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Regulating human interventions in Colombian coastal areas: Implications for the environmental licensing procedure in middle-income countries
Institution:1. EAFIT University, Department of Earth Sciences, Carrera 49 No. 7 sur-50, Medellín, Colombia;2. Ministry of Environment and Sustainable Development (Colombia), Sectorial and Urban Direction of Environmental Issues, Calle 37 No. 8 – 40, Bogotá, Colombia;3. Universidad de la Costa, Civil and Environmental Department, GESSA Research Group, Calle 58#55-66, Barranquilla, Colombia;4. University Sergio Arboleda, School of Law, Calle 18 No. 14A-18, Santa Marta, Colombia;1. Institute of Geography, Pedagogical University of Cracow, ul. Podchor??ych 2, 30-084 Cracow, Poland;2. Polish Academy of Sciences, Institute of Geography and Spatial Organization, ul. ?w. Jana 22, 31-018 Cracow, Poland;1. Department of Civil Engineering, University of Minho, Campus de Azurém, 4800-058 Guimarães, Portugal;2. Laboratório de Planejamento e Projetos, UFES, Av. Fernando Ferrari, 514, Room 7, Vitória, Espírito Santo 29075-910, Brazil;3. Department of Civil Engineering, University of Minho, Campus de Azurém, 4800-058 Guimarães, Portugal
Abstract:Although anthropogenic impacts could be assessed in any environment, coastal areas pose a particular challenge because of their special nature as the interface between land and sea. Therefore, this study evaluates the environmental regulatory framework for coastal interventions in Colombia, as an archetype of medium income countries (MICs), to derive implications for the environmental licensing procedure (ELP). The methods comprised two simultaneous pathways: a. An inventory of human interventions at the large scale area of the Colombian Caribbean Coast, with an estimation of the overall environmental impact; b. An analysis of the ELP in Colombia during the last 25 years. The study evidences several weaknesses, such as a consistent reduction in the number of works and activities covered in each new legislative. Moreover, the Colombian ELP currently regulates only four of the ten types of interventions with greater effect in its coastal zones. The discussions highlight some policy implications for the ELP in MICs, mainly based on how the impact of a type of intervention can be magnified in proportion to its frequency of occurrence, and the need to articulate instruments of environmental management and territorial planning. At last, the need to evolve the impact assessment of human interventions from environmental factors toward socio-natural processes is evidenced and further addressed, by the introduction of a susceptibility approach inspired on geomorphological processes. Overall, this study highlights important gaps of the Colombian ELP for coastal environments, which entails valuable lessons for MICs.
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