy and Marine Spatial Planning -- 5 The Current Management Framework for the Bay of Bengal -- 5.1 Bay of Bengal Program Inter-governmental Organization Agreement 2003. , 5.2 Action Plan for the Protection and Management of the Marine and Coastal Environment of the South Asian Region 1995 -- 5.3 SAARC Charter, Environment Action Plan and Convention on Cooperation on Environment -- 5.4 Declaration on the Establishment of the Bangladesh-India-Myanmar-Sri Lanka-Thailand for Economic Cooperation (BIMSTEC) 1997 -- 6 The Management Framework, Blue Economy and Marine Spatial Planning in the Bay of Bengal -- 7 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 4: Green Ports and Sustainable Shipping in the European Context -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 The North Sea and Baltic Sea Region -- 1.2 The Mediterranean Sea Region -- 1.3 The Black Sea Region -- 2 Maritime Regulation in the European Regions -- 2.1 MARPOL in European Regions -- 2.2 European Pollution Prevention Regulations -- 2.2.1 Classification Society -- 2.2.2 Port State Control -- 2.2.3 Maritime Surveillance -- 2.2.4 Ship-Shore Pollution Prevention -- 3 Green Port Management Practices -- 4 Green Shipping Practices -- 5 A Conceptual Framework for Maritime Sustainability -- 6 Conclusions and Future Research Directions -- References -- Part II: Moving to a More Secure and Safe Maritime Regulatory Regime -- Chapter 5: Maritime Transport and Sustainable Fisheries: Breaking the Silos -- 1 Overview of the Global Efforts for Sustainable Fisheries and Maritime Transport -- 1.1 The Global Effort for Sustainable Fisheries and Port State Control -- 1.2 Interagency Cooperation: A Global Approach to Deter IUU Fishing and Increase Maritime Safety -- 2 The Way Forward: How to Break the Silos -- 2.1 Fighting IUU Fishing: Enhanced Global Cooperation, Strengthened Ocean Governance, and Improved Regional Compliance -- 2.2 Enhancing Sustainable Maritime Transport and SDG 14's Implementation: Environmental Issues Related to Fisheries and Sea-Based Marine Plastic Litter -- 3 Conclusions -- References. , Chapter 6: Maritime Security: Adapting for Mid-century Challenges -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Collaborative Maritime Security -- 2.1 United Nations Sustainable Development Goals for 2030 -- 2.2 Maritime Security and the International Regulatory Governance -- 2.3 Collaborative Hard Security -- 3 Benchmarking Maritime Security Strategies -- 3.1 IMO -- 3.2 European Union -- 4 Embracing Multi-causality -- 5 Identifying the Main Drivers and Threats -- 6 Geopolitics and Breaking the Rules -- 7 Energy Markets and Maritime Security -- 7.1 The Geopolitics of Oil and Gas -- 7.2 Scenarios and Back-Casting -- 8 The Covid-19 Pandemics Impact on 2050 CO2 Emission Goals -- 9 Security Flashpoints 2050 -- 10 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 7: ISPS Code Implementation: Overkill and Off-Target -- 1 Introduction -- 2 ISPS Code Implementation in EU and Danish Legislation -- 2.1 Danish Implementation -- 2.2 Tactical Danish Method -- 3 Development of Plans -- 3.1 Ports and Port Facilities -- 3.2 Ship Security Assessment (SSA) -- 3.2.1 Security -- 4 Nature of Security -- 4.1 Acceptance of Risk, Example Iraq Vs. USA -- 4.2 Consequence and Risk of Exposal -- 4.3 Red Teaming -- 4.4 Barriers and Capacity -- 4.5 A Thesis of How to Assess Potential Terrorists -- 5 Combining Consequence and Risk of Exposal with Barriers and Capacity -- 5.1 Evaluation of the Efficiency in Perspective on "Return on Investment" -- 6 Security as Part of Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) -- 7 Towards a Better Security to Support SDGs and Beyond -- 7.1 Appropriate Security Measures -- 7.2 Sustainable Development Goal 14 Combined with Goal 17 -- 8 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 8: Port and Maritime Security and Sustainability -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Defining Sustainability and Resilience -- 3 Sustainable Development, Disruption, and the Maritime Domain -- 3.1 Threats to Maritime Security. , 3.2 Protection of Marine Resources -- 3.2.1 Piracy as a Result of Resource Unavailability -- 3.3 Enhancing the Focus on Cargo Security -- 3.4 Limitations of the ISPS Code -- 3.5 Expansion of Global Trade -- 3.6 "Just-in-Time" Delivery and the Sensitivity of Global Trade -- 3.7 The Convergence of Operational, Physical, and Digital Security -- 3.8 A Challenge of Governance -- 3.9 Maritime Security and Resilience -- 3.10 Protecting the Sea Lines of Communication -- 4 How Maritime and Port Security Can Support Sustainable Development -- References -- Chapter 9: Governance of International Sea Borders: Regional Approaches and Sustainable Solutions for Maritime Surveillance in the Mediterranean Sea -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Traditional Maritime Surveillance Operations and Conventional Techniques Within Maritime Spaces Defined by the UNCLOS -- 3 The Interplay Between EU Maritime Security Policies and Surveillance Activities in the Mediterranean Sea -- 4 The Management of the External Sea Borders in the EU and the Concept of Integrated Maritime Surveillance -- 5 EU InterAgency Cooperation and the Development of Sustainable Technologies to Detect Unlawful Activities in the Mediterranean Sea -- 5.1 Copernicus Maritime Surveillance Service -- 5.2 Unmanned Aircraft Systems -- 5.3 Maritime Autonomous Vehicles -- 6 Exploring the Nexus Between Maritime Surveillance Activities in the Mediterranean and Sustainable Approaches -- 6.1 Flexibility -- 6.2 Interoperability -- 6.3 Complementarity -- 7 Concluding Remarks -- References -- Part III: Improvements in Management/Technology of Best Practices for Sustainable Shipping -- Chapter 10: The Applicability of the International and Regional Efforts to Prevent Oil Pollution: Comparative Analysis Between the Arabian Gulf Region and the North Sea -- 1 Introduction -- 2 International Efforts to Curb Marine Oil Pollution. , 2.1 Importance of UNCLOS in Marine Pollution Prevention -- 2.2 Summary of International Conventions -- 2.3 Section Summary and Critical Analysis -- 3 Arabian Gulf Regional Marine Pollution Prevention Efforts -- 3.1 Summary of Regional Conventions to Curb Oil Marine Pollution -- 3.2 Section Summary and Critical Analysis -- 4 North Sea Regional Marine Pollution Prevention Efforts -- 4.1 Regional Efforts Towards Marine Pollution Prevention -- 4.2 Sources of Oil Pollution in the North Sea -- 4.3 Section Summary and Critical Analysis -- 5 Comparative Analysis Between the Arabian Gulf and North Sea Marine Pollution Prevention Activities -- 6 The Relation Between Oil Pollution Conventions, the SDGs, and Marine Transportation -- 6.1 SDGs and Maritime Transportation -- 6.2 Overview of the SDGs Role in Maritime Transportation -- 6.3 Linkages Between SDG 14, 17, and Transboundary Pollution -- 6.4 Transboundary Pollution in Accidental and Non-Accidental Oil Pollution -- 7 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 11: Implications of Automation and Digitalization for Maritime Education and Training -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Maritime Autonomous Ship Operations -- 3 Future Competencies of Seafarers -- 4 The Role of Digital Technologies -- 5 Implication for Maritime Education and Training -- 6 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 12: Synergies Between the Obligations and Measures to Reduce Vessel-Source Underwater Noise and Greenhouse Gas Emissions -- 1 Introduction: Another Way Is Possible -- 1.1 Sustainable Development Goals -- 2 Underwater Noise as a Risk to Marine Life -- 2.1 Tackling Vessel-Source Underwater Noise -- 3 GHG Emissions from Ships -- 3.1 International Shipping and the Climate Change Regime Framework -- 3.2 The Kyoto Protocol -- 3.3 The Paris Agreement -- 3.4 Reducing GHG Emissions by Increasing Energy Efficiency -- 4 Managing Underwater Noise from Ships. , 4.1 Underwater Noise and the Law of the Sea.
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham :Springer International Publishing AG,
    Keywords: Oil pollution of the sea-North Sea. ; Water quality. ; Water-Pollution. ; Electronic books.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (321 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9783319239019
    Series Statement: The Handbook of Environmental Chemistry Series ; v.41
    DDC: 577.14
    Language: English
    Note: Intro -- The Handbook of Environmental Chemistry Also Available Electronically -- Aims and Scope -- Series Preface -- Contents -- Introduction -- References -- Bonn Agreement Actions to Eliminate Illegal and Accidental Oil Pollution from Ships in the North Sea -- 1 Introduction -- 2 What Does the Bonn Agreement Cover? -- 3 Changes in Traffic Levels and Pollution: The BE-AWARE Project -- 3.1 Results from Phase I of the BE-AWARE Project -- 3.1.1 Sensitivity Analysis and Vulnerability Mapping -- 3.1.2 Quantitative Analysis of Oil Spill Risk -- 3.1.3 Qualitative Analysis of HNS Spill Risk -- 3.2 Conclusions -- 4 Marine Pollution Offences -- 4.1 Development of the North Sea Manual on Maritime Oil Pollution Offences -- 4.2 Purpose of the Manual -- 4.3 Chapters in the Manual -- 5 Surveillance -- 5.1 Zones of Responsibility (Control Zones) -- 5.2 Purpose of Surveillance Flights -- 5.3 Flight Types -- 5.3.1 National Flights -- 5.3.2 Regional Flights -- 5.3.3 Tour de Horizon Flights -- 5.3.4 Coordinated Extended Pollution Control Operation (CEPCO) -- 5.3.5 Aerial Surveillance Exercise -- 5.3.6 National Navigation Points -- 5.4 Reporting from Surveillance Flights -- 5.4.1 Reporting to Responsible Authorities -- 5.5 Surveillance Evidence: The Present -- 6 Conclusions -- References -- European Maritime Safety Agency CleanSeaNet Activities in the North Sea -- 1 Introduction -- 2 History of the European Maritime Safety Agency -- 2.1 EMSA Structure -- 2.2 The Developing Role of EMSA -- 3 EMSA Operational Tasks -- 3.1 Vessel Reporting Service -- 3.2 Integrated Maritime Services -- 3.3 Pollution Response Service -- 4 EMSA Earth Observation Services -- 4.1 Integrated Maritime Service Activities -- 4.2 CleanSeaNet Service -- 5 5 EMSA CSN First Generation Data by North Sea State, 2007-2011 -- 6 Conclusions -- References. , The Role of the International Maritime Organization in the Prevention of Illegal Oil Pollution from Ships: North Sea Special S... -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Status Quo of the North Sea -- 2.1 Abstraction of Special Status Area -- 2.2 North Sea Special Status Area -- 3 Oil Discharge in the North Sea -- 3.1 Operational Discharge vs Illegal Discharge -- 3.2 Illegal Oil Pollution in the North Sea -- 4 The Role of IMO in the Prevention of Illegal Oil Pollution -- 4.1 A Critique of MARPOL 73/78 -- 4.2 European Union Directive and North Sea Coastal State Legislation -- 4.2.1 North Sea Coastal States Shift Towards Stringency -- 4.2.2 Directive 2005/35/EC as Distinguished from MARPOL 73/78 -- 5 Conclusion -- References -- Oil Pollution in the Waters of the Danish Sector of the North Sea -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Responsibility for Aerial Surveillance and Combating Oil Spills and Chemical Pollution at Sea -- 2.1 The Danish National Legal Framework for Marine Environmental Preparedness -- 2.1.1 The Danish Ministry of Defence´s Responsibility -- 2.1.2 The Danish Act on the Protection of the Marine Environment, Section 34 -- 2.1.3 Municipal Responsibility the Danish Act on the Protection of the Marine Environment, Section 35 -- 2.1.4 The Danish Act on the Protection of the Marine Environment, Section 35, Subsection 6 -- 2.1.5 Options -- 2.2 The Rule of International Law Based on the Marine Environment -- 2.2.1 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), 1982 -- 2.2.2 The MARPOL Convention -- 2.3 Multilateral Agreements in Relation to the Marine Environment -- 2.3.1 The Bonn Agreement -- 2.3.2 The Copenhagen Agreement [9] -- 2.3.3 Trilateral Agreements: DENGERNETH [10] -- 3 National Organization and Responsibilities -- 3.1 Geographical Responsibilities and Allocation of Responsibilities. , 3.1.1 Drilling Rigs, Production Platforms (Oil and Gas), Subsea Pipelines and Similar Installations -- 3.1.2 The Macondo/Deep-Water Horizon Oil Spill -- 3.1.3 Oil Spill Contingency Plans (OSCP) -- OSCPs for Offshore Operators in Denmark -- Coordination During Spill Identification and Spill Recovery -- 3.1.4 Aerial Surveillance -- Danish Sea Environmental Aircraft -- German Sea Environmental Aircraft -- EMSA -- Tour d´Horizon [16] -- Coordinated Extended Pollution Control Operations (CEPCOs) [16] -- 3.1.5 Oil Pollution Response -- Combat Readiness in the Form of Environmental Equipped Ships -- Combating Methods Used in Connection With Oil Spills in the Danish Sector of the North Sea -- International Cooperation Regarding Oil Spill Response -- OSPAR: International Cooperation to Protect the Marine Environment -- 3.2 Marine Environment Organization -- 3.2.1 Organization for Oil Pollution and Chemical Pollution Response at Sea -- 3.2.2 Organization for Oil Pollution Response and Chemical Pollution Response on the Coast and in Harbours -- 3.3 Sailing Equipment for Oil Spill Response -- 3.3.1 Danish Naval Assets -- 3.3.2 Rescue Boats -- 3.3.3 The Danish Naval Home Guard -- 3.3.4 Cooperation with Private Stakeholders -- Maersk Oil and Gas/Esbjerg Guard Ship Company -- 3.4 Other Partners -- 3.4.1 The Danish Emergency Management Agency -- 3.4.2 The Local Authority´s Preparedness -- 3.4.3 Nord -- 3.4.4 The Police -- 4 Preventive Measures on the Marine Environment -- 4.1 The Safety of Navigation in the Danish Sector of the North Sea -- 4.2 Hailing of Ships -- 5 Oil Spill Statistics -- 5.1 Incidents in the Period 2010-2014 -- 5.1.1 Collision Between Golden Trader and Vidar -- 5.1.2 Spill of Crude Oil During Bunkering from the Syd Arne Platform -- 5.1.3 Other Incidents -- 5.2 Observations of Possible Oil in the Danish Sector of the North Sea. , 5.2.1 All Observed Spills in the Danish Sector of the North Sea Using Bonn Agreement Data -- 5.2.2 Observed Spills from Oil Platforms -- 5.2.3 Observed Discharges from Shipsy -- 6 Conclusions -- References -- Oil Pollution In and Around the Waters of Belgium -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 Ecological Importance of Belgian Waters and Shores -- 1.2 Socioeconomic Importance of Belgian Waters and Shores -- 1.3 A Key Risk Area for Ship-Source Pollution -- 2 Illegal Oil Discharges from Ships -- 2.1 Aerial Surveillance as Method for Monitoring Oil Pollution In and Around the Waters of Belgium -- 2.2 Significant Decrease in Chronic Oil Pollution Pressure -- 3 Accidental Marine Pollution -- 3.1 Historical Overview of Shipping Accidents with (Risk for) Accidental Oil Pollution -- 3.2 Outcome of Recent Risk Assessment Studies -- 3.3 Oil Pollution Prevention, Preparedness and Response -- 4 Conclusions -- References -- Oil Pollution in the Dutch Sector of the North Sea -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Study Area -- 3 Terminology -- 4 History of Oil Pollution in Dutch Waters -- 4.1 When It All Started: Oil Pollution in Dutch Waters, 1915-1968 -- 4.2 A Period of Technological Developments: Monitoring Oil Pollution in 1969-1991 -- 4.3 Monitoring Oil Pollution in Recent Years: 1992-2011 -- 5 Statistical Analysis of Recent Trends in SLAR Detections -- 5.1 Annual Trend -- 5.2 Spatial Patterns -- 5.3 Seasonal Patterns -- 5.4 Diurnal Patterns -- 6 Law Enforcement -- 7 Discussion -- References -- Oil Pollution in the Waters of the United Kingdom North Sea -- 1 Introduction -- 2 A Review of Vessel-Source Oil Pollution in the UK Waters -- 3 Oil Pollution, North Sea and UK Legislation -- 3.1 Inclusion of Conventions in Current UK National Law -- 3.2 UK and North Sea International Agreements -- 4 Obscured Oil Pollution Intervention and the UK Legal Regime. , 4.1 An Analysis of UK Intervention Policy for the North Sea -- 4.2 Comparison with Australian Legislation -- 5 Instruments Against Illegal Oil Discharge -- 6 Conclusion -- References -- The German Operational Monitoring System in the North Sea: Sensors, Methods and Example Data -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 The German Part of the North Sea -- 1.2 Sensitivity of the German North Sea Coast to Oil Pollution -- 1.3 The ``Wadden Sea´´: A Sensitive Environment -- 2 History and Projects -- 2.1 Historical Experiments -- 3 Monitoring System and Sensors -- 3.1 Airborne Sensors -- 3.2 Spaceborne Sensors -- 3.3 Combined Monitoring System -- 4 Example Data -- 4.1 Statistics -- 4.1.1 ``Clean Seas´´ Statistics -- 4.1.2 Combined Statistics -- 5 Application of Chemical Dispersants in Intertidal Waters -- 5.1 Advantages and Disadvantages of the Application of Chemical Dispersants -- 5.2 Modelling in Case of an Accident -- 5.3 Modelling for Risk Analyses -- 6 Summary -- References -- Beached Bird Surveys in the North Sea as an Instrument to Measure Levels of Chronic Oil Pollution -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Beached Bird Surveys Around the North Sea: Historical Overview -- 3 The Development of a Monitoring Instrument -- 4 OSPAR EcoQOs and Oil Pollution -- 5 Oil Pollution and Stranded Seabirds in the 1950s-1970s -- 6 Oil Pollution and Stranded Seabirds in the 1980s and 1990s -- 7 Recent Patterns and Trends -- 8 Discussion -- References -- Monitoring Oil Pollution from Oil and Gas Installations in the North Sea -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Role of the OSPAR Commission in Monitoring Oil Inputs from Oil and Gas Industry -- 2.1 OSPAR Offshore Industry Committee Role and Responsibilities -- 2.2 Measures Relating to Discharges Contaminated with Oil -- 2.3 Measures Relating to the Use and Discharge of Drilling Fluids and Cuttings. , 3 The Role of the Bonn Agreement in Monitoring Oil Pollution in the North Sea.
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 3
    Keywords: Analytical biochemistry ; Environmental pollution ; Analytical biochemistry ; Environmental pollution ; Environmental chemistry ; Environmental Chemistry ; Marine Sciences ; Geochemistry ; Environmental chemistry ; Marine Sciences ; Geochemistry ; Analytical chemistry. ; Water quality. ; Freshwater. ; Water pollution.
    Description / Table of Contents: This volume reviews the oil inputs to the Mediterranean Sea from sources such as shipping, offshore oil installations, and oil refineries, presented in a number of national case studies. A regional overview is also presented for the Adriatic Sea. Topics include mapping of oil slicks in the Adriatic, oil exploration and exploitation activities in the waters of the Levantine Basin (Eastern Mediterranean), the oil pollution preparedness and response activities of individual Mediterranean states, bilateral and regional cooperation among the various states, and the risk of pollution from shipping in sensitive sea areas, for example. Together with the companion volume Oil Pollution in the Mediterranean Sea: Part I - The International Context, it addresses both national and international measures in the region, making it of relevance to the agencies and government bodies tasked with remediating or preventing oil pollution, as well as policymakers and practitioners in the fields of shipping, ports and terminals, oil extraction and marine management. It provides researchers with essential reference material on tools and techniques for monitoring oil pollution, and constitutes a valuable resource for undergraduate and post-graduate students in the field of marine oil pollution
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: Online-Ressource (XII, 291 p. 117 illus., 104 illus. in color, online resource)
    Edition: Springer eBook Collection. Earth and Environmental Science
    ISBN: 9783030111380 , 9783030111380
    Series Statement: The Handbook of Environmental Chemistry 84
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 4
    Keywords: Analytical biochemistry ; Environmental pollution ; Environmental chemistry ; Environmental Chemistry ; Marine Sciences ; Water pollution. ; Analytical chemistry. ; Water quality. ; Freshwater. ; Environmental management.
    Description / Table of Contents: Introduction to Part I: The International Context -- History, Sources and Volumes of Oil Pollution in the Mediterranean Sea -- Shipping and Oil Transportation in the Mediterranean Sea -- Oil and Gas Exploration and Production in the Mediterranean Sea -- Oil Spill Intervention in the Mediterranean Sea -- The International Maritime Organization and Oil Pollution in the Mediterranean Sea -- The Barcelona Convention and its Role in Oil Pollution Prevention in the Mediterranean Sea -- The Role of REMPEC in the Prevention of and Response to Pollution from Ships in the Mediterranean Sea -- European Maritime Safety Agency Activities in the Mediterranean Sea -- Numerical Modeling of Oil Pollution in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea -- Numerical Modeling of Oil Pollution in the Western Mediterranean Sea -- Projects on Oil Spill Response in the Mediterranean Sea -- Oil Spill Beaching Probability for the Mediterranean Sea -- Conclusions for Part I: The International Context
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (XII, 350 p. 80 illus. in color)
    ISBN: 9783030122362
    Series Statement: The Handbook of Environmental Chemistry 83
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 5
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham : Springer International Publishing | Cham : Imprint: Springer
    Keywords: Economic geography ; Urban geography ; Sustainable development ; Transportation ; Globalization ; Sociology, Urban
    Description / Table of Contents: Foreword by David Pinder -- Chapter 1. Introduction -- Chapter 2. Port-City redevelopment and Sustainable Development -- Chapter 3. A Life-Cycle Model for port redevelopment strategies -- Chapter 4. Port-City redevelopment and the Circular Economy agenda in Europe -- Chapter 5. Technological Change and Logistics Development in European Ports -- Chapter 6. European Spatial Planning and Port-Cities -- Chapter 7. Organisational Change Management in Seaports -- Chapter 8. Urban Regeneration and Spatial Restructuring of Ports in Cities -- Chapter 9.Policy and Planning Issues in European Waterfront areas -- Chapter 10. Touristification of European Port Cities: Impact on local populations and cultural heritage -- Chapter 11. Governance Structures in Port Cities -- Chapter 12. The Intermodal Centrality of European Port and non-Port Cities: An Appraisal -- Chapter 13. The separation of ports from cities: The Case of Rotterdam -- Chapter 14. Integrated Port Cities: The Case of Hamburg -- Chapter 15. The Societal Integration of Ports and Cities: Case Study on Spanish Ports -- Chapter 16. The Consolidation of Waterfronts as Places of Leisure: Evidence from the South Bank of the Tagus Estuary, Portugal -- Chapter 17. Analysis of Interpretative Frameworks and Decision-Making in Maritime Environmental Disasters -- Chapter 18. Sustainability Assessment of Seaports -- Chapter 19. Conclusions.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource(XVIII, 345 p. 66 illus., 53 illus. in color.)
    Edition: 1st ed. 2020.
    ISBN: 9783030364649
    Series Statement: Strategies for Sustainability
    Language: English
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 6
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham : Springer International Publishing | Cham : Imprint: Springer
    Keywords: Economic geography. ; Shipping. ; Sustainable development. ; Environmental management.
    Description / Table of Contents: Chapter1. Introducing Sustainability in the Maritime Domain -- Chapter2. Greening the Blue Economy: A Trans-disciplinary Analysis -- Chapter3. Regional Marine Spatial Planning: A Tool For Greening Blue Economy In The Bay Of Bengal -- Chapter4. Green Ports and Sustainable Shipping in the European context -- Chapter5. Maritime Transport and Sustainable Fisheries: Breaking the Silos -- Chapter6. Maritime Security: Adapting for Mid-century Challenges -- Chapter7. ISPS Code implementation: overkill and off-target -- Chapter8. Port and Maritime Security and Sustainability -- Chapter9. Governance of international sea borders: regional approaches and sustainable solutions for maritime surveillance in the Mediterranean Sea -- Chapter10. The applicability of the international and regional efforts to prevent oil pollution: comparative analysis between the Arabian Gulf Region and the North Sea -- Chapter11. Autonomous operations, digital technologies and implications for Maritime Education and Training -- Chapter12. Synergies Between the Obligations and Measures to Reduce Vessel-Source Underwater Noise and Greenhouse Gas Emissions -- Chapter13. Sustainable Maritime Labour Governance: The Role of Transformative Partnership in Seafarers' Welfare -- Chapter14. Underwater noise from shipping – a special case for the Arctic -- Chapter15. Canadian Ports Sustainability: A Strategic Response to Disruptive Paradigms such as COVID-19 -- Chapter16. Lessons Learned from Robotics & AI in a Liability Context: A Sustainability Perspective -- Chapter17. The role of slow steaming in shipping and methods of CO2 reduction -- Chapter18. Maritime Governance & Small Island Developing States of the Wider Caribbean Region in the Era of Climate Change Adaptation -- Chapter19. Mind the gap: Women in the boardroom, on board and in the port -- Chapter20. Maritime Governance and International Maritime Organization instruments focused on sustainability in the light of United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals -- Chapter21. Putting the Pieces Together for Sustainable Shipping -- Chapter22. Conclusions: Connecting Sustainable Development Goals to the Maritime Domain. .
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource(XVIII, 525 p. 38 illus.)
    Edition: 1st ed. 2021.
    ISBN: 9783030693251
    Series Statement: Strategies for Sustainability
    Language: English
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 7
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham :Springer International Publishing AG,
    Keywords: Environmental chemistry. ; Electronic books.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (355 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9783030122362
    Series Statement: The Handbook of Environmental Chemistry Series ; v.83
    DDC: 577.14
    Language: English
    Note: Intro -- The Handbook of Environmental Chemistry Also Available Electronically -- Series Preface -- Contents -- Introduction to Part I: The International Context -- References -- History, Sources and Volumes of Oil Pollution in the Mediterranean Sea -- 1 Introduction -- 2 History of Oil Pollution in the Mediterranean Sea -- 3 Sources of Oil Pollution in the Mediterranean Sea -- 3.1 Shipping -- 3.2 Oil and Gas Platforms -- 3.3 Ports and Oil Terminals -- 3.4 Land-Based Sources -- 3.5 Military Conflicts -- 3.6 Natural Oil Seeps -- 3.7 Atmosphere -- 4 Volumes of Oil Pollution in the Mediterranean Sea -- 5 Conclusions -- References -- Shipping and Oil Transportation in the Mediterranean Sea -- 1 Introduction: A fast Changing Activity -- 2 Sources of Oil Spills in the Mediterranean -- 2.1 Marine Sources -- 2.2 Inland Sources -- 2.3 Shipping Routes -- 2.4 The Mediterranean Perspective -- 3 Inventory of Past Oil Spills in the Mediterranean -- 3.1 Accidental Spills -- 3.2 Operational Spills -- 3.3 The Possible Contribution of Satellite Imagery -- 4 Regional Cooperation -- 4.1 The Mediterranean Blue Plan -- 4.2 The Regional Marine Pollution Emergency Response Centre -- 4.3 The EuroMed Partnership -- 5 Conclusions -- References -- Oil and Gas Exploration and Production in the Mediterranean Sea -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Oil and Gas Production in the Mediterranean Sea -- 2.1 Greece -- 2.2 Montenegro -- 2.3 Italy -- 2.4 Croatia -- 2.5 Israel -- 2.6 Palestine -- 2.7 Cyprus -- 2.8 Egypt -- 2.9 Libya -- 3 Conclusions -- References -- Oil Spill Intervention in the Mediterranean Sea -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Oil Spill Intervention in an International Context -- 2.1 The OPRC Convention -- 2.2 The Intervention Convention -- 2.3 The Barcelona Convention and Regional Cooperation -- 2.4 MARPOL 73/78 -- 3 Mediterranean Zones and National Legislation on Oil Spills. , 3.1 Maritime Zones of the Mediterranean Sea -- 3.2 Intervention and National Contingency Plans -- 4 Examples of a (Potential Spill) Intervention Plan for the Mediterranean -- 5 Conclusion -- References -- The International Maritime Organization and Oil Pollution in the Mediterranean Sea -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Definition of ``Oil´´ and ``Pollution´´ -- 3 Sources of Oil Pollution at Sea -- 3.1 Operational Pollution and Accidental Pollution -- 3.2 Effects of Vessel Source Pollution -- 4 Oil Pollution in the Mediterranean Sea -- 4.1 An Overview of Mediterranean Maritime Traffic -- 4.2 Mediterranean Oil Tankers and Illicit Vessel Discharges -- 5 IMO and the Mediterranean Sea -- 6 Conclusion -- References -- The Barcelona Convention and Its Role in Oil Pollution Prevention in the Mediterranean Sea -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The UNEP Regional Seas Programme and the Mediterranean Action Plan -- 2.1 MAP Regional Activity Centres -- 2.2 Mediterranean Pollution Assessment and Control Programme (MED POL) -- 2.3 Regional Marine Pollution Emergency Response Centre for the Mediterranean Sea (REMPEC) -- 3 Overview of the Barcelona Convention and Its Key Components -- 3.1 The Barcelona Convention -- 3.2 Summary of the Protocols to the Barcelona Convention -- 3.3 Key Components of the Barcelona Convention -- 3.3.1 Liability and Compensation Framework for Pollution: The Backdrop -- 3.3.2 Guidelines on Liability and Compensation -- 4 Overview of the Protocols of the Barcelona Convention with Relevance to Oil Pollution -- 4.1 The Dumping Protocol and Its Main Requirements -- 4.2 The Prevention and Emergency Protocol and Its Main Requirements -- 4.3 The Land-Based Sources Protocol and Its Main Requirements -- 4.4 The Offshore Protocol and Its Main Requirements -- 4.5 Tabular Comparison with Other Protocols -- 5 Summary -- References. , The Role of REMPEC in Prevention of and Response to Pollution from Ships in the Mediterranean Sea -- 1 Introduction -- 2 REMPEC and Its Mandate -- 3 The Role of REMPEC in Pollution Prevention -- 3.1 Effective Maritime Administration Activities -- 3.2 Activities Dealing with Illicit Discharges of Oil and Other Hazardous or Noxious Substances -- 3.3 Activities Dealing with Port Reception Facilities -- 3.4 Guidelines for Pleasure Craft and for Places of Refuge -- 4 The Role of REMPEC in Marine Pollution Response and Preparedness -- 4.1 Response Activities of REMPEC -- 4.1.1 Remote Assistance -- 4.1.2 On-Site Assistance -- 4.2 Preparedness Activities of REMPEC -- 4.2.1 Contingency Planning -- 4.2.2 Mediterranean Overview -- 4.2.3 Capacity Building -- 4.2.4 Guidelines and Tools -- 4.2.5 Involvement of REMPEC in MEDESS-4MS and POSOW -- 4.2.6 Government and Industry Cooperation -- 5 Summary -- References -- European Maritime Safety Agency Activities in the Mediterranean Sea -- 1 Introduction -- 2 History of the European Maritime Safety Agency -- 2.1 Establishment of EMSA -- 2.2 The Developing Role of EMSA -- 3 EMSA Operational Tasks -- 3.1 Pollution Response Service -- 3.2 Stand-by Oil Spill Response Vessels in the Mediterranean -- 3.3 Pollution Preparedness and Response Exercises in the Mediterranean -- 4 EMSA Earth Observation Services -- 4.1 CleanSeaNet Service -- 4.2 CleanSeaNet in the Mediterranean -- 4.3 Satellite Imagery and CSN Post-2011 -- 5 EMSA CSN First Generation Data by Mediterranean EU Member State, 2007-2011 -- 5.1 Cyprus -- 5.2 Croatia -- 5.3 Greece -- 5.4 Italy -- 5.5 Malta -- 5.6 France -- 5.7 Spain -- 6 Conclusions -- References -- Numerical Modeling of Oil Pollution in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Main Oil Pollution Incidents in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea. , 3 Oil Spill Modeling in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea: A Review -- 4 The MEDSLIK Oil Spill Modeling System -- 4.1 The Lebanon Oil Pollution Crisis -- 5 The POSEIDON Oil Spill Model -- 5.1 POSEIDON OSM Test Cases -- 6 MEDSLIK-II: A Community Oil Spill Model for the Mediterranean -- 6.1 The MEDSLIK II Test Case: The Case of Costa Concordia -- 7 Oil Spill Risk Mapping -- 8 Conclusions -- References -- Numerical Modeling of Oil Pollution in the Western Mediterranean Sea -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Main Oil Pollution Incidents in the Western Mediterranean Sea -- 3 Oil Spill Modeling in the Western Mediterranean Sea: A Review -- 4 The MOTHY Operational System -- 4.1 The Haven Accident Test Case -- 5 The Bonifacio Oil Spill Operational Mode -- 5.1 The Porto Torres Oil Spill Test Case -- 6 Concluding Remarks -- References -- Projects on Oil Spill Response in the Mediterranean Sea -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Roles of Regional Marine Pollution Emergency Response Centre for the Mediterranean Sea and European Maritime Safety Agen... -- 2.1 The Role of Regional Marine Pollution Emergency Response Centre for the Mediterranean Sea -- 2.2 The Role of European Maritime Safety Agency -- 3 Funding for Oil Spill Response -- 3.1 Funded Projects Overview -- 3.1.1 Kill Spill Project -- General Information -- Background -- Main Objectives -- Main Results -- 3.1.2 EU-MOP Project -- General Information -- Background -- Main Objectives -- Main Results -- 3.1.3 HoverSpill Project -- General Information -- Background -- Main Objectives -- Main Results -- 3.1.4 METANE Project -- General Information -- Background -- Main Objectives -- Main Results -- 3.1.5 MOST Project -- General Information -- Background -- Main Objectives -- Main Results -- 3.1.6 MEDESS-4MS Project -- General Information -- Background -- Main Objectives -- Main Results -- 3.1.7 TOSCA Project -- General Information. , Background -- Main Objectives -- Main Results -- 3.1.8 NEREIDS Project -- General Information -- Background -- Main Objectives -- Main Results -- 3.1.9 PREMARPOL Project -- General Information -- Background -- Main Objectives -- Main Results -- 3.1.10 Mediterranean Pollution Control Project -- General Information -- Main Objectives -- Main Results -- 3.1.11 ARGOMARINE Project -- General Information -- Background -- Main Objectives -- Main Results -- 3.1.12 HAZADR Project -- General Information -- Background -- Main Objectives -- Main Results -- 3.1.13 RAOP-MED Project -- General Information -- Background -- Main Objectives -- Main Results -- 3.1.14 PRIMI Project -- General Information -- Background -- Main Objectives -- Main Results -- 3.1.15 URready4OS Project -- General Information -- Background -- Main Objectives -- Main Results -- 3.1.16 MEDSLIK-II Project -- General Information -- Background -- Main Objectives -- Main Results -- 4 Conclusions -- References -- Online Sources -- Oil Spill Beaching Probability for the Mediterranean Sea -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Methodology and Simulation Setup -- 3 Beaching Probability Maps -- 3.1 Beaching Maps from One Single Point -- 3.2 Beaching Maps for a Traffic Line -- 3.3 Beaching Maps for the Whole Mediterranean Basin -- 4 Summary -- References -- Conclusions for Part I: The International Context -- References -- Index.
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 8
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham : Springer
    Keywords: Environment ; Water quality ; Water pollution ; Analytical chemistry ; Environmental chemistry
    Description / Table of Contents: This volume offers a review of measures taken at different levels to prevent oil inputs to the North Sea from sources such as shipping and oil installations. A range of data from satellites, remote sensing, aerial surveillance, in-situ monitoring, oil spill sampling and beached bird surveys presents a comprehensive portrait of trends in oil pollution over many years. Topics include Bonn Agreement-based actions to eliminate illegal and accidental pollution from ships, OSPAR monitoring of oil installations, EMSA CleanSeaNet activities, andan internationally approved common standard for oil spills presented bythe Bonn-OSINet.A chapter on the role of the IMO in preventing oil pollution from ships provides an international context, whileothersdiscussefforts being made at the national level. A decadal review of the state of the North Sea prepared by OSPAR supports the view that there has been a significant reduction of oil inputs to the sea. This thorough review addresses national and international agencies and government bodies, as well as policymakers and practitioners in the fields of shipping, ports and terminals, oil extraction and marine management. Further, it provides researchers with essential reference material on tools and techniques for monitoring oil pollution and offers a valuable resource for undergraduate and post-graduate students in the field of marine oil pollution
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: Online-Ressource (XII, 312 p. 83 illus., 56 illus. in color, online resource)
    ISBN: 9783319239019
    Series Statement: The Handbook of Environmental Chemistry 41
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
Close ⊗
This website uses cookies and the analysis tool Matomo. More information can be found here...