Abstract

Humans derive many tangible and intangible benefits from coastal areas, providing essential components for social and economic development especially of less developed coastal states and island states. At the same time, growing human and environmental pressures in coastal areas have significant impacts on coastal systems, requiring urgent attention in many coastal areas globally. Sustainable development goal (SDG) 14 of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development (henceforth the 2030 Agenda) aims for conservation and sustainable use of the oceans, seas, and marine resources, explicitly considering coastal areas in two of its targets (14.2 and 14.5). These promote, as we argue in this article, a strong sustainability concept by addressing protection, conservation, and management of coastal ecosystems and resources. The 2030 Agenda adopts the so-called “three-pillar-model” but does not specify how to balance the economic, social, and environmental dimensions in cases of trade-offs or conflicts. By analysing SDG 14 for the underlying sustainability concept, we derive decisive arguments for a strong sustainability concept and for the integration of constraint functions to avoid depletion of natural capital of coastal areas beyond safe minimum standards. In potential negotiations, targets 14.2 and 14.5 ought to serve as constraints to such depletion. However, such a rule-based framework has challenges and pitfalls which need to be addressed in the implementation and policy process. We discuss these for coastal areas in the context of SDG 14 and provide recommendations for coastal governance and for the process ahead.

Highlights

  • Coastal areas are frontiers along roughly 356,000 km of global coastline (Central Intelligence Agency 2016)

  • Referring to our working definition of ‘‘coastal zones’’ (‘‘Introduction’’) which comprises transitional systems at the land–sea interface, we identify a logical issue between Sustainable development goal (SDG) 14 and SDG15: depending on the definition adopted, coastal areas would be addressed both through SDG and through SDG which aims to ‘‘protect, restore and promote sustainable use of terrestrial ecosystems’’ (United Nations 2015: 24)

  • In the first section of this article, we identified the challenges facing coastal zones and coastal sustainability

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Summary

Introduction

Coastal areas are frontiers along roughly 356,000 km of global coastline (Central Intelligence Agency 2016). These promote, as we argue in this article, a strong sustainability concept by addressing protection, conservation, and management of coastal ecosystems and resources.

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