Participant biographies - Centre Scientifique de Monaco
Transcription
Participant biographies - Centre Scientifique de Monaco
OCEAN ACIDIFICATION IMPACTS ON COASTAL COMMUNITIES 12-‐14 janvier 2015 Musée océanographique de Monaco 1 _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 2 _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 3 _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 4 _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 5 _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 6 _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 7 _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 8 _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 9 _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 10 _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 11 _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 12 _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 13 _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 14 15 Food and Agriculture Organization Marine and Inland Fisheries Service Fisheries and Aquaculture Resources Use and Conservation Division Fisheries and Aquaculture Department F615 Viale delle Terme di Caracalla 00153 ROME ITALY tarub.Bahri@fao.org • 1996 – 2000 • 2000 – 2001 • 2001 – 2008 • 2008 – today PhD at the University Pierre & Marie Curie (Paris) Consultant for the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and the French Research Institute for Exploitation of the Sea (Ifremer) Fishery monitoring expert for an FAO field project in the Mediterranean Fishery resources officer at FAO Fisheries and Aquaculture Department Her university training is in biology, oceanography and statistics at the University of Montpellier and University Pierre and Marie Curie, France (1988 – 1996). In 2000 she received her Doctor of Science with a thesis on “the effect of environmental factors on the spatial distribution and structure of small pelagic fish schools in the Mediterranean” at the University Pierre and Marie Curie (France). In 2000 she started working as a consultant for the Food and Agriculture Organization, in particular for the design of research activities in the Strait of Sicily aiming at enhancing the understanding of relationships between recruitment strength, spawning stock size and environmental factors. She also worked for the French Research Institute for Exploitation of the Sea (Ifremer) on the enhancement of methodologies used to process acoustic data for a better discrimination of fish vs. plankton. In 2001 took a position in a field project of the FAO dealing with the assessment and monitoring of the fishery resources and the ecosystems in the Strait of Sicily. In 2008 she moved to FAO headquarters where she was offered a position of Fishery resources officer within the Fisheries and Aquaculture Department. She joined the Departmental working group on climate change and contributed actively to the creation of the Partnership for Climate, Fisheries and Aquaculture. She is currently involved in activities dealing with fisheries management and climate change, mainly in Africa and in the Caribbean. PUBLICATIONS ü T. Bahri. Western Central Atlantic. In FAO Review of the state of world marine Fishery resources. FAO Fisheries and Aquaculture Technical Paper No. 569. Rome, FAO. 2011: 46-66. ü T. Bahri, K. Cochrane. Climate change impacts on the world fisheries resources. In FAO Review of the state of world marine Fishery resources. FAO Fisheries and Aquaculture Technical Paper No. 569. Rome, FAO. 2011: 279-289. ü Cochrane, K.; De Young, C.; Soto, D.; Bahri, T. (eds). 2009. Climate change implications for fisheries and aquaculture. Overview of current scientific knowledge. FAO Fisheries and Aquaculture Technical Paper. No. 530. Rome, FAO. 2009. 212 p. ü Bonanno, S. Zgozi, A. Cuttitta, A. El Turki, A. Di Nieri, H. Ghmati, G. Basilone, S. Aronica, M. Hamza, M. Barra, S. Genovese, F. Falco, L. Knittweis, R. Mifsud, B. Patti, T. Bahri, G. Giacalone, I. Fontana, G. Tranchida, S. Mazzola. 2012. Influence of environmental variability on anchovy early life stages (Engraulis encrasicolus) in two different areas of the Central Mediterranean Sea. Hydrobiologia DOI 10.1007/s10750-012-1285-8 ü Fortibuoni, T., Bahri, T., Fiorentino, F., Garofalo, G., Gristina, M. 2010. Spawning and nursery areas of deep-water pink shrimp Parapenaeus longirostris (Lucas, 1846) in the Strait of Sicily (central Mediterranean) Journal of Crustacean Biology: May 2010, Vol. 30, No. 2, pp. 167-174. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 16 Aquaculture Economics and Sustainable Development (Independant Consultant) YORK UNITED KINGDOM Honorary Research Associate of the Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI) University of York, Heslington YORK, YO10 5DX UNITED KINGDOM cecilebrugere@gmail.com • I hold a PhD in Agricultural Economics from the University of Newcastle and an MSc in Ecological Economics from the University of Edinburgh (UK). • In 2010-2011, I held a European Marie Curie Research Fellowship and led interdisciplinary project “Sustainable Ecosystem Services and Livelihoods through Aquaculture Development” (ECOLIVA) from the Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI) in York (UK). This project shed light on the linkages between the provision and valuation of ecosystem services, coastal shrimp farming and sustainable livelihoods in Thailand. • Previously, and until July 2012, I worked as a Fishery Planning Analyst/ Aquaculture Officer with the FAO in Rome, providing aquaculture policy advice and support to national governments, and addressing social and economic issues associated with aquaculture expansion and aquatic resources management. • Since 2012, I have been working in an independent research and advisory capacity for the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), the Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation (NORAD), the Network for Aquaculture Centres in Asia and the Pacific (NACA), and the University of Wageningen (Netherlands). My work focuses on the sustainability and socio-economic impacts of aquaculture, and in particular on issues related to livelihoods, gender equality, adaptation and resilience, ecosystem services and the functioning of institutions. My work and research have mostly taken place in Asia (Bangladesh, India, Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Thailand, Vietnam, Indonesia) and in sub-Saharan Africa (Mozambique, Uganda, Mali, Cameroon, Chad). I have authored/co-authored a range of peer-reviewed papers, book chapters and FAO technical papers, and have contributed to two UN flagship publications: the World Water Resources Report and the State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture. I have acted as a reviewer for: Food Policy; Agricultural Economics; Ocean and Coastal Management; Society and Natural Resources; Perspectives in Agriculture, Veterinary Sciences, Nutrition and Natural Resources. PUBLICATIONS ü Brugere, C. (forthcoming) Climate change vulnerability in fisheries and aquaculture: A synthesis of six regional studies. FAO Fisheries and Aquaculture Technical Paper No. 568. FAO, Rome. ü Brugere, C. (2014) Mainstreaming gender in transboundary natural resources projects – the experience of the Bay of Bengal Large Marine Ecosystem (BOBLME) project. Environmental Development, 11: 84-97. ü Schmitt, L. and Brugere, C. (2013) Capturing ecosystem services, stakeholders' preferences and trade-offs in coastal aquaculture decisions: A Bayesian Belief Network application. PLoS ONE, 8(10): e75956. ü Brugere, C. (2013) Assessing climate change vulnerability in fisheries and aquaculture: Available methodologies and their relevance for the sector. Consultancy Report to the Economics and Policy Division, Fisheries and Aquaculture Department, FAO, Rome, 76p. ü Brugere, C. (2006) Can integrated coastal management solve agriculture-fisheries-aquaculture conflicts at the land-water interface? A perspective from New Institutional Economics. In: C.T. Huong, T.P. Tuong, J.W. Gowing and B. Hardy (Eds) Environment and Livelihoods in Coastal Tropical Zones: Managing Agriculture – Fishery – Aquaculture conflicts. CGIAR Comprehensive Assessment Series, CABI International, Oxon, pp. 258-273. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 17 School of Biological Sciences / Faculty of Sciences University of Queensland BRISBANE ST LUCIA QLD 4072 AUSTRALIA sophie@uq.edu.au • Ph. D in Biological Sciences from the University of Sydney • M.A. Hon. in Mathematics and Philosophy from the University of Edinburgh Sophie Dove is an Associate Professor at the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia (www.coralreefecosystems.org). Sophie’s research focuses on investigating the effects of environmental change on marine aquatic organisms and coral reef ecosystems. She is presently concerned with the interactive effects of ocean warming and acidification on a broad diversity of reefal organisms that are directly involved in reef construction and destruction. To achieve these aims, she has ben central to the construction of a mesocosm system at Heron Island that provides sufficiently fine control over seawater pCO2 and temperature to allow the incorporation of natural diurnal and seasonal fluctuations within these parameters. She is a chief investigator in the Australian Research Council’s Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, has advised 22 postgraduate students to completion, and has published over 75 articles in refereed journals. Her novel isolation of pigments from Scleractinian corals led to two international patents. PUBLICATIONS ü Dove SG, Kline DI, Pantos O, Angly FE, Tyson GW, Hoegh-Guldberg O (2013). Future reef decalcification under business-as-usual CO2 emission scenario. PNAS 110 38: 15342-15347. ü Fang JKH, Schönberg CHL, Mello-Athayde MA, Hoegh-Guldberg O, Dove SG (2014). Effects of ocean warming and acidification on the energy budget of an excavating sponge. Global Change Biology, Early View: 1-12. ü Reyes-Nivia C, Diaz-Pulido G; Kline D, Hoegh- Guldberg O, Dove S (2013) Ocean acidification and warming scenarios increase microbioerosion of coral skeletons. Global Change Biology 19(6):1919-1929 ü Fang JKH, Mello-Athayde MA, Schönberg CHL, Kline DI, Hoegh-Guldberg O, Dove SG. (2013). Sponge biomass and bioerosion rates increase under ocean warming and acidification. Global Change Biology 19(12):3581-3591. ü Bender D., Diaz-Pulido G. and Dove S. (2014) Warming and acidification promote cyanobacterial dominance in turf algal assemblages. Mar Ecol Progr Ser. Vol. 517: 271–284. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 18 BIOENV Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences Centre for Marine Evolutionary Biology (CeMEB) University of Gothenburg The Sven Loven Centre for Marine Sciences, Kristineberg SE-45178 FISKEBÄCKSKIL SWEDEN sam.dupont@bioenv.gu.se Sam Dupont is a marine ecophysiologist at the University of Gothenburg and an Honorary Assistant Professor at the School of Biological Sciences, Hong Kong University. His main research topic is on the impact of increased CO2 and related changes on marine species and ecosystems and was published in more than 100 publications in journals including Nature, PNAS and TREE. His work aims at revealing the mechanisms behind species and ecosystem responses and at developing the needed unifying theory for large scale predictions. He is in direct contacts with various stakeholders, both at local and global level. He is a member of the Advisory Board of the Ocean Acidification International Coordination Centre (OA-ICC), the Executive Council of the Global Ocean Acidification Observing Network (GOA-ON) and the Steering committee of the EuroMarine consortium. He is an active partner in several science education projects, including “Inquiry-to-Insight” and “Inquiry-to-SEA“, collaborations between the University of Gothenburg and Stanford University, the “VirtualLab project” which is a collaboration between the Faculty of Education and Faculty of Sciences at the University of Gothenburg. PUBLICATIONS ü Dupont S & Pörtner H (2013) Get ready for ocean acidification. Nature 498:429. ü Dupont S, Hall E, Calosi P & Lundve B (2014). First evidence of altered sensory quality in a shellfish exposed to decreased pH relevant for ocean acidification. Journal of Shellfish Research. 33: 857-861. ü Gaylor B, Kroeker KJ, Sunday JM, Anderson KM, Barry JP, Brown NE, Connell SD, Dupont S, Fabricius KE, HallSpencer JM, Klinger T, Milazzo M, Munday PL, Russell BD, Sanford E, Schreiber SJ, Thiyagarajan V, Vaughan MLH, Widdicombe S & Harley CDG (2014) Ocean acidification through the lens of ecological theory. Ecology ü Sunday JM, Calosi P, Dupont S, Munday PL, Stillman JH & Reusch TBH (2014) Evolution in an acidifying ocean. Trends in Ecology & Evolution. 29: 117-125. ü Thor P & Dupont S (2014) Transgenerational effects alleviate severe fecundity loss during ocean acidification in a ubiquitous planktonic copepod. Global Change Biology. doi: 10.1111/gcb.12815. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 19 International Atomic Energy Agency Environment Laboratories Ocean Acidification International Coordination Centre (OA-ICC) 4a Quai Antoine 1er MC 98000 MONACO l.hansson@iaea.org Atoms for Peace • 2002 – 2007 Master of Science in Biotechnology Engineering, LTH, Faculty of Engineering, Lund University, Sweden o 2004 - 2005 Bachelor of Science in Chemistry, sabbatical year, University of Nice Sophia Antipolis, Faculty of Science, France o 2006 - 2007 Fourth and last year of the Master of Science in Biotechnology Engineering – LTH exchange student programme, INSA Lyon, Biosciences, Biochemistry and Biotechnology, France • 2008 – 2012 Project manager of the EU FP7 project EPOCA - European Project on Ocean Acidification, Laboratoire d’Océanographie de Villefranche-sur-Mer (CNRS-UPMC), France • 2012 – present Associate Project Officer of the IAEA project OA-ICC - Ocean Acidification International Coordination Centre, International Atomic Energy Agency, Environment Laboratories, Monaco Lina Hansson holds a Master of Science in Biotechnology Engineering from Lund University, Sweden. She was the project manager of the EU FP7 project EPOCA (European Project on Ocean Acidification) from 2008 to 2012. She is currently working as Associate Project Officer of the Ocean Acidification International Coordination Centre (OA-ICC), launched in 2012 and based at the IAEA Environment Laboratories in Monaco. Lina Hansson is co-editor of the EPOCA publication "Guide to Best Practices in Ocean Acidification Research and Data Reporting", a guidance document for the ocean acidification research community covering seawater carbonate chemistry, experimental design of perturbation experiments, measurements of CO2-sensitive processes and data reporting and usage. The guide was published in 2010 and is freely available at . She is also co-editor of the first book on the subject, “Ocean Acidification”, published in 2011 by Oxford University Press. http://ukcatalogue.oup.com/product/9780199591091.do Each of the book’s 15 chapters reviews a key topic of ocean acidification research. She is co-author of several short articles on EPOCA and the OA-ICC in various newsletters. PUBLICATIONS ü Gattuso J.-P. & Hansson L., 2011. Ocean acidification. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ü Gattuso J.-P. & Hansson L., 2011. Ocean acidification: background and history. In: Gattuso J.-P. & Hansson L. (Eds.), Ocean acidification. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ü Hansson, L. 2013. Ocean Acidification International Coordination Centre. SOLAS NEWS 15, Summer 2013:28. ü Hansson L., Bijma J., Orr J., Riebesell U., Turley C. & Gattuso J.-P., 2012. End of first international large-scale research project on ocean acidification. GeoQ – the quarterly newsletter of the European Geosciences Union 3: 29–32. ü Riebesell U., Fabry V. J., Hansson L. & Gattuso J.-P., 2010. Guide to best practices for ocean acidification research and data reporting, 260 p. Luxembourg: Publications Office of the European Union. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 20 Institute of Economic Studies University of Iceland Saemundargötu 2 101 REYKJAVIK ICELAND gunnarha@hi.is • • • • • • • • • • • • BSc (econ.), University of Iceland. MSc, University of Iceland. DEA (MPhil) in Economics, Université Toulouse 1. DEEQA (European Master’s degree in Quantitative Economics), Université Toulouse 1. PhD in Economics, Université Toulouse 1. 1997 – 1998 Economist, National Economic Institute. 2002-2005 Economic Advisor to the Prime Minister. 2005-2006 Associate Professor of Economics, Bifröst University. 2007-2010 Director, Institute of Economic Studies, University of Iceland. 2009-2010 Chairman of the Financial Supervisory Authority in Iceland. 2010-2012 Senior Policy Analyst, Fisheries Policies Division, Trade and Agriculture Directorate, OECD, Paris. 2012-present Director, Institute of Economic Studies, University of Iceland. Mr Gunnar Haraldsson holds B.Sc. (econ.) degree in Economics and M.Sc. degree from the University of Iceland, and DEA and a PhD in Economics from the University of Toulouse. He is a former economist at the National Economic Institute, Economic Advisor at the Prime Minister, Project Director at the Icelandic Development Agency, Associate Professor of Economics at Bifröst University (Iceland), Senior Economist at the Fisheries Division of the Trade and Agriculture Department of the OECD in Paris and currently the director of the Institute of Economic Studies (IoES) at the University of Iceland. Dr. Haraldsson has participated in numerous international research project related to fisheries and the environment. Among other responsibilities he was chairman of the Icelandic Financial Supervisory Authority from March 2009 to March 2010. PUBLICATIONS ü Hilmi N., Allemand D., Cinar M., Cooley S., Hall-Spencer J., Haraldsson G., Hattam C., Jeffree R.A., Orr J. C., Rehdanz K., Reynaud S., Safa A., Dupont S., (2014). Sensitivity of Mediterranean Countries to Ocean Acidification. Water, Vol. 6, Issue 6. ü Hilmi, N., D. Allemand, S. Dupont, A. Safa, G. Haraldsson, P. L.D. Nunes, C. Moore, C. Hattam, S. Reynaud, J. M. Hall-Spencer, M. Fine, C. Turley, R. Jeffree, J. Orr, P. L. Munday, S. R. Cooley (2013). Towards improved socioeconomic assessments of ocean acidification’s impacts. Marine Biology, Vol. 160, Issue 8, pp. 1773-1787. ü Haraldsson, G. and D. Carey (2011). Ensuring a Sustainable and Efficient Fishery in Iceland, OECD Economics Department Working Papers, No. 891, OECD Publishing. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 21 THE WORLD BANK Consultant, Fisheries and Oceans 1818 H Street, NW WASHINGTON, DC 20433 USA kkelleherWB@gmail.com Kieran Kelleher is a consultant on fisheries and oceans and works for a range of international agencies and consulting firms. He is the former Fisheries Team Leader in the World Bank and former manager of the World Bank's Global Partnership on Fisheries (www.worldbank.org/fish). He has a background in biology and business management and has worked as a fisherman, fish farmer, manager of a fisher cooperative, as a fisheries scientist and university lecturer. He has spent most of his career as an advisor on fisheries and marine affairs to governments in more than sixty developing countries. He is the author of global studies on discards and fisheries enforcement and was the lead author of World Bank studies: “The Sunken Billions. The Economic Justification for Fisheries Reform” (www.worldbank.org/ sunkenbillions), Changing the face of the Waters. The promise and challenge of sustainable aquaculture and “The Hidden Harvests. The global contribution of capture fisheries”. His wiki page on fisheries and climate change is available at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fisheries_and_climate_change and he has authored discussion papers on green growth in fisheries (OECD), and papers on blue growth (Indonesia and FAO). While working in the World Bank he commissioned studies on blue carbon and it’s financing and contributed to the establishment of the Global Partnership on Oceans. He was the lead author of the South Pacific and Southern Ocean chapter on a recent IAEA publication on the economics of ocean acidification. PUBLICATIONS ü ASCOE, Sean. The Sunken Billions: The Economic Justification for Fisheries Reform. Marine Resource Economics, 2012, vol. 27, no 2, p. 193-194. (www.worldbank.org/sunkenbillions) ü World Bank. 2012. Hidden harvest : the global contribution of capture fisheries. Washington, DC: World Bank. ü WOOD, Adrian et MAYER, Jörg. Changing the Face of the Waters: The Promise and Challenge of Sustainable Aquaculture. 2007. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 22 PUBLICATIONS _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 23 IfW Kiel Institute for the World Economy and University of Kiel Kiellinie 66 24105 KIEL GERMANY katrin.rehdanz@ifw-kiel.de Katrin Rehdanz is associate professor for environmental and resource economics at the University of Kiel associated with the Kiel Institute for the World Economy. She holds a diploma and a PhD in economics from the University of Hamburg. She has a strong background in environmental valuation and environmental-economy modeling. Her main areas of research are environmental impact assessment and climate policy analysis. She was leading the young researchers group “Valuing the Ocean” within the cluster of excellence initiative “The Future Ocean” funded by the German government. She has published various articles in international journals and has been principle investigator to a number of international and national third-party funded projects. For more information see: http://www.eare.wiso.uni-kiel.de/Welcome?set_language=en PUBLICATIONS ü Hilmi, N., D. Allemand, M. Cinar, S. Cooley, J.M. Hall-Spencer, G. Haraldsson, C. Hattam, R.A. Jeffree, J.C. Orr, K. Rehdanz, S. Reynaud, A. Safa and S. Dupont (2014) Exposure of Mediterranean Countries to Ocean Acidification, Water, 6 1719-1744. ü Bertram, C. and K. Rehdanz (2013), On the Environmental Effectiveness of the EU Marine Strategy Framework Directive Marine Policy, Marine Policy, 38 25-40.. ü Brander, L.M., K. Rehdanz, R.S.J. Tol and P.J.H. van Beukering (forthcoming), The Economic Impact of Ocean Acidification on Coral Reefs, Climate Change Economics. Narita, D., K. Rehdanz and R.S.J. Tol (2012), Economic Costs of Ocean Acidification: A Look into the Impacts on Shellfish Production, Climatic Change, 113(3) 1049-1063 ü Maddison, D. and K. Rehdanz (2011), The Impact of Climate on Life-Satisfaction, Ecological Economics, 70(12) 2437-2445. ü Narita, D., K. Rehdanz and R.S.J. Tol (2012), Economic Costs of Ocean Acidification: A Look into the Impacts on Shellfish Production, Climatic Change, 113(3) 1049-1063 _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 24 OECD Fisheries Division Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development 2 rue André Pascal 75775 PARIS CEDEX 16 FRANCE carl-christian.schmidt@oecd.org Since August 2001, Mr. Carl-Christian SCHMIDT is the Head of the Fisheries Policies Division in the Directorate for Trade and Agriculture the OECD. Mr. Schmidt is in charge of the OECD’s programme of work related to fisheries and in this respect oversees the operation of the OECD’s Committee for Fisheries. He is also member of the management team of the Directorate for Trade and Agriculture. He participates in a number of international fora representing the OECD and its work on fisheries, natural resource management and ocean issues. During his tenure with the OECD, Mr. Schmidt has contributed to advancing the understanding of sustainable and responsible fisheries, including a wide number of fisheries management issues, and trade. He has had wide international exposure to fisheries, natural resource management and trade through collaboration with a number of international organisations, in particular the FAO, WTO, ICES, UNEP as well as regional fisheries management bodies. Following the years 1979-1982 when he worked for the Danish Ministry of Fisheries, Mr. Schmidt was appointed Administrator at the OECD in 1982. He was promoted to the post of Principal Administrator in 1988. In 1997 and 1998, Mr. Schmidt was on leave of absence while setting up the Marine Stewardship Council based in London, a non-governmental accreditation organisation devoted to promote sustainable fisheries through certification. Mr. Schmidt holds a Masters degree in Economics and Political Science from Copenhagen School of Economics and Business Administration and a postgraduate Certificate of Advanced European Studies from the College of Europe, Bruges, Belgium. PUBLICATIONS ü 2010: The Economics of Adapting Fisheries to Climate Change ü 2011: Fisheries and Aquaculture Certification ü 2011: Fisheries Policy Reform: National Experiences ü 2011: Rebuilding Fisheries – The Way Forward ü 2013: The OECD Handbook for Fisheries Managers – Principles and Practice for Policy Design _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 25 UBC Fisheries Centre Fisheries Economics Research Unit (FERU)) 2202 Main Mail The University of British Columbia V6T 1Z4 VANCOUVER, BC CANADA r.sumaila@fisheries.ubc.ca Recent teaching : • Environmental Economics (Undergraduate, UBC) • Land and Forestry Economics (Graduate, UBC) • Critical Issues in Fisheries (Graduate, UBC) • Fisheries Economics (Graduate, UBC) • Environmental and Natural Resource Economics (Graduate, University of Tromsø) • Natural Resource Economics (Undergraduate, University of Namibia) • Applied Game Theory (Graduate, UBC). Dr. Sumaila specializes in bioeconomics, marine ecosystem valuation and the analysis of global issues such as fisheries subsidies, illegal fishing and the economics of high and deep seas fisheries. He has experience working in fisheries and natural resource projects in Norway, Canada and the North Atlantic region, Namibia and the Southern African region, Ghana and the West African region and Hong Kong and the South China Sea. Sumaila has published over 160 peer-reviewed articles including in Nature, Science and the Journal of Environmental Economics and Management. His work has generated a great deal of interest, and has been cited by, among others, the Economist, the Boston Globe, the International Herald Tribune, the Wall Street Journal and the Vancouver Sun. He has won awards such as the Leopold Leadership Fellowship (Stanford), the Pew Marine Fellowship; Craigdarroch Award for Societal Contribution; the Zayed International Price for the Environment and the Peter Wall Institute Senior Early Career Scholar Award. His policy influence can be judged by the many highlevel invited talks he has given over the years, e.g., at the UN Rio + 20 Ocean Dialogue, the White House, the U.S. Congress, the Canadian Parliament, the House of Lords, UK; the African Union; the World Trade Organisation and at the St James Palace, with Prince Charles. PUBLICATIONS ü Sumaila, U.R., Cisneros-Montemayor, A.M., Dyck, A., Huang, L., Cheung, W.W.L., Jacquet, J., Kleisner, K., Lam, V.W.Y., McCrea-Strub, A., Swartz, W., Watson, R., Zeller, D., and Pauly, D. (2012). Impact of the Deepwater Horizon well blowout on the Economics of U.S. Gulf fisheries. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, 69: 499-510. ü Sumaila, U.R. and Huang, L. (2012). Managing Bluefin Tuna in the Mediterranean Sea. Marine Policy, 36: 502– 511. ü Collette, B.B., U.R. Sumaila and others (2011). High Value and Long Life—Double Jeopardy for Tunas and Billfishes. Science, 333: 291-292. ü Pereira, H. M., Leadley, P.W., Sumaila, U.R., and others (2010). Scenarios for Global Biodiversity in the 21st Century. Science, 330(6010): 1496-1501 ü Sumaila, U.R., Cheung, W.W.L., Dyck, A., Gueye, K., Huang, L., Lam, V.W.Y., Pauly, D., Srinivasan, T., Swartz, W., Pauly, D., and Zeller, D. (2012). Benefits of rebuilding global marine fisheries outweigh costs. PLoS ONE 7(7), e40542. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 26 27 _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 28 29 CSM Centre Scientifique de Monaco 8 Quai Antoine 1er MC 98000 MONACO allemand@centrescientifique.mc • Denis Allemand is a monegasc citizen, born on July 9, 1959. • He received his Ph.D. in pharmacological science and endocrinology at the University of Montpellier II (France) in 1986. • He is now a Professor of Biology (PR1) at the University of Nice-Sophia Antipolis, currently on leave to be Scientific Director of the Centre Scientifique de Monaco (CSM). • His main area of research is related to the comparative physiology of marine organisms such as cnidarians, sea urchins. • As such, he co-authored over 130 scientific papers and numerous book chapters. He has supervised 12 doctoral students. The CSM is a public agency historically dedicated to research on the marine field. Currently the agency is divided in three departments: - Marine Biology and Economy (including a team of Ecophysiology/Ecology, a team of Physiology/Biochemistry and a team of Environmental economy), - Polar Biology (LIA 647 CSM - CNRS – Strasbourg University), - Biomedicine. Professor ALLEMAND’s current work focuses on the physiology of corals (reef-building corals, mediterranean red coral…) with an emphasis on two major biological functions: biomineralization and symbiosis. In biomineralization, his studies encompass the mechanism of formation of the coral skeleton and the effect of ocean acidification on the process of biomineralization. As for symbiosis, it focuses on the mutual adaptation of both partners of the symbiosis (host animal and the unicellular algae called zooxanthellae) and especially the molecular relationship between zooxanthellae and their host. Involved in the Monegasque Association for Nature Protection, he is also interested in the management of sea-protected areas and the culture of precious coral on site. Denis ALLEMAND is part of various institutes and agencies enhancing his involvement and dedication to scientific research and nature protection. Thus, he is member of the Scientific Board of the Institute of Oceanography Foundation Albert I - Prince of Monaco (Monaco), the Foundation Prince Albert II de Monaco, (Monaco), the CNRS-Institute of Ecology and Environment (France), the École Pratique des Hautes Études (EPHE) (France), the Institut Français de Recherche pour l’exploitation de la mer (IFREMER) (France) and Board of Directors of the Oceanological Observatory of Villefranche-sur-Mer (France). As a reward for his involvement and achievements he is Knight of St. Charles Order and Knight of the Order of Grimaldi. Beside his main activities in science, his interests scopes a wide variety of subjects as cave dwellings from the prehistorical times to more recent troglodyte installations or vernacular architecture in Provence and Côte d'Azur. PUBLICATIONS ü Allemand D, Ferrier-Pages C, Furla P, Houlbreque F, Puverel S, et al. (2004) Biomineralisation in reef-building corals: from molecular mechanisms to environmental control. Comptes Rendus Palevol 3: 453-467. ü Weis VM, Allemand D (2009) What Determines Coral Health? Science 324: 1153-1155. ü Erez J, Reynaud S, Silverman J, Schneider K, Allemand D (2011) Coral calcification under ocean acidification and global change. In: Dubinsky Z, Stambler N, editors. Coral reefs: An ecosystem in transition: Springer Netherlands. pp. 151-176. ü Venn AA, Tambutté É, Holcomb M, Laurent J, Allemand D, et al. (2013) Impact of seawater acidification on pH at the tissue-skeleton interface and calcification in reef corals. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 110: 1634-1639. ü Holcomb M, Venn A, Tambutté É, Tambutté S, Allemand D, et al. (2014) Coral calcifying fluid pH dictates response to ocean acidification. Sci Rep 4: 5207. For a more complete biography, list of publication and information concerning the Scientific Center of Monaco go to www.centrescientifique.mc. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 30 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco SNH Scottish Natural Heritage Silvan House 231 Corstorphine Road EDINBURGH EH12 7AT, SCOTLAND UNITED KINGDOM john.baxter@snh.gov.uk Honorary Professor: St Andrews University and Heriot-Watt University. He is principal adviser (marine) for Scottish Natural Heritage, the Scottish Government’s advisers on nature conservation. He is a marine biologist and oversees a large research programme to support the work involved in providing advice on a wide range of topics including climate change, ocean carbon and ocean acidification. He is Chair of the Expert Panel of the UK Marine Climate Change Impacts Partnership (MCCIP) and a member of the Marine Alliance for Science and Technology Scotland’s (MASTS) Marine Biogeochemistry Forum. He is ViceChair of the Ocean Acidification international Reference User Group. He is Chief Editor (Marine) for the international journal Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems. He has co-edited a number of publications on ocean acidification and ocean carbon aimed at policy makers and the general public. PUBLICATIONS ü MCCIP. 2009. Marine Climate Change Ecosystem Linkages Report Card 2009. Eds. Baxter JM, Buckley PJ, Frost MT. Summary Report, MCCIP, Lowestoft, 16pp. ü Ocean Acidification Reference User Group. 2009. Ocean Acidification: The Facts. A special introductory guide for policy advisers and decision makers. Eds. Laffoley D d’A and Baxter JM. European Project on Ocean Acidifcation (EPOCA) 12pp. ü Laffoley D d’A and Baxter JM (Eds.). 2011. Ocean Acidification: Acting on Evidence. Messages for Rio+20. European Project on ocean Acidification (EPOCA), UK Ocean Acidification Research Programme (UKOA), Biological Impacts of Ocean Acidification (BIOACID) and Mediterranean Sea Acidification in a Chnaging Climate (MedSeA) 8pp. ü Laffoley D d’A and Baxter JM (Eds.). 2012. Ocean Acidification: The knowledge base 2012. Updating what we know about ocean acidification and key global challenges. European Project on Ocean Acidification (EPOCA), UK Ocean Acidification Research Programme (UKOA), Biological Impacts of Ocean Acidification (BIOACID) and Mediterranean Sea Acidification in a Changing Climate (MedSeA) 8pp. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 31 AWI Alfred Wegener Institute Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research Am Handelshafen 12 - (Building E-2055) D-27570 BREMERHAVEN GERMANY jelle.Bijma@awi.de • • • • • • • 1979-1985: 1985-1992: 1991: 1993-1997: 1997-1999: 1999-today: 2004-today: Marine biology and actuopaleontology at the State University of Groningen (The Netherlands) Research assistant at the University of Tübingen (Germany) PhD at the State University of Groningen (The Netherlands) Post-doc at Alfred-Wegener Institute for polar and marine research (AWI) in Bremerhaven (Germany) Post-doc at the department of geology at the University of Bremen (Germany) Senior scientist at the AWI. Adjunct professor of marine geosciences at the International University Bremen (Jacobs University Bremen as of spring 2007). His university training is in biology and geology at the State University of Groningen, The Netherlands (1979-1985). After his MSc (marine biology and actuopaleontology) he accepted a position as research assistant at the University of Tübingen (Germany). In 1991 he received his Doctor of Science with a thesis "On the biology of tropical spinose Globigerinidae (Sarcodina, Foraminiferida) and its implications for paleoecology" at the State University of Groningen (The Netherlands). In 1993 he moved to the Alfred-Wegener Institute for polar and marine research (AWI) as a post-doc where he initiated the interdisciplinary Carbon Working Group. After a two-years post-doc at the department of geology at the University of Bremen (1997-1999), he was offered a permanent position at the AWI. The Carbon Working Group became the section Marine Biogeosciences and this is where he still is. In 2004 he became adjunct professor of marine geosciences at the International University Bremen (Jacobs University Bremen as of spring 2007). His research interests focus on process-oriented studies of the incorporation of isotopes and (trace) elements (“proxies”) into biogenic carbonates, biomineralisation, global biogeochemical cycles (specifically the carbon cycle) and processes of modern and past climate change. He served as president of the Biogeosciences devision at EGU and is editor of the EGU open access journal “Biogeosciences”. He has been and is coordinator of several EU, EGS, bi-national and national projects and serves on several national and international scientific committees and programmes dealing with biogeology, paleoceanography, modern and past climate and global change in research, training and outreach. He is chair of the International Advisory Board of the Darwin Center for Biogeosciences and speaker of the Helmholtz Graduate School “POLMAR” For more information see: http://www.awi.de/People/show?jbijma PUBLICATIONS ü Bijma, J. and Bijma, S. I. (2013): Oceaanverzuring ‑ het minder bekende CO2‑probleem , Stichting Geologische Aktiviteiten, 46 (1), pp. 19‑22 ü Bijma, J. , Pörtner, H. O. , Yesson, C. and Rogers, A. D. (2013): Climate change and the oceans ‑ What does the future hold? , Marine Pollution Bulletin, 74 , pp. 495‑505 ü Gattuso, J. P. , Bijma, J. , Gehlen, M. , Riebesell, U. and Turley, C. (2011): Ocean acidification: knowns, unknowns, and perspectives / J. Gattuso and L. Hansson (editors) , Ocean Acidification, Oxford, Oxford University ü Bijma, J. , Barange, M. , Brander, L. , Cardew, G. , de Leeuw, J.W. , Feely, R. , Fernand, R. , Ganssen, G. , Gattuso, J.P. , Ganzalez Davila, M. , Haugan, P. , Held, H. , Hood, M. , Kiefer, T. , Kozyr, A. , Orr, J. , Pörtner, H.O. , Rehdanz, K. , Reichart, G.J. , Rodhouse, P. , Schmidt, F. , Thorndyke, M. , Turley, C. , Urban, E. , Ziveri, P. , Lipiatou, E. , Avril, B. and Turk, D. (2009): Impacts of ocean acidification, ESF Science Policy Briefing, 37, pp. 1‑12. ü Bijma, J. , Hönisch, B. and Zeebe, R. (2002): Impact of the ocean carbonate chemistry on living foraminiferal shell weight: Comment on "Carbonate ion concentration in glacial‑age deep waters of the Caribbean Sea" by W. S. Broecker and E. Clark , Geochemistry geophysics geosystems, 3(11), 1064 _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 32 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco IVM Institute for Environmental Studies VU University Amsterdam De Boelelaan 1087 NL-1081 HV AMSTERDAM THE NETHERLANDS lukebrander@gmail.com Division of Environment Hong Kong University of Science and Technology Clear Water Bay Kowloon, HONG KONG CHINE • Luke Brander has a background in environmental economics. • He obtained his Masters degree in Environmental and Resource Economics at University College London (1997-1998). • From April 2000 to September 2010 he worked as a researcher at the Institute for Environmental Studies (VU University Amsterdam). • He obtained his doctoral degree from the VU University Amsterdam in 2011. His main research interests are in the design of economic instruments to control environmental problems and the valuation of natural resources and ecosystem services. He has worked on the valuation of wetlands, forests, grasslands, mangroves, coral reefs and urban open space through meta-analyses of the ecosystem valuation literature. He is currently working as a freelance environmental economist based in Hong Kong. On-going projects include an assessment of the benefits of expanding networks of marine protected areas for the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF), and the valuation of marine ecosystem services in the South Pacific for the International Union for Nature Conservation (IUCN). On ocean acidification, Luke co-authored a paper providing a first estimate of the global economic impact of OA on coral reefs (Brander et al., 2012). He has presented his research on OA at several international conferences including the CSM/IAEA workshop on the economics of ocean acidification, Monaco, 2010; UNFCCC COP 17, Durban, 2011; Third symposium on the ocean in a high-CO2 world, Monterey, 2012; Interdisciplinary symposium on ocean acidification and climate change, Hong Kong, 2012; International conference on climate change and coral reef conservation, Okinawa, 2013. Luke is currently involved in a SESYNC supported venture on “using spatial data and analysis to understand the human impacts of ocean acidification”. PUBLICATIONS ü Brander, L.M., Eppink, F.V., Schägner, P., van Beukering, P.J.H. and Wagtendonk, A. (forthcoming). GIS-based mapping of ecosystem service values: The case of coral reefs. In Johnston, R.J., Rolfe, J., Rosenberger, R.S. and Brouwer, R. (Eds.), Benefit transfer of environmental and resource values: A handbook for researchers and practitioners. Springer. ü Brander, L.M. (2014). Benefits and costs of the biodiversity targets for the post 2015 development agenda. Copenhagen Consensus Center. ü Brander, L.M., Narita, D., Rehdanz, K., and Tol, R.S.J. (2014). The economic impacts of ocean acidification. In Nunes, P., Kumar, P. and Dedeurwaerdere, T (eds.). Handbook on the Economics of Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services. Edward Elgar, Cheltenham. ü Brander, L.M., Rehdanz, K., Tol, R.S.J. and van Beukering, P. (2012). The economic impact of ocean acidification on coral reefs. Climate Change Economics. ü Brander, L.M., Beukering van, P. & Cesar, H.S.J. (2007). The recreational value of coral reefs: a meta-analysis. Ecological Economics 63, 209-218. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 33 CIB Center for International Business Quinlan School of Business Loyola University Chicago 1 E Pearson CHICAGO, Il 60611 USA mcinar@luc.edu Prof. Mine Cinar is the Director of the Center for International Business and a professor of economics at the Quinlan School of Business at Loyola University Chicago. Her fields of interest are in international business, game theory, and financial economics. She is the publisher and managing editor of the electronic journal "Topics in Middle East and North African Economies". She has been a consultant to government institutions and universities in Turkey, Egypt, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan, is a Research Fellow at Economic Research Forum of Cairo, Egypt and was the past President of Middle East Economic Association. She has a Bachelor of Arts from Robert College, Istanbul, Turkey, a Masters degree from Vanderbilt University and a PhD from Texas A and M University, all in economics. PUBLICATIONS ü Cinar, M. , editor, (2014). Topics in Middle East and North African Economies, V16 (1 and 2 ed., vol. 1). http:// www.luc.edu/orgs/meea/volume16/meea16.html ü Hilmi, N., Allemand, D., Cinar, M., Cooley, S., Hall-Spencer, J. M., Haraldsson, G., ... & Dupont, S. (2014). Exposure of Mediterranean countries to ocean acidification. Water, 6(6), 1719-1744. ü Cinar, M. , editor, (2013). Topics in Middle East and North African Economies, V15 (1 and 2 ed., vol. 1). http:// www.luc.edu/orgs/meea/volume15/meea15.html ü Cinar, M., Johnson, J., & Palmer, A. (2013). Decision making: Fishing production and fishers in the Black Sea. Fisheries Research, 147, 296-303. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 34 IUI The Interuniversity Institute for Marine Science in Eilat POB 469 88103 EILAT ISRAEL maoz.fine@biu.ac.il • • • • 1993-1996 1997-1998 1998-2003 2003-2005 Faculty of Life Sciences. B.Sc. Tel Aviv University Department of Zoology. M. Sc. Tel Aviv University Department of Zoology. Ph. D. (Summa cum laude) Center for Marine Studies. Postdoctoral Research Fellow. University of Queensland, Australia Fine earned his PhD from Tel Aviv University in 2003 (Department of Zoology) under the supervision of the renowned coral reef ecologist Yossi Loya. He then moved to The University of Queensland, Centre for Marine Studies to perform his Post-Doctorate with Ove Hoegh-Guldberg. Since 2006, Maoz Fine is a professor of Marine Ecology at Bar-Ilan University, and the Interuniversity Institute for Marine Science in Eilat, Israel. Fine's research focuses on the response of coral reef organisms to ocean acidification and climate change. The Fine laboratory uses a multi-stressor approach to examine how coral reefs are likely to change in the near future under environmental change. Rather than looking at the single colony physiological response, Fine examines coral communities and trophic cascades among reef communities. PUBLICATIONS ü Fine M, Gildor H and Genin A (2013) A coral reef Refugia in the Red Sea. Global Change Biology 19: 3640-3647 ü Horwitz R and Fine M (2014) High CO2 detrimentally affects tissue regeneration of Red Sea corals. Coral Reefs 33: 819–829 ü Grover R, Ferrier-Pages C, Maguer JF, Ezzat L, Fine M (2014) Nitrogen fixation in the mucus of Red Sea corals. JEB ü Gabay Y, Fine M, Benayahu Y (2014). Octocoral tissue provides protection from declining oceanic pH, Plos ONE 9: e91553 ü Hazan Y, Wangensteen OS, Fine M (2014) Tough as a rock-boring urchin: Adult Echinometra sp. EE from the Red Sea show high resistance to ocean acidification over long term exposures. Marine Biology. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 35 PICRC Palau International Coral Reef Center PO Box 7086 Koror, PALAU 96940 ygolbuu@picrc.org Dr. Yimnang Golbuu is the CEO at the Palau International Coral Reef Center. His research interests include Marine Protected Areas (MPAs), watersheds, and impact of climate change on coral reefs of Palau. In 2012, he received a commendation by the Palau National Congress for his contributions to the sustainability of Palau's natural resources. In 2013, he was awarded a Pew Fellowship in Marine Conservation. His current research interest, and the focus of his Pew Fellowship, is to examine existing MPAs in Palau and their connectivity, with the aim of using that information to improve the MPA network in Palau. Besides his work in Palau, he has conducted coral reef research, monitoring and trainings in other islands of Micronesia including Yap, Guam, Pohnpei, Chuuk, and the Marshall Islands. He has served as board member of Palau Conservation Society, chairman of the Northern Reef Management Planning Team and chairman of the Protected Areas Network Technical Committee. He is currently a member of the Northern Reef Co-Management Committee, the Palau National Commission of UNESCO, and a Pew Fellow in Marine Conservation PUBLICATIONS ü Shamberger KEF, Cohen AL, Golbuu Y, McCorkle DC, Lentz SJ, Barkley HC. 2014. Diverse coral communities in naturally acidified waters of a Western Pacific Reef. Geophysical Research Letters 41. ü McLeod E, Anthony KRN, Andersson A, Beeden R, Golbuu Y, Kleypas J, Kroeker K, Manzello D, Salm RV, Schuttenberg H, Smith JE. 2013. Preparing to manage coral reefs for ocean acidification: lessons from coral bleaching. Frontiers in Ecology and Environment 11: 20-27. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 36 GCI Global Change Institute Building (#20), Top of Staff House Road The University of Queensland ST LUCIA, QLD 4072 AUSTRALIA oveh@uq.edu.au • • • • • 2010 - present 2006 - present 2000 - present 1989 1982 Director, Global Change Institute, University of Queensland Deputy Director, ARC Centre for Excellence for Reef Studies Professor of Marine Studies, University of Queensland Ph.D. University of California, Los Angeles B.Sc. (Hons, 1st class) University of Sydney Ove Hoegh-Guldberg is the Director of the Global Change Institute (GCI: www.gci.uq.edu.au), Deputy Director of the Centre for Excellence in Coral reef Studies (www.coralcoe.org.au) and Professor of Marine Science (www.coralreefecosystems.org) at the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia. The Global Change Institute, where Ove is based is focused on research, ideas and advice for solving the challenges of a rapidly changing world, and is focused in four main themes: healthy oceans, food security, sustainable water, and clean energy. Ove’s research focuses on the impacts of ocean warming and acidification on marine ecosystems, with his early research establishing the seriousness of climate change for coral reefs in the 1990s. He has published over 250 peerreviewed papers and book chapters on the physiology and ecology of marine ecosystems, particularly on impacts associated with ocean warming and acidification. In addition to leading a research group at the University Queensland, he was the Coordinating Lead Author for the ‘Oceans’ chapter for the Fifth Assessment report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (www.ipcc-wg2.gov) and chair of the Blue Ribbon Panel for the Global Partnership for Oceans. He has been awarded a Eureka Prize for his scientific research, the QLD Premier’s Fellowship, and is currently an ARC Laureate Fellow and member of the Australian Academy of Science. In late 2014, Ove was awarded the Prince Albert II of Monaco Climate Change Award. PUBLICATIONS ü Hoegh-Guldberg, O., R. Cai, E.S. Poloczanska, P.G. Brewer, S. Sundby, K. Hilmi, V.J. Fabry, and S. Jung, 2014: The Ocean. In: Climate Change 2014: Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerability. Part B: Regional Aspects. Contribution of Working Group II to the Fifth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change [Barros, V.R., C.B. Field, D.J. Dokken, M.D. Mastrandrea, K.J. Mach, T.E. Bilir, M. Chatterjee, K.L. Ebi, Y.O. Estrada, R.C. Genova, B. Girma, E.S. Kissel, A.N. Levy, S. MacCracken, P.R. Mastrandrea, and L.L. White (eds.)]. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom and New York, NY, USA, pp. ü Hoegh-Guldberg O, Aqorau T, Arnason R, Chansiri T, Del Rio N, Demone H, Earle S, Feeley MH, Gutierrez D, Hilborn R: Indispensable Ocean: Aligning Ocean Health and Human Well-Being-Guidance from the Blue Ribbon Panel to the Global Partnerships for Oceans. 2013 ü Hoegh-Guldberg, O, and Bruno, J F (2010) The Impact of Climate Change on the World's Marine Ecosystems. Science 328: 1523 – 1528 ü Hoegh-Guldberg O, Mumby PJ, Hooten AJ, Steneck RS, Greenfield P, Gomez E, Harvell CD, Sale PF, Edwards AJ, Caldeira K, Knowlton N, Eakin CM, Iglesias-Prieto R, Muthiga N, Bradbury RH, Dubi A, Hatziolos ME (2007) Coral reefs under rapid climate change and ocean acidification. Science 318:1737-1742 ü Hoegh-Guldberg O: Coral reefs in the Anthropocene: persistence or the end of the line? Geological Society, London, Special Publications 395 (1), 167-183 _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 37 CSM Centre Scientifique de Monaco 8 Quai Antoine 1er MC 98000 MONACO sreynaud@centrescientifique.mc Dr. Stéphanie Reynaud is a Research Scientist at the Centre Scientifique of Monaco (Ecophysiology team) with more than 15 years of experience in ecophysiology and biogeochemistry. She has expertise on corals culture for calibration of proxies (stable isotopes and trace elements). She also carried out controlled experiments to investigate the response of reef-building corals to elevated pCO2 and temperature. She has participated at different field trip, and especially one in Papua New Guinea where the responses of coral reefs naturally acclimatized to low pH (due to volcanic CO2 seeps) were investigated. She received a Ph.D. in Biogeochemistry in 2000 from the Université de Nice-Sophia Antipolis, and then received a 2 years postdoctoral grant from Columbia University’s Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory. For a complete biography and list of publication see www.centrescientifique.mc PUBLICATIONS ü Houlbrèque F, Reynaud S, Godinot C, Oberhänsli F, Rodolfo-Metalpa R, Ferrier-Pagès C (in press) Ocean acidification reduces feeding rates in the scleractinian coral Stylophora pistillata. Limnology and Oceanography ü Hilmi N, Allemand D, Cinar M, Cooley S, Hall-Spencer J, Haraldsson G, Hattam C, Jeffree R.A, Orr J.C, Rehdanz K, Reynaud S, Safa A, Dupont S (2014) Exposure of Mediterranean Countries to Ocean Acidification. Water, 6, 1719-1744. ü Erez J, Silverman J, Schneider K, Reynaud S, Allemand D (2011). Coral calcification under ocean acidification and global change. In Coral and Coral Reefs, (ed. Z. Dubinsky): Springer. ü Reynaud S, Leclercq N, Romaine-Lioud S, Ferrier-Pagès C, Jaubert J, Gattuso J-P (2003). Interacting effects of CO2 partial pressure and temperature on photosynthesis and calcification in a scleractinian coral. Global Change Biology 9: 1660-1668. ü Reynaud S, Hemming N G, Juillet-Leclerc A, Gattuso J-P (2004). Effect of pCO2 and temperature on the boron isotopic composition of the zooxanthellate coral Acropora sp. Coral Reefs 539-546. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 38 Skill Partners 24 avenue Sidi Brahim Le Mas St Claude, L1 E7 06130 GRASSE FRANCE alain.safa@unice.fr Alain Safa is specialized in macroeconomics and international finance. He’s a professor at the University of Nice Sophia-Antipolis, and Business schools, EDHEC, IPAG and IDRAC. He’s manager and consultant in "SKILL PARTNERS" enterprise. His researches analyze macroeconomic constraints, especially in the Mediterranean region. He worked on the countries adaptation to political economic and financial openness, including their economic and social aspects in the context of European and international research projects. Recently, Alain Safa has integrated environmental dimension to his studies. The exploration of ocean acidification and analysis of their economic and social impacts have become a central concern of his research today. As such, he has published several works and participated in two workshops about economic impact of ocean acidification which were held in Monaco in 2010 and 2012. PUBLICATIONS ü Nathalie Hilmi, A. Safa and al (2014), « Préserver la biodiversité des récifs coralliens : l’évaluation économique comme outil d’une gouvernance multi-échelle », dans « Les sciences humaines et sociales dans le Pacifique Sud Terrains, questions et méthodes, PP 291-312, sous la direction de Laurent Dousset, Barbara Glowczewski et Marie Salaün, Pacific-Crdo Publications (CNRS) ü HILMI N. et SAFA A. and al. (2012), “Towards improved socio‐economic assessments of ocean acidification’s impacts”, Marine Biology, DOI 10.1007/s00227‐012‐2031‐5, August 21. ü HILMI N., SAFA A., and CINAR M. (2012), “Decision making tools for natural resources protection: Coral reefs management”, Proceedings of the 12th International Coral Reef Symposium, Cairns, Australia, 9‐13 July 2012 Mini‐symposium 22D “ECONOMIC VALUATION AND MARKET‐BASED CONSERVATION” _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 39 GS Conseil 221 rue Saint-Honoré 75001 PARIS FRANCE guillaume.sainteny@gsconseil.com Guillaume Sainteny owns a Ph.D. in Political Science completed with high distinction, receiving unanimous agreement with governing committee (Université de Paris I Panthéon Sorbonne), a Master of Business Administration (University of Chicago), a Master and Bachelor in Law (Université de Paris II), a Diploma of Institut d’Etudes Politiques de Paris and a Diploma of Institut des Hautes Etudes de Défense Nationale Guillaume SAINTENY has held several responsibilities inside the French Ministry for Ecology, Energy, Sustainable Development and Sea, in charge for clean technologies and climate change negotiations notably as Deputy Head of the Cabinet of the Minister and Director for Economic Affairs and Environmental Assessment He has started his own consulting company in the field of environment. He his notably: • Member of the Advisory Committee of the Enterprise Institute • Member of the Advisory Board of the Sisley Foundation • Member of the Editorial Review Board of Commentaire, Droit de l’environnement, Ecologie et Politique, Sciences, Cultures, Sociétés and Vraiment Durable. • Member of the Advisory Board of the Committee 21 • Member of the Advisory Board of the Environmental Factory • Member of the Scientific Comittee of the Prince Albert II of Monaco Foundation He has, notably, been a Member of the Board of the: • European Environment Agency • French Financing Agency for Transports Infrastructure • National Heritage Foundation • National Institute for Environment and Industrial Risks • National Geographical Institute • Radioprotection and Nuclear Safety Institute • Port-Cros National Park He has also been a Member of the National Council for Sustainable Development, French official consultative council dependent on the Prime Minister Office, a General Secretary of the Scientific Council for Biodiversity and Natural Heritage and a General Secretary of the Prevention and Precaution Committee. PUBLICATIONS ü Plaidoyer pour l’écofiscalité, Paris, Buchet-Chastel, 2012, 272 p. ü Développement durable. Aspects stratégiques et opérationnels, Paris, Francis Lefebvre, 2010, 596 p. ü Les aides publiques dommageables à la biodiversité, Paris, La Documentation française, 2012, 414 p. ü « La prise en compte de la valeur économique de la biodiversité dans les décisions publiques », in Parance (Béatrice), Martin (Gilles) (sous la direction de), La Régulation environnementale, Paris, L.G.D.J., 2012, 126 p., pp. 51-66 ü « Les enjeux géopolitiques des énergies naturelles renouvelables », Questions internationales, n°45, septembreoctobre 2010, pp.108-114. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 40 Ministère français de l’Ecologie, du Développement Durable et de l’Energie Direction de l’Eau et de la Biodiversité Bureau 17.40, Arche Sud 92055 LA DEFENSE CEDEX FRANCE aurelie.thomassin@developpement-durable.gouv.fr • 2004 - 2006 : • 2007 - 2010 : • 2007 - 2011 : • 2009 - 2012 : • 2012 - Now: Project officer, Marine Protected Area and Biodiversity Conservation, Institut de Recherche pour le Développement - La Réunion Collection of field data, Participatory mapping, Interview with local population, Logistics of field missions, Reporting to donors. Lecturer in Statistics and methodology in Geography, La Réunion Island University PhD student, Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD) - La Réunion Collaborations in research projects, Project management, Fundraising, Logistics of field missions, Reporting to donors Purpose of the thesis: Building social acceptance indicators to monitor social dynamics in marine protected areas in the southwestern Indian Ocean. Consulting in Social Sciences applied to Biodiversity Conservation (Géodesic) Socio-economic diagnostic, Evaluation of social impacts, Perceptions analysis, Measure of social acceptance, Governance study, Environmental consultation, Participatory management Experiences: o Feasibility study of implementing a Marine Protected Area on the southwest coast of Mauritius – Mauritius Marine Conservation Society (MMCS) o Methodological advice and support to the measurement of indicators for the dashboard of the Parc Naturel Marin d'Iroise (PNMI) - Agence Nationale des Aires Marines Protégées o Typology of tradional fishermen in the Natural Marine Reserve of La Reunion – GIP Réserve Naturelle Marine de La Réunion Project Manager in Marine biodiversity, coral reef and fisheries officer, French Ministry of Ecology PUBLICATIONS ü Thomassin A., David, G., 2014. Elaboration d’une méthode pour construire des indicateurs d’acceptation sociale : application à la Réserve Naturelle Marine de La Réunion. In Espaces Protégés et Territoires. Conflits et acceptation. Gauchon C., Laslaz L., Duval-Massaloux M. et Heritier S., dir., Paris. 300p. ü Thomassin A., David, G., Duchêne, J., Bissery, C., 2011. Social acceptance of recreational fishermen in the Natural Marine Reserve of Reunion Island. Coastal Management, 39:4, p. 425-439. ISSN 0892-0753. ü Thomassin, A.,. White C., Stead S., David, G., 2010. Social acceptability of a Marine Protected Area: the case of Reunion Island, Ocean & Coastal Management, n°53, p.169-179. ISSN 0964-5691. ü David, G., Antona, M., Botta, A., Daré, W., Thomassin, A., 2010. Du satellite au décideur, la recherche action au service de la gestion intégrée du littoral de La Réunion. Les Cahiers d’Outre-Mer, n°248, p.549-570. ISSN 0373-5834. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 41 _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 42 43 Université de Bretagne Occidentale UMR – AMURE Institut Universitaire Européen de la Mer Rue Dumont d'Urville 29280 PLOUZANÉ FRANCE denis.bailly@univ-brest.fr His undergraduate university training is in development economics. In 1986, he obtained a MSc in Marine Social Sciences from the University of Kagoshima, Japan, with a scholarship from the Ministry of Education of Japan. He then joined the fisheries economist team of the French Institute for the Exploitation of the Sea (IFREMER) to work on aquaculture development. In 1993 he obtained a PhD in economics from the University of Rennes I and moved to the University of West Brittany (UBO) in Brest as a lecturer in economics. He then joined the research Center for Law and Economics of the Sea (CEDEM). During the 90’s most of his work has been dedicated to the management and sustainable development of aquaculture, mainly shellfish farming in Europe and shrimp farming in South and South-East Asia. Then the focus of his research shifted to the integrated management of coastal zones (ICZM) and participatory integrated assessment to address environmental management in the coastal zone. From 2007 to 2011 he acted as the scientific co-coordinator of the integrated project SPICOSA (Science and Policy Integration for Coastal Systems Assessment, 6th FP of the EU) that has developed the System Approach Framework SAF. In 2011-2012 he coordinated the economic and social assessment of the French initial assessment for the implementation of the Marine Strategy Framework Directive of the EU. He is presently deputy director of the joint research unit AMURE, a merge of the Marine Economic Department of IFREMER and the Center for the Law and Economics of the Sea of UBO, and elected member of the board of the European Institute for Marine Studies (IUEM). PUBLICATIONS ü Levrel H., Jacob C, Bailly D., Charles M., Guyader 0., Aoubid S., Bas A., Cujus A., Frésard M., Girard S., Hay J., Laurans Y, Paillet J, Pérez Agúndez J., Mongruel R (2014) The maintenance costs of marine natural capital: A case study from the initial assessment of the Marine Strategy Framework Directive in France. Marine Policy, 49(2014): 37-47. ü Guimarães M. H., Ballé-Béganton J., Bailly D., Newton A., Boski T., Dentinho T. (2013) Transdisciplinary conceptual modeling of a social-ecological system – a case study application in Terceira Island, Azore,. Ecosystem Services Journal, vol.3, pp. 22-31. ü Voltaire L., Bailly D. and Pirronne C. (2013) Dealing with Preference Uncertainty in Contingent Willingness to pay for a Nature Protection Program: A New Approach, Ecological Economics, vol 88, pp 76-85. ü Hopkins T.S., Bailly D., Elmgren R., Glegg G., Sandberg A., and Støttrup J.G. (2012) “A Systems Approach Framework for the Transition to Sustainable Development: Potential Value Based on Coastal Experiments”, Ecology and Society 17(3): 39. ü Hopkins , T. S., Bailly D., Støttrup J. G. ( 2011) “A systems approach framework for coastal zones” Ecology and Society 16(4): 25. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 44 IDDRI / Sciences-Po Institut du Développement Durable et des Relations Internationales 27 rue Saint Guillaume 75337 PARIS CEDEX 07 FRANCE michel.colombier@iddri.org • • • • Agricultural engineer and doctor of economics Specialist in energy and climate issues, former member of the GEF and FGEF scientific panels. After the CEEETA (University of Lisbon), he joined ADEME, then directed ICE. Co founder of IDDRI in 2001. Michel Colombier is co-founder and Scientific Director of Iddri (Institute for Sustainable Development and International Relations www.iddri.org) since 2001. He was before Director General of ICE (International Consulting on Energy) developing activities at both local level (cities and European regions) and international level (governements, international institutions and firms); Advisor in the cabinet of the Minister of energy; Head of the “strategy and evaluation” Department of Ademe (French Agency for Environment and Energy); and Programme Manager for the Ministry of Environment in Portugal. He has developed a wide operational expertise in the field of Energy and Environment Policy design but always maintained a strong connection with the University, teaching and developing research activities (Universidade de Lisboa, INSTN Saclay, Université de Sciences Bordeaux I, and now SciencesPo Paris). He served as member of the Scientific and Technical Advisory Panel of the GEF (Global Environment Facility) and the FFEM (Fonds Français d’Environnement Mondial), negotiator in the UNFCCC process and director of the Board of Climate Strategies (London). PUBLICATIONS ü The mitigation framework in the 2015 climate change agreement: from targets to pathways, T. Spencer, S. Fu, J. Zou, M. Colombier, T. Ribera Working Papers, n°7, Iddri Paris 2014 ü The 2030 EU Climate and Energy Package: why and how? Thomas Spencer, Michel Colombier, Teresa Ribera, Policy Briefs, n°16, Iddri 2014 ü L’énergie au XXIeme siècle, les nouveaux défis, Michel Colombier in L’énergie à découvert, Fuchs Mosseri Jeandel, CNRS editions, Paris 2012 ü “Bringing developing countries into the energy equation” Michel Colombier et Jacques Loup ed., IDDRI 2006 ü Emissions trading under the Kyoto Protocol : how far from the ideal? Richard Baron et Michel Colombier, in "Climate Change and Carbon Markets", Ed by Farhana Yamin, Earthscan J§J, London, 2005 _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 45 CNRS / LOV Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique – Laboratoire d’Océanographie de Villefranche-sur-Mer – Université Pierre et Marie Curie 181 chemin du Lazaret 06230 VILLEFRANCHE SUR MER FRANCE gattuso@obs-vlfr.fr Jean-Pierre Gattuso is a Research Professor at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS, France) and is based at the Laboratoire d'Océanographie de Villefranche, a marine station operated by the Université Pierre-etMarie Curie (Paris 6) in Southern France. His research interests are related to: (1) the carbon and carbonate cycles in coastal ecosystems; and (2) the response of marine organisms and ecosystems to global environmental changes. He was the Scientific Coordinator of the FP7 large-scale integrated project EPOCA (European Project on Ocean Acidification; 2008-2012) which aimed at advancing the understanding of the biological, ecological, biogeochemical, and societal implications of ocean acidification. The EPOCA consortium comprised more than 160 researchers from 32 institutes and 10 European countries. Jean-Pierre Gattuso is the Founding chair of the SOLAS-IMBER Ocean Acidification Working Group, led the launch of the Ocean Acidification International Coordination Center and co-edited the first book on ocean acidification. He is also the Founding President of the European Geosciences Union Biogeosciences Division, Founding editor-in-chief of the journal Biogeosciences and a past member of the IMBER Scientific Steering Committee. Jean-Pierre Gattuso is a member of the European Academy of Sciences. PUBLICATIONS ü Gattuso J.-P., Brewer P., Hoegh-Guldberg O., Kleypas J. A., Pörtner H.-O. & Schmidt D., 2014. Ocean acidification. In: Field C. B., Barros V. R., Dokken D. J., Mach K. J., Mastrandrea M. D., Bilir T. E., Chatterjee M., Ebi K. L., Estrada Y. O., Genova R. C., Girma B., Kissel E. S., Levy A. N., MacCracken S., Mastrandrea P. R. & White L. L. (Eds.), Climate Change 2014: Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerability. Part A: Global and Sectoral Aspects. Contribution of Working Group II to the Fifth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, pp. 129-131. Cambridge, United Kingdom and New York, NY, USA: Cambridge University Press. ü Gattuso J.-P. & Hansson L. (Eds.), 2011. Ocean acidification, 326 p. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ü Gattuso J.-P., Hoegh-Guldberg O. & Pörtner H.-O., 2014. Coral reefs. In: Field C. B., Barros V. R., Dokken D. J., Mach K. J., Mastrandrea M. D., Bilir T. E., Chatterjee M., Ebi K. L., Estrada Y. O., Genova R. C., Girma B., Kissel E. S., Levy A. N., MacCracken S., Mastrandrea P. R. & White L. L. (Eds.), Climate Change 2014: Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerability. Part A: Global and Sectoral Aspects. Contribution of Working Group II to the Fifth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, pp. 97-100. Cambridge, United Kingdom and New York, NY, USA: Cambridge University Press. ü Riebesell U. & Gattuso J.-P., in press. Lessons learned from ocean acidification research. Nature Climate Change. ü Turley C. & Gattuso J.-P., 2012. Future biological and ecosystem impacts of ocean acidification and their socioeconomic-policy implications. Current Opinion In Environmental Sustainability 4:278-286. _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 46 Tasmanian School of Business and Economics University of Tasmania Private Bag 85, Hobart TASMANIA 7001 AUSTRALIE sarah.jennings@utas.edu.au Dr Sarah Jennings (Tasmanian School of Business & Economics and Centre for Marine Socioecology). Sarah is a natural resource economist who, having graduated from the Universities of Otago (NZ), British Columbia (Canada) and Alberta (Canada), has spent most of her working life at the University of Tasmania, Australia. Having spent many years describing herself as a forestry economist, Sarah now focuses her research on marine economics including the evaluation of climate change impacts and adaptation strategies for socio ecological fisheries systems, the economics of marine biodiversity conservation and recreational fishing, fisheries overcapacity and the role of fisheries in food security. As well as having a strong background in applied welfare analysis, including cost-benefit analysis and non-market valuation, Sarah has strong experience working in interdisciplinary research teams and is particularly interested in the integrative science required to address the ‘wicked’ problems confronting marine users, communities and managers both locally and globally. Domestically, Sarah leads the Integrating Social, Economic and Environmental Values project in the Marine Biodiversity National Environmental Research Project which focuses on the use of biodiversity offsets in the marine environment and on public values for marine reserve networks. She also leads the national Fisheries Research Development Corporation Building Capability in Fisheries Economics Project which involves providing research higher degree training in fisheries economics and courses that equip industry and managers with the economic thinking required to participate effectively in fisheries management and governance. Sarah has extensive experience in tertiary level learning and teaching, particularly in the areas of applied microeconomics and natural resource economics. PUBLICATIONS ü Jennings, S., Pascoe, S., Hall-Aspland, S., LeBouhellec, B., Norman-Lopez, A., Sullivan, A., and Pecl, G. Setting objectives for evaluating management adaptation actions to address climate change impacts in south-eastern Australian fisheries. Fisheries Oceanography (forthcoming) ü Pecl, G., Ward, T., Doubleday, Z., Clarke, S., Day, J., Dixon, C., Frusher, S., Gibbs, P., Hobday, A., Hutchinson, N., Jennings, S., Jones, K., Li, X,. 2014. Spooner, D., Stoklosa, R. 2014. Rapid assessment of fisheries species sensitivity to climate. Climatic Change (online) ü Frusher, S., Hobday, A.J., Jennings, S.M., Creighton, C , D'Silva, D, Haward, M, Holbrook, N.J., Nursey-Bray, M, Pecl, G.T., van Putten, E.I. 2013 The short history of research in a marine climate change hotspot: from anecdote to adaptation in south-east Australia, Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries. ü Doubleday, Z.A., Clarke, S.M., Li, X, Pecl, G.T., Ward, T.M., Battaglene, S.C., Frusher, S.D., Gibbs, P.J., Hobday, A.J., Hutchinson, N, Jennings, S.M. and Stoklosa, R. 2013. Assessing the risk of climate change to aquaculture: a case study from south-east Australia, Aquaculture Environment Interactions, 3 (2) pp. 163–175. ü Van Putten, I.E., Jennings, S, Frusher, S, Gardner, C , Haward, M, Hobday, A.J., Nursey-Bray, M, Pecl, G, Punt, A and Revill, H. 2013. Building blocks of economic resilience to climate change: a south east Australian fisheries example. Regional Environmental Change: Natural and Social Aspects, 13 (6) pp. 1313-1323. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 47 Climate Service Center 2.0 Helmholtz Center Geesthacht Chilehaus, Eingang B, Fischertwiete 1 20095 HAMBURG ALLEMAGNE maria.manez@hzg.de • 2014 - present • 2013 - 2014 • 2013 - present • 2012 - present • 2010 - 2013 • 2010 • 2000 – 2003 • 1996 - 2000 • 1993 - 1996 Senior science advisor at the Climate Service Center – Helmholtz Centre Geesthacht. Department of Climate impacts and Economics Head of the Department Economics and Policy of the Climate Service Center at the Helmholtz Center Geesthacht Guest professor at the Faculty of Hydraulic Engineering of Polytechnic University of Valencia Head of the Secretariat for the Earth League – Executive Director Science officer at the Climate Service Centre – Helmholtz Centre Geesthacht. Department of Economics and Policy Senior Researcher at the HafenCity University in Hamburg. PhD in Environmental and Agricultural Economics at Georg August University, Göttingen, Germany. M.Sc. (Hauptdiplom) in Geography. Minors in Botany and in Development Sociology from Justus Liebig University of Giessen, Germany Agricultural Engineering at Justus Liebig University of Giessen, Germany I work in the Climate Impacts and Economics Department of the Climate Service Center, Germany, an institution of Helmholtz-Zentrum Geesthach. I develop methods for stakeholder involvement and participatory approaches for the management of natural resources. I work in the development of behavioral games for the support of policy processes. My research explores the vulnerability and adaptive capacity of social ecological systems to climate and environmental change, taking special attention to risk perception, reflecting on value and belief systems, which fundamentally shape behavior towards management. My investigation main aim lies on the development of capacities for adaptation and/or transformation and on the development of participatory methods for supporting management change. Hereby the emphasis is the linking of my research to implementation efforts in real life, as it is usual for intervention research I am also visiting professor at the University of Barcelona, Spain and guest professor at the Polytechnical University of Valencia, Spain. In both universities I teach participatory methods for water management. My teaching concentrates around the human dimension of decision making and how it might affect the use of the resources. I have coordinated various research projects of the European Union, working on the topic of “Global environmental change“. In those projects my research has circulated around the perception of environmental change and risk and how this might have an effect in the arising of different governance structures. PUBLICATIONS ü Jancloes, M., Thomson, M., Máñez Costa, M., Hewitt, C., Corvalan, C., Dinku, T., Lowe, R., M. Hayden (2014) Climate Services to improve Health. Int J Environ Res in Public Health May 25;11(5):4555-9. ü Máñez Costa, M ., Kelman, I. Sherve, C. (2014) Comparing four geographies regarding the quality and relevance of downscaled data for climate change vulnerability and adaptation assessment, CSC Report 21, Climate Service Center, Germany ü Máñez Costa, M, Carmona, M. and B. Gerkensmeier (2014): Assessing governance performance, Report 20, Climate Service Center, Germany ü Máñez Costa, M, Carmona, M., Gee, K., Gerkensmeier, B, Ratter, B. M. R, Botzen, W., Aerts, J., Paudel Y. (2014) Governance Indicators for (un)successful multi-sectoral partnerships. Report 2.3. Enhance Project. ü Máñez Costa, M , Moors, E. and E. Fraser (2012): Socio-economic settings and climate change: Which is driving vulnerability in southern Portugal?. In Ecology and Society _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 48 PUBLICATIONS _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 49 CIEP Centro de Investigación en Ecosistemas de la Patagonia Km 4,5 Camino a Puerto Aysén Sector El Arenal CHILE rtorres@ciep.cl Dr. Rodrigo Torres is a researcher at CIEP (Centro de Investigación en Ecosistemas de la Patagonia, a research center located in Chilean Patagonia). He is a marine biologist, with a master in oceanography (Universidad de Concepcion, Chile) and a doctor degree in marine chemistry (University of Gothenburg, Sweden). Since 2006, he has participated in several OA activities including the first IGBP–SCOR FTI Workshop: "Ocean Acidification - modern observations and past experiences”, the Global Ocean Acidification Observing Network (GOA-ON), Socioeconomic impact of Ocean Acidification and Harmful Algal Blooms (RTC, IAEA) and SCOR WG145. His research group is leading 2 OA research projects and collaborating in three others. He is coauthor 18 publications about the CO2 fluxes in Chilean waters and the effect OA on marine invertebrates. His group has been in charge of developing chemostat facilities for various experiments oriented to assess the effect of high CO2 on the growing rates, behavior and physiology of marine invertebrates. Since 2012 he has coordinated the Chilean symposium in Ocean Acidification during the main National Marine Science Congress. His group is maintaining a seawater carbonate system time series at two aquaculture facilities (30°S and 41°S). In 2013, his group began an evaluation of the socioeconomic effects of OA on the Chilean mollusk industry, funded by IAEA and FONDECYT. PUBLICATIONS ü Manríquez, P., Jara, M.E., Mardones, M.L., Navarro, J.M., Torres, R., Lardies,M., Vargas, C., Duarte, C., Widdicombe, S., Salisbury, J., Lagos, N., 2013, Ocean acidification disrupts prey responses to predator cues but not net prey shell growth in Concholepas concholepas (loco), PLOS ONE, 2013, DOI/URL: PONED-13-09748R1 ü Navarro, J.M., Torres, R., Acuna, K., Duarte, C., Manriquez, P., Lardies, M., Lagos, N.,Vargas, C. and Aguilera, V. 2013. Long-term exposure to high pCO2 levels. Its effects on the physiological energetic and aquaculture of the juvenile mussel Mytilus chilensis. Chemosphere 90, 1242-1248. ü Torres, R., Pantoja, S., Harada, N., Gonzalez, H., Daneri, G., Frangopulos, M., Rutllant, J., Duarte, C., RúizHalpern, Mayol, E., Fukasawa, M. (2011) Air-sea CO2 fluxes along the coast of Chile: from CO2 outgassing in central-northern upwelling waters to CO2 uptake in southern Patagonian fjords. Journal of Geophysical Research, VOL. 116, C09006, 17 PP., doi:10.1029/2010JC006344. ü Torres, R., Manríquez, P.H., Duarte, C., Navarro, J.M., Lagos, N., Vargas, C., Lardies, 2013, Evaluation of a semiautomatic system for long-term seawater carbonate chemistry manipulation. Revista Chilena de Historia Natural 86: 443-451. ü Körtzinger, A., Mintrop, L., Wallace D.W.R., Johnson, K.M., Neill, C., Tilbrook, B., Towler, P., Inoue, H.Y., Ishii, M., Shaffer, G, Torres, R., Ohtaki, E., Yamashita, E., Poisson, A., Brunet, C., Schauer, B., Goyet, C. and G. Eischeid, 2000, The International At-sea Intercomparison of fCO2 Systems during the R/V Meteor Cruise 36/1 in the North Atlantic Ocean. Marine Chemistry 72:171-192. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 50 NOAA National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration 1315 East West Highway, Rm. 15618 SILVER SPRING, MD 20910 USA david.yoskowitz@noaa.gov • • • • • 1999 - 2002 2002 - 2008 2008 - 2009 2008 - present 2012 - present • 2010 - present • 2014 - 2015 Assistant Professor, Texas A&M International University Associate Professor, Texas A&M University - Corpus Christi HRI Endowed Research Professor for Socio-Economics, Harte Research Institute Professor of Economics, College of Business, Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi Professor of Environmental Economics, College of Science and Engineering, Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi HRI Endowed Chair for Socio-Economics, Harte Research Institute Chief Economist, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association (NOAA) Dr. David Yoskowitz is the Endowed Chair for Socio-Economics at the Harte Research Institute (HRI) and Professor of Economics in the College of Business and the College of Science and Engineering, both at Texas A&M UniversityCorpus Christi. His work is focused on elucidating the link between environmental well-being and human well-being and moving practice into policy. Currently he is leading an effort to inventory and value ecosystem services for the Gulf of Mexico region and quantifying the impact of sea-level rise on coastal community resiliency. His work has taken him through much of North and Central America including Cuba, Nicaragua, Belize, El Salvador, and Mexico. He led the effort to produce Gulf 360o: State of the Gulf of Mexico which was a successful collaboration between governmental, academic, non-governmental organizations, and industry in both the United States and Mexico. He has served on the National Research Council Committee on the Effects of the Deepwater Horizon Mississippi Canyon-252 Oil Spill on Ecosystem Services in the Gulf of Mexico. He currently sits on the Socio-Economic Scientific and Statistical Committee for the Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council and is a Kavli Fellow of the National Academy of Sciences. PUBLICATIONS ü Carollo, C., R. Allee, D.W. Yoskowitz. 2013. Linking the Coastal and Marine Ecological Classification Standard (CMECS) to ecosystem services: An application to the U.S. Gulf of Mexico. International Journal of Biodiversity Science, Ecosystem Services & Management. Vol. 9, No. 3 pp: 249-256 ü Beseres Pollack, J., D.W. Yoskowitz, H.C. Kim, and P. Montagna. 2013. Role and value of nitrogen regulation provided by oysters (Crassostrea virginica) in the Mission-Aransas Estuary, Texas, USA. PLoS ONE 8(6). ü Wetz, M.S. and D.W. Yoskowitz. 2013. An ‘extreme’ future for estuaries? Effects of extreme climatic events on estuarine water quality and ecology. Marine Pollution Bulletin. Vol. 69, No. 1-2. pp: 7-18. ü Jordan, S., S. Hayes, D. Yoskowitz, L. Smith, J. Summers, M. Russell, and W. Benson, 2010. Accounting for natural resources and environmental sustainability: Linking ecosystem services to human well-being, Environmental Science & Technology 44:1530-1536. ü Yoskowitz, D.W., 2002. Price Dispersion and Price Discrimination: Empirical Evidence from a Spot Market for Water, Review of Industrial Organization, Vol. 20, No. 3. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 51 _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 52 53 CGILE Centre de Gestion Intégrée du Littoral et de l’Environnement University of Lomé / Faculty of Arts and Humanities Department of Geography and Direction of Research of University BP 1515 60047 BÈ LOMÉ TOGO bliviadoteblim@gmail.com In July 1993, he has PhD at the University of Bordeaux 3 (France) in Coastal geomorphology. He works specifically on sediments fluxes (sedimentation and erosion) in the gulf of Benin (West Africa, including Ghana, Togo, Benin, Nigeria). In June 2000, he is Associate Professor and 2006, Professor of geomorphology at the University of Lome (Togo). During his training, he got marine biology and marine chemistry courses which give him few notes on marine biodiversity and sea temperature. He did cruise in the gulf of Guinea with NIOMR vessel Sarkim Barka. He was group team member on oceanography program which implemented Temperature ONSET Monitoring. Two stations are installed in sea in Togo (Kpeme and Navy-Port stations) collecting real time temperature data (SST). He was leader of impact study on gas pipeline construction. He elaborated with Navy and Fishery staff safety area along the pipeline on the continental shelf. This area becomes a specific marine area protected where marine science experiences can be set up for physical oceanography and ocean acidification monitoring. He is the principal consultant of the three reports 2001, 2010, 2014 on Climate Change and Coastal and Marine Vulnerabilty of Togo. The third one is focused on predictions of temperature and sea level rise up to 2025, 2050, 2075, 2100. He produced reports on environmental issues for World Bank, UNEP, UNIDO, UNDP and locally for Ministry of Environment. Basically he is not chemist. But working on oceanography and coastal morphology issues, as Coordinator of IODE/ ODINAFRICA program on ocean data and information and as IOC Vice Chair implicated in operational ocean research related to Climate Change new challenges (ocean acidification), his pragmatic vision is to improve marine sciences in Group V, particularly in Africa countries where applications, laboratories applications are great need. He attends the workshop to prospect possibilities and to link partnership with High Research Centers and Gulf of Guinea research centers for experimentation of ocean acidification station in safety area along gas pipeline in Togo. PUBLICATIONS ü BLIVI, A.B., 2000 – La pêche, un secteur d'activité vulnérable à l'augmentation de la température. In Annales de l’UB, Série Lettres XX, pp 120-133. ü BLIVI, A.B., 2010 – Etude de vulnérabilité et adaptation aux changements climatiques, le littoral du Togo (Région Maritime), 189p. ü BLIVI, A.B., 2014 – Etude de vulnérabilité et adaptation aux changements climatiques, la zone côtière du Togo, 81p. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 54 Ocean Conservancy 1300 19th Street NW, 8th Floor WASHINGTON DC 20036 USA scooley@oceanconservancy.org • • • • • • • • 2014-present 2006-present 2010-2014 2007-2010 2007-2009 2000-2006 1999 1998 Science Outreach Manager, Ocean Conservancy, Washington, DC. Freelance technical editor for private clients and companies. Research Associate III, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, MA. Postdoctoral Investigator, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, MA. Technical Editor, American Meteorological Society, Boston, MA Graduate Research Assistant, University of Georgia, Athens, GA. Summer Undergraduate Research Fellow, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, La Jolla, CA. NSF-REU Intern, University of Delaware College of Marine Science, Lewes, DE Sarah received a B.S. in chemistry with a biochemistry concentration at Haverford College in 1999. She then studied inorganic carbon cycling in the Amazon River plume for her Ph.D. dissertation at University of Georgia, and graduated in 2006. In 2007 she began a postdoc at Wood Hole Oceanographic Institution, where she studied projections of ocean acidification and their possible impacts on human communities. In 2010 she became a research associate at WHOI and continued researching the human impacts of ocean acidification from an interdisciplinary perspective. Her present work involves conducting scientific research to support the development of sound ocean acidification policy, and she also helps craft policies relevant to ocean acidification. Sarah’s research at Ocean Conservancy focuses on how global ocean change, primarily ocean acidification, affects marine resource availability, and how that impacts human communities in a variety of ways. PUBLICATIONS ü Mathis, J.T., Cooley, S.R., N. Lucey, C. Hauri, J. Ekstrom, T. Hurst, S. Colt, W. Evans, J.N. Cross, R.A. Feely. (in press) Ocean Acidification Risk Assessment for Alaska’s Fishery Sector. Progress in Oceanography. 10.1016/ j.pocean.2014.07.001. ü Cooley, S.R., J. Mathis. (2013) Addressing ocean acidification as part of sustainable development. In: Chircop A., Coffen-Smout S. & McConnell M. (Eds.), Ocean Yearbook 27. Leiden: Brill (Martinus Nijhoff). ISBN: 9789004250451. p. 29-46. http://www.brill.com/ocean-yearbook-27. ü Cooley, S.R., Lucey, N., Kite-Powell, H., and Doney, S.C. (2012) Nutrition and income from mollusks today imply vulnerability to ocean acidification tomorrow. Fish and Fisheries. 13:182-215. DOI: 10.1111/j. 1467-2979.2011.00424.x. ü Cooley, S.R., H. Kite-Powell, and S.C. Doney (2009) Ocean acidification’s potential to alter global marine ecosystem services. Oceanography 22(4): 172-181. ü Cooley, S.R., and S.C. Doney. 2009. Anticipating ocean acidification’s economic consequences for commercial fisheries. Environmental Research Letters, 4, doi:10.1088/1748-9326/4/2/024007. (Nominee, ERL 5th Anniversary Best Article Prize) _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 55 ISEPP Institut Supérieur de l’Enseignement Privé de Polynésie Quartier de la mission Rue du Bon Pasteur BP 105 98713 PAPEETE FRENCH POLYNESIA hinagrepin@hotmail.com • Thesis of ethnology, "l'adolescence masculine aux Tuamotus de l'Est aujourd'hui : le taure'are'a : contradictions et transformations d'une catégorie sociale traditionnelle", Paris: EHESS, sous la direction de Maurice GODELIER, janvier 2001. Director of Isepp since 2008 (private university), associate researcher at EATSCO (Unit of research, University of french Polynésia), at EHESS Teacher of social sciences at Isepp, UPF Her research topics are : Ethnology and sociology of The tuamotuan societies ; the gender issue in French Polynesia PUBLICATIONS ü H GREPIN "Le Tricdané au coeur des sociétés des Tuamotu", colloque de recherche à l'Université de Polynésie française, 1er mars 2013 ü H GREPIN "Integrated indigenous management of Land and Marine protected areas in Tehaupoo (Tahiti, french Polynésia), dir Bambridge Tamatoa, à paraître ü H GREPIN "A chacun sa nature: la problématique Nature/Culture en Polynésie française", conférence à l'Isepp (Institut supérieur de l'enseignement privé de Polynésie, 2014). _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 56 PML Plymouth Marine Laboratory, Prospect Place, The Hoe, PLYMOUTH, PL1 3DH UNITED KINGDOM caro4@pml.ac.uk • • • • • • • • • 1994 – 1997 1998 – 1999 1999 – 2001 2001 – 2002 2002 – 2006 2006 – 2007 2007 – 2008 2008 – present 2014 – 2017 BSc Biology, University of Wales, Bangor MSc Rural Resource and Environmental Policy, Wye College, University of London Research Associate, Autonomous University of Yucatan, Mexico Consultant, Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations (FAO), Rome PhD Agricultural and Food Economics, University of Reading Agricultural Economist, Scottish Agricultural College Associate Research Fellow, Marchmont Observatory/SLIM, University of Exeter Environmental Economist, Plymouth Marine Laboratory Honorary Fellow, Medical School, University of Exeter Caroline Hattam is an environmental economist at Plymouth Marine Laboratory. Her interest in environmental economics stems from her university training in biology, rural resource use, environmental policy and agricultural economics. Her move towards social sciences arose out of experiences working in rural communities in Nepal and Mexico and the need to better understand the relationship between people and the natural environment. Her current research focuses primarily on the valuation of marine ecosystem services using both monetary and nonmonetary techniques. She is particularly interested in how valuation methods can be improved, especially for ecosystem services that are not currently traded on the market. Her work on ocean acidification focuses on the societal implications of change in the ocean and how the UK public perceive OA. She has also been involved in work exploring the potential impacts of OA on the UK fishing industry and fishing dependent communities. Other research interests include how ecosystem service valuation is used in the decision-making process; social and economic impact analysis; and environmental education and knowledge exchange. For more information, please see: http://www.pml.ac.uk/People/Science-Staff/Dr-Caroline-Hattam PUBLICATIONS ü Fernandes, J.A., Papathanasopoulou, E., Queirós A.M., Cheung, W.L., Yool, A., Artioli, Y., Pope, E.C., Flynn, K.J., Merino, G., Calosi, P., Beaumont, N., Austen, M., Widdicombe, S., Hattam, C., Barange, M. (submitted) Ocean acidification and warming add to vulnerability of UK fisheries-dependent communities. ü Hilmi, N., Allemand, D., Cinar, M., Cooley, S., Hall-Spencer, J.M., Haraldsson, G., Hattam, C., Jeffree, R.A., Orr, J.C., Rehdanz, K., Reynaud, S., Safa, A. and Dupont, S. (2014) Exposure of Mediterranean countries to ocean acidification Water, 6, 1719-1744; doi:10.3390/w6061719 ü Hilmi, N., Allemand, D., Dupont, S., Safa, A., Haraldsson, G., Nunes, P.A.L.D., Moore, C., Hattam, C., Reynaud, S., Hall-Spencer, J.M., Fine, M., Turley, C., Jeffree, R., Orr, J., Munday, P.L., Cooley, S.R. (2013) Towards improved socio-economic assessments of ocean acidification’s impacts. Marine Biology DOI 10.1007/s00227-012-2031-5 _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 57 NOAA National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration 1315 East West Highway, Rm. 15618 SILVER SPRING, MD 20910 USA libby.jewett@noaa.gov Libby is the founding Director of NOAA’s Ocean Acidification Program, Chair of the US Interagency Working Group on Ocean Acidification, co-Chair of the Global Ocean Acidification Observing Network and US representative to the Advisory Board for the OA International Coordination Centre at the IAEA. She has made numerous presentations around the world about Ocean Acidification and how the US is addressing this crisis. Most recently, she co-chaired an Ocean Acidification workshop which preceded the Third UN Conference on Small Island Developing States. She has a PhD in marine ecology from the University of Maryland and a Master of Public Policy from Harvard University. PUBLICATIONS ü NOAA Ocean Acidification Steering Committee (2010): NOAA Ocean and Great Lakes Acidification Research Plan, NOAA Special Report, 143 pp. ü Newton, J.A., Feely, R.A.,Jewett, E.B., Williamson, P.; Mathis, J. (2014) Global Ocean Acidification Observing Netork: Requirements and Governance Plan, 57pp. ü Committee on Environment and Natural Resources. 2010. Scientific Assessment of Hypoxia in U.S. Coastal Waters. Interagency Working Group on Harmful Algal Blooms, Hypoxia, and Human Health of the Joint Subcommittee on Ocean Science and Technology. Washington, DC. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 58 IUCN’s Global Marine and Polar Programme IUCN World Headquarters Rue Mauverney 28 CH- 1196 GLAND SWITZERLAND danlaffoley@btinternet.com Dan Laffoley is a leading global expert on ocean conservation. At IUCN, he acts in the consultant role of Principal Advisor, Marine Science and Conservation for the Global Marine and Polar Programme, and also has the global honorary role of Marine Vice Chair for the World Commission on Protected Areas. He has a place on the Boards and Councils of many UK leading marine science organisations, as well as acting as an independent advisor to the UK Government on marine science. He is also Patron of the HMS Beagle Trust, dedicated to building a modern ocean-going version of the ship that Darwin travelled on to explore the ocean. Through his work, Dan provides knowledge, innovation and leadership on new ways to deliver marine conservation which lever greater action and attention for the ocean. He works with leading scientists to create initiatives that bring new knowledge into policy on issues such as coastal carbon sinks, climate change and ocean acidification. He has a keen interest in how information technology can help protect the ocean and recently co-originated and helped deliver Google Ocean, showing the public for the first time how the ocean is protected, benefitting in excess of 1 billion people with a new perspective on the seas. For over 25 years, Dan has been responsible for the creation of many key national, European and global partnerships and alliances that underpin marine conservation. He served as chief scientific advisor for the marine environment in Natural England, for over a decade headed-up the marine conservation programme for English Nature, and has also worked in a variety of roles including special marine environmental advisor for the Prime Minister Tony Blair’s Strategy Unit, and for the European Commission. He currently chairs the International Ocean Acidification reference User Group spearheading efforts to address the major global problem. In 2011, he convened leading experts to form the High Seas Alliance and developed new perspectives on synergistic effects of the impacts we are having on the global ocean, to world-wide press coverage. PUBLICATIONS ü Ocean Acidification Reference User Group (2009). Ocean Acidification: The Facts. A special introductory guide for policy advisers and decision makers. Laffoley, D. d’A, and Baxter, J. M. (Eds.), European Project on Ocean Acidification (EPOCA). 12pp. ü Ocean Acidification Reference User Group (2010). Ocean Acidification: Questions Answered. Laffoley, D. d’A., and Baxter, J.M. (eds). European Project on Ocean Acidification (EPOCA). 24 pp ü Laffoley, D. d’A., and Baxter, J.M. (eds). 2011. Ocean Acidification: Acting on Evidence. Messages for Rio+20. European Project on Ocean Acidification (EPOCA), UK Ocean Acidification Research Programme, (UKOA), Biological Impacts of Ocean Acidification (BIOACID) and Mediterranean Sea Acidification in a Changing Climate (MedSeA). 8pp. ü Laffoley, D. d’A., and Baxter, J.M. (eds). 2012. Ocean Acidification: The knowledge base 2012. Updating what we know about ocean acidification and key global challenges. European Project on Ocean Acidification (EPOCA), UK Ocean Acidification Research Programme, (UKOA), Biological Impacts of Ocean Acidification (BIOACID) and Mediterranean Sea Acidification in a Changing Climate (MedSeA). 8pp. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 59 University Abou Bekr Belkaid of Tlemcen Faculty of Economics and Management BP 226 Tlemcen 13000 ALGERIA sb_maliki@mail.univ-tlemcen.dz Dr. Samir Baha-Eddine MALIKI is currently an Associate Professor of Economics at Tlemcen University (Algeria). He holds a PhD in economics from Versailles University (France). He was a Deputy Director of Tlemcen Preparatory School of Economics. He is also Research Associate at Economic Research Forum (ERF, Egypt) and member of MEEA (Middle East Economic Association). He is currently leading a Master program of Economic Engineering and Development of enterprises at the international. He is the head of team n°2 in Mecas laboratory since 2008. He also was the head of a number of research program about poverty, water management, financing sme by foreign banks in Algeria and innovation in SME’s The principal of its publications concerns water management and applied economics. PUBLICATIONS ü Hemche, O., Jawadi F., Maliki S. B., Idi Cheffou A, On the study of contagion in the context of the subprime crisis: A dynamic conditional correlation–multivariate GARCH approach, Economic Modelling, (2014), ü Maliki S.B., Benhabib A. and Bouteldja A, “Poverty and Education in Algeria: the Impact of Non-School Factors using a Multinomial Econometric Approach”, International Journal for Innovation Education and Research, Vol-2 No-1, January 2014 Edition, , pp.62-80 ü Bouteldja A, Benameur A , Maliki S. B., “ The Black Market Exchange Rate and Demand for Money in Algeria”, International Journal of Arts and Commerce, Vol. 2 No. 10, November 2013, pp. 71-82., ü Smahi A, Maliki S.B, and Arif S.E, "Microfinance and Subjective Poverty in Algeria: Primary Analysis" (in French), La Revue des Sciences de Gestion,n°255-256, mai-aout 2012, pp.133-144 ü Maliki S.B., Benhabib A. and Charmes J, “Households poverty and water linkages: Evidence from Algeria” Topics in Middle Eastern and North African Economies, electronic journal, Volume 11, Middle East Economic Association and Loyola University Chicago, September 2009 _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 60 Université de Brest UBO-AMURE 12 rue de Kergoat – Bât. B CS 93837 29238 BREST CEDEX 3 FRANCE linwood.pendleton@duke.edu • • • • He holds a doctoral degree in resource and environmental economics from Yale University; a Master's degree in public administration from Harvard’s Kennedy School; a Master's degree in ecology, evolution, and behavior from Princeton; and a Bachelor's degree in biology from the College of William and Mary. Linwood Pendleton holds the International Chair of Excellence at the European Institute for Marine Studies, in the Institute for Marine Law and Economics, at the University of Brest and Laboratory of Excellence in Brest, France. He is a senior scholar in the Ocean and Coastal Policy Program at Duke University's Nicholas Institute for Environmental Policy Solutions. Pendleton’s work focuses on policies that affect human uses and enjoyment of ocean and coastal resources – both living and non-living. He is the Director of the Marine Ecosystem Services Partnership, author of many scholarly articles, and coordinates the Marine Secretariat of the international Ecosystem Services Partnership. Pendleton’s current projects include understanding the economic and human impacts of ocean acidification (funded by SESYNC and the Prince Albert II Foundation), Mapping Ocean Wealth (with the Nature Conservancy), the economics of coastal blue carbon (Global Environmental Facility), and efforts to better manage the deep sea. Pendleton served as Acting Chief Economist at NOAA from January 2011 through August 2013. PUBLICATIONS ü Pendleton, L., Mongruel, R., Beaumont, N., Hooper, T., and M. Charles. Forthcoming. A Triage Approach to Improve the Relevance of Marine Ecosystem Services Assessments. Marine Ecological Progress Series. ü Börger, T., Beaumont, N., Pendleton, L., Boyle, K. Cooper, P. Fletcher, S. Haab, T., Hanemann, M. Hooper, T., Hussain, S., Portela, R., Stithou, M., Stockhill, J. Taylor, T. and M. Austen. 2014. Incorporating Ecosystem Services in Marine Planning: The Role of Valuation. Marine Policy. Vol 46, May 2014, page 161-170. ü Pendleton, L., Karl, T. and E. Mills. 2013. Growing the U.S. Economy in the Face of Weather and Climate Extremes: A Call for Better Data. Eos, Journal of the American Geophysical Union. Volume 94, Issue 25, pages 225–226, 18 June 2013 ü Pendleton, L., Donato DC, Murray BC, Crooks S, Jenkins WA, et al. 2012 Estimating Global “Blue Carbon” Emissions from Conversion and Degradation of Vegetated Coastal Ecosystems. PLoS ONE 7(9): e43542. ü Pendleton, L., King, P. Mohn, C., Webster, D.G. and R. Vaughn. 2011. Estimating the Potential Economic Impacts of Climate Change on Southern California Beaches. Journal of Climatic Change. Volume 109 (1) _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 61 AWI Alfred Wegener Institute Integrative Ökophysiologie Am Handelshafen 12 D-27579 BREMERHAVEN GERMANY hans.poertner@awi.de • 2005 – • 1995 – 2012 • 1992 –1995 • 1990 • 1985 – 1987 • 1983 – 1985 • 1983 Universität Bremen FB2 Biologie Chemie Postfach 330440 D-28334 Bremen GERMANY Professor (W3) and Section Head in Integrative Ecophysiology at AWI and Bremen University. Professor (C3) and Head of Research Group / Section in Integrative Ecophysiology at AWI and Bremen University DFG Heisenberg fellow at Lovelace Medical Foundation, Albuquerque, New Mexico, and AWI Habilitation in Zoology at HHU Düsseldorf Max-Planck- and DFG-Research associate at Max-Planck-Insitute for experimental Medicine, Göttingen; Acadia University, Wolfville, and Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. Hochschulassistent 1. Phase, HHU Düsseldorf PhD in Zoology – Westfälische Wilhelms-University Münster; Heinrich-Heine-University Düsseldorf Hans-O. Pörtner studied at Münster and Düsseldorf Universities where he received his PhD and habilitated in Animal Physiology. As a Research and then Heisenberg Fellow of the German Research Council he worked at Dalhousie and Acadia Universities, Nova Scotia, Canada and at the Lovelace Medical Foundation, Albuquerque, NM. Currently he is Professor and Head of the Department of Integrative Ecophysiology at the Alfred Wegener Institute for Marine and Polar Research, Bremerhaven, Germany. He acts as an associate editor “Physiology” for Marine Biology and as a coeditor of the Journal of Thermal Biology. He is a Coordinating Lead Author of IPCC WGII AR5, chapter Ocean Systems and a member of the author teams for the WGII Summary for Policymakers and Technical Summary, as well as a member of the Core Writing Team for the IPCC AR5 Synthesis Report. His research interests include the effects of climate warming, ocean acidification, and hypoxia on marine animals and ecosystems with a focus on the links between ecological, physiological, biochemical and molecular mechanisms limiting tolerance and shaping biogeography and ecosystem functioning. This research addresses the cellular and whole animal energy budgets in various climate regimes, as well as the molecular mechanisms of adaptation and limitation. These efforts led to the development of the concept of oxygen and capacity limited thermal tolerance (OCLTT). The concept provides a matrix for integrating temperature, oxygen and CO2 effects on marine animals and ecosystems and also contributes to understanding the roles of climate oscillations in evolutionary history. http://www.awi.de/en/research/research_divisions/biosciences/integrative_ecophysiology/ PUBLICATIONS ü Pörtner, H.-O., D.M. Karl, P.W. Boyd, W.L. Cheung, S.E. Lluch-Cota, Y. Nojiri, D.N. Schmidt, and P.O. Zavialov, 2014: Ocean systems. In: Climate Change 2014: Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerability. Part A: Global and Sectoral Aspects. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK; New York, NY, USA. ü Storch D., Menzel L., Frickenhaus S., Pörtner H.O. (2014) Climate sensitivity across the domains of life: Limits to evolutionary adaptation shape species interactions. Global Change Biology. ü Dupont, S., Pörtner, H.O. (2013) Get ready for ocean acidification. Nature 498, 429. ü Wittmann, A. C., and Pörtner, H. O., 2013, Sensitivities of extant animal taxa to ocean acidification: Nature Climate Change. ü Pörtner, H. O., 2012, Integrating climate-related stressor effects on marine organisms: unifying principles linking molecule to ecosystem-level changes: Marine Ecology Progress Series, v. 470, p. 273-290. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 62 63 _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 64 65 PERSGA Regional Organization for the Conservation of the Environment of the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden JEDDAH SAUDI ARABIA salim.almoghrabi@persga.org / smoghrabi@hotmail.com • Joined the PERSGA in Jeddah – Saudi Arabia on the 11th of January 2014 • Appointed as the Honorary Consul of the French Republic, in Aqaba - Jordan, in April 2013 • Served in a number of positions in the Aqaba Special Economic Zone Authority (ASEZA) since joining in 2001. Last position served was the Commissioner for Environment and health Control in ASEZA (Nov 2008 – Apr. 2012) • Chairman of several Management Committees and member of the Board of Directors of several companies in Aqaba • Researcher at the University of Jordan/Marine Science Station in Aqaba since 1992 • Obtained a Ph.D. in Biology from the University of Nice-Sophia Antipolis (France) in 1992 • Obtained a B.Sc. and M.Sc. in Biology from the University of Jordan in 1983 and 1985 respectively I have been lucky to have the opportunity to be part of the very first team of public-officials that have been entrusted by the Government of Jordan to establish the Aqaba Special Economic Zone (ASEZ). ASEZ is part and parcel of several initiatives lead by H.M. King Abdullah II to liberalize the country and accelerate its economic growth which included accession to the WTO and entering a free trade agreement with the US and an association agreement with the EU. While these initiatives aimed at liberalizing trade in goods and services with important trading partners, ASEZ comes with the extra step of opening up the local economy in Aqaba for foreign direct investment and maximizing private sector participation in the development of the zone. This has required the development of numerous legislations and regulatory instruments to create a liberalized and attractive investment climate; the establishment of an administratively and financially autonomous governing institution (ASEZA) with planning, regulatory and developmental powers and responsibilities; and undertaking sweeping efforts to upgrade, expand and privatize infrastructure and utility services; primarily port and airport facilities, water, electricity and gas supply and distribution networks. I have served nine years in office including three and a half years as the Commissioner for Environment and Health Control. Through out these years, we in ASEZA have been continuously challenged on several fronts: how to anchor theoretical concepts in real institutional practice, how to ensure societal wide involvement and integration, how to maintain harmony and complementarities between conflicting economic demands and interests, and not least of all how to strike the right balance between economic development and protection of the environment and scarce natural resources of the zone. PUBLICATIONS ü Al-Moghrabi, S., Goiran, C., Allemand, D., Speziale, N., Jaubert, J. (1996). Inorganic carbon uptake for photosynthesis by the symbiotic coral-dinoflagellate association II. Mechanisms for bicarbonate uptake. J. Exp. Mar. Biol. Ecol. 199: 227-248. ü Goiran, C., Al-Moghrabi, S., Allemand, D., Jaubert, J. (1996). Inorganic carbon uptake for photosynthesis by the symbiotic coral-dinoflagellate association I. Photosynthetic performances of symbionts and dependence on sea water bicarbonate. J. Exp. Mar. Biol. Ecol. 199: 207-225. ü Loya, Y., Al-Moghrabi, S.M., Ilan, M., Crosby, M. P. (1998). The Red Sea Marine Peace Park coral reef benthic communities: Ecology and Biology Monitoring program. Proceedings of the Hawai'i Coral reef monitoring workshop. pp. 239-250. ü Al-Rousan, S., Al-Moghrabi, S.M., Patzold, J., Wefer, G. (2002). Environmental and biological effects on the stable oxygen isotope records of coral in the northern Gulf of Aqaba, Red Sea. Mar. Ecol. Progr. Ser. 239: 301-310. ü Felis, T., Lohmann, G., Kuhnert, H., Lorenz, S.J., Scholz, D., Patzold, J., Al-Rousan, S.A., Al-Moghrabi, S.M. (2004). Increased seasonality in Middle East temperatures during the last interglacial period. Nature 429: 164-168. ü Al-Horani, F.A., Ferdelman, T., Al-Moghrabi, S.M., de Beer, D. (2005). Spatial distribution of calcification and photosynthesis in the scleractinian coral Galaxea fascicularis. Coral Reefs 24: 173-180. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 66 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco Coastal Systems CSIR-Natural Resources and the Environment Durban, KwaZulu-Natal & Stellenbosch, WESTERN CAPE SOUTH AFRICA lcelliers@csir.co.za Qualification: Ph.D. in Tropical Marine Ecology at the University of Natal (now KwaZulu-Natal) on predatory disturbances on marginal high-latitude reefs in South Africa (2000) Current position: Principal Scientist & Research Group Leader: Coastal Systems - Natural Resources and the Environment business unit of the CSIR. As Principal Scientist I apply for and manage research projects in the field of integrated coastal management, coastal governance, institutional assessment, socio-ecology. I am currently Primary Investigator in several larger national and international projects. Research Interests: Science supporting integrated coastal management; impact-driven research and development: State of the coast and trends in its bio-physical condition (e.g. state of coast reporting/assessment indices) leading to; Prediction and forecasting systems giving direction to sustainable coastal planning and development (future scenario testing, trade-offs and early warning) that are dependent on integration of technologies, and Integration of science into governance and management as an integral part of the social-ecological-system, in order to facilitate change in behaviour (adaptation), including packaging and transfer (e.g. training, protocols, guidelines and frameworks). Key Active Projects: The Negotiation of Knowledge for Coastal Governance. Department of Science and Technology (DST) within the context of the Global Change Grand Challenge (GCGC) - Society and Sustainability Research Programme (SSRP) Ecosystem-scale science supporting integrated planning and development in complex urban coastal systems. Parliamentary Grant Project – Coastal Systems - Natural Resources and the Environment-CSIR Emerging Knowledge for Local Adaptation - Modifying the symbiosis of knowledge and governance for the adaptation of Western Indian Ocean coastal communities at risk from global change - 2014-1017 (four years). MASMA program of the Western Indian Ocean Marine Science Association (WIOMSA) PUBLICATIONS ü Celliers L, Colenbrander DR, Breetzke T and Oelofse G.In press. Towards increased degrees of Integrated Coastal Management in the City of Cape Town, South Africa. Ocean and Coastal Management ü Celliers L, Rosendo S, Coetzee I, and Daniels G. 2013. Pathways of integrated coastal management from national policy to local implementation: enabling climate change adaptation. Marine Policy 39:72-86 ü Celliers L, Breetzke T, Moore L, and Malan N. 2009. A User-friendly Guide to the Integrated Coastal Management Act of South Africa. Department of Environmental Affairs and SSI Engineers and Environmental Consultants. 100pp ü Celliers L, Bulman R, Breetzke T, and Parak O. 2007. Institutional mapping of integrated coastal zone management in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. In Ocean Yearbook. Martinus Nijhoff, pp. 365–404 _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 67 Marine Institute University of Plymouth PLYMOUTH UNITED KINGDOM jason.hall-spencer@plymouth.ac.uk Jason is Professor of Marine Biology in his home town of Plymouth, UK and is Editor-in-Chief of the journal Regional Studies in Marine Science. His group carries out applied research to provide policy makers with the scientific information needed to best manage the marine environment, ranging from improving the sustainability of fisheries and fish farming to the design of marine protected areas. He is a field ecologist and is able to get out to sea regularly; he has witnessed the discovery giant deep sea reefs using submersibles and studied the biology of remote seamounts using underwater robots. This year he is using satellite tracking of vessels to design effective fisheries regeneration areas and studying underwater volcanoes in the Mediterranean and Atlantic to help predict the effects of ocean acidification due to rising atmospheric carbon dioxide levels. He is very open to collaborations aimed at improving the way in which we exploit the seas around us. Website: www.plymouth.ac.uk/staff/jhall-spencer PUBLICATIONS ü Beare DJ, McQuatters-Gollup A, van der Hammen, T, Machiels M, Teoh SJ, Hall-Spencer JM (2013) Long-term trends in calcifying plankton and pH in the North Sea. PLOS ONE 8, e61175. ü Brodie J, Williamson CJ, Smale DA, Kamenos NA,Mieszkowska N, Santos R, Cunliffe M, Steinke M, Yesson C, Anderson KM, AsnaghiV, Brownlee C, Burdett HL, Burrows MT, Collins S, Donohue PJC, Harvey B, FoggoA, Noisette F, Nunes J, Ragazzola F, Raven JA, Schmidt DN, Suggett D, TeichbergM, Hall-Spencer JM (2014) The future of the NE Atlantic benthic flora in a high CO2 world. Ecology and Evolution, 4, 2787-2789. ü Jackson EL, Davies A, Howell KL Kershaw PJ Hall-Spencer JM (2014) Future-proofing Marine Protected Area networks for cold water coral reefs. ICES Journal of Marine Science. doi: 10.1093/icesjms/fsu099 ü Molfese C, Beare D, Hall-Spencer JM (2014) Overfishing and the Replacement of Demersal Finfish by Shellfish: An Example from the English Channel. PLoS ONE 9(7), e101506. ü Russell BD, Connell SD, Uthicke S, Muehllehner N, Fabricius KE & Hall-Spencer JM (2013) Future seagrass beds: increased productivity leading to carbon storage? Marine Pollution Bulletin 73, 463-469. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 68 WOC World Ocean Council 3035 Hibiscus Drive, Suite 1 Honolulu HAWAII 96815 USA paul.holthus@oceancouncil.org Paul Holthus is the founding CEO of the World Ocean Council (WOC) – the only international, multi-industry leadership alliance on “Corporate Ocean Responsibility”. The WOC brings together oil and gas, shipping, fisheries, aquaculture, tourism, offshore renewables, mining, cable, technology and other industries to create value by catalysing collaboration on ocean sustainability, science and stewardship. The WOC works with leadership companies to address the growing risks and opportunities created by ocean environment issues, limits access to ocean areas/resources, social license to operate… The growing WOC ocean business community includes WOC Members (70+ leadership companies from a wide range of ocean industries) and the WOC network (34,000+ ocean industry stakeholders around the world). Mr Holthus has held senior positions with the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and international environmental organisations, including as Deputy Director for the IUCN Global Marine Programme. While at The Nature Conservancy, he originated the “Coral Triangle”, a successful large seascape approach to international sustainable ocean development. Since 1998, Mr Holthus has worked primarily with the private sector to develop practical solutions for the sustainable use of the marine environment and advance the Blue Economy. He has worked in over 30 countries with companies, communities, UN agencies, international NGOs, foundations and industry associations. PUBLICATIONS ü Holthus, P., C. Clarkin, and J Lorentzen. 2013. Emerging Arctic Opportunities: Dramatic increases expected in Arctic shipping, oil and gas exploration, fisheries and tourism. Coast Guard Journal of Safety and Security at Sea 70 (2): 10-13. ü Richardson, J., Guedes, A. M., de la Gorce, X., de Saint Salvy, A-F., Holthus, P., The Fractured Ocean: Current Challenges to Maritime Policy in the Wider Atlantic. 2012. ü Holthus, P. 2012. Smart Ocean/Smart Industries: Scaling Up Of Ocean Data Collection By Industry. Integrated Ocean Observing System (IOOS) Summit White Paper. 5 pp. ü Holthus, P. 2010. The Future of Sustainable Ocean Resource Use. Op-ed. Sea Technology magazine. Aug 2010. ü Holthus, P. 2009. Industry leadership in governance and sustainable use of the high seas. Océanis 35 (1-2): 271-276. Towards a New Governance of High Seas Biodiversity. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 69 IDDRI / Sciences-Po Institut du Développement Durable et des Relations Internationales 27 rue Saint-Guillaume 75007 PARIS FRANCE alexandre.magnan@iddri.org Alexandre MAGNAN has been a research fellow at IDDRI since 2007, working on vulnerability and adaptation to climate and environmental change in coastal areas. He has been developing research since 2003 especially in the Indian Ocean and in the Pacific. He is currently leading two major projects on the assessment of adaptive capacity to climate change (CapAdapt) and on "trajectories of vulnerability" to climate change (VulneraRe). He is currently coleading The Oceans 2015 initiative (with UPMC-CNRS) on an impact scenario for ocean acidification and warming. He recently co-organised two workshops on: maladaptation to climate change (Bellagio Center of the Rockefeller Foundation, Italy, November 2012); and trajectories of vulnerability (France, October 2013). He also co-organised a major science/decision-making conference in France in April 2014 (on coastal hazards), and is a reviewer for several high-ranking journals (Mitigation & Adaptation Strategies for Global Change, Global Environmental Change, Climate and Development and WIREs Climate Change). He recently published several books: Ces îles qui pourraient disparaître (2012), Changement climatique: tous vulnérables ? (2013), Des catastrophes… “naturelles” ? (2014). Thematic area – Vulnerability to natural hazards and to climate change (theory and practice), Adaptation and adaptive capacity to natural hazards and to climate change (theory and practice), Maladaptation to global change (theory and guidelines), Relationships between societies and environment in developing and developed countries Main geographical areas – Coastal areas (continental coasts and small islands): Indian Ocean (Maldives, Mauritius & Rodrigues, Reunion Island, Seychelles), Pacific (Kiribati, French Polynesia, Japan), Caribbean (British & US Virgin Islands, Sint-Marteen, Anguilla). PUBLICATIONS ü Billé R., Downing T., Garnaud B., Magnan A., Smith B., Taylor R., 2013. Adaptation strategies for the Mediterranean. Chapter 12 in : A. Navarra and L. Tubiana (eds.), Regional Assessment of Climate Change in the Mediterranean, Advances in Global Change Research 51, Springer, p. 235-262. ü Magnan A., 2014. Avoiding maladaptation to climate change: towards guiding principles. S.A.P.I.E.N.S., 7 (1). (On line, http://sapiens.revues.org/1680) ü Duvat V., Magnan A., Pouget F., 2013. Exposure of atoll population to coastal erosion and flooding: a South Tarawa assessment, Kiribati. Sustainability Science, Special issue on Small islands, 8 (3): 423-440. ü Duvat V., Magnan A., 2013. Back to the Future: from trajectories of vulnerability to adaptation to climate change, background paper of the scientific workshop Back to the Future, 8-11 October 2013, Rochefort/La Rochelle, France. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 70 PML Plymouth Marine Laboratory, Prospect Place, The Hoe, PLYMOUTH, PL1 3DH UNITED KINGDOM elpa@pml.ac.uk • • • • • • • • 1996 – 2001 2000 – 2001 2002 – 2006 2006 – 2007 2007 – 2008 2008 – 2009 2009 – 2012 2012 – present BSc Banking and Finance, University of London (UK) MSc International Economics and Policy, University of Surrey (UK) PhD University of Surrey (UK) Research Fellow, University of Surrey (UK) Head of Travel and Tourism Course, Alpine Centre (Greece) Freelance Economist (Greece) Economics Lecturer and Research Fellow, Technological Educational Institute of Piraeus (Greece) Economist, Plymouth Marine Laboratory (UK) Eleni is an economist by training having received both her Masters of Science in Economics and her PhD in the application of Environmentally Extended Input-Output models. After the completion of her PhD in 2006 she continued as a Research Fellow at the University of Surrey working on the ESRC funded project: Research Group on Lifestyles, Values and the Environment (RESOLVE). In 2007, she accepted the position of Head of Travel and Tourism at the Alpine Centre in Greece where she led and taught modules on sustainable tourism and development. Eleni returned to the field of energy and environmental research in 2008 undertaking a research project for a year before lecturing part-time at the Technological Educational Institute of Piraeus. She is now working as an economist at the Plymouth Marine Laboratory on a number of projects investigating the socio-economic impacts of a changing marine environment. Her research interests are in quantifying the impact and distributional effects on wealth and wellbeing of a changing natural environment, the implementation of associated policies and environmental management decisions. Within the marine environment she has recently estimated the economic impact of changes in fish catch due to climate change (warming and ocean acidification) and what this means for fishing communities in England, Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales. The research highlighted the vulnerability of fishing communities to environmental change particularly in terms of their relative deprivation. Eleni has undertaken a number of review and steering committee positions including: Reviewer for DEFRA’s Natural Capital Accounts (2014), Reviewer for DEFRA’s Sustainable Consumption and Production (SCP) evidence base research programme (2006 – 2007) and a Steering Group member for the Office for National Statistics’ Material Flow Review Programme (2005 – 2006). For more information see: http://www.pml.ac.uk/People/Science-Staff/Dr-Eleni-Papathanasopoulou PUBLICATIONS ü Fernandes, J. A., Papathanasopoulou, E., et al. Ocean acidification and warming adds to the vulnerability of UK fisheries-dependent communities. Global Change Biology. (Submitted) ü MMO (2013). Social impacts of fisheries, aquaculture, recreation, tourism and marine protected areas (MPAs) in marine plan areas in England. Authored by: Papathanasopoulou, E., Beaumont, N., Lear, D., Fisher, E., Walker, P., Midlen, A. and M. Austen. ü Hopkins, F., Ellis, P., Pope, E., Papathanasopoulou, E. (2013). Ocean acidification and shellfish: effects on UK aquaculture? Article for Cefas “Shellfish News” May Edition. ü Hopkins, F. and Papathanasopoulou, E. (2012). Ocean acidification and shellfish. Article for the Association of Scottish Shellfish “Grower” magazine, October 2012. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 71 Ministère des Affaires Etrangères et du Développement International 27 rue de la Convention 75015 PARIS FRANCE laura.recuero-virto@diplomatie.gouv.fr Laura Recuero Virto joined the French Ministry of foreign affairs in February 2013 as head of unit on economic analysis and globalisation and is now chief economist. She is managing projets such as the socio-economic impacts on ocean acidification (UMR Amure, Brest), the scientific and economic links between climate and ocean (plateforme océan-climat), the relevance of the creation of a maritime information system in the southeast Indian ocean (Ifremer, FS), the European development report on financing development and environment (EC, Finland, Germany, Lux.), the Sahel and West Africa Club at the OECD on food security, the use of natural capital accounting for policy decisions (WWF Germany). She has previously worked for the OECD's Development Centre, OECD’s Public Governance and Territorial Development Directorate, Télécom ParisTech, World Bank Institute, Nortel Networks, Centre National d'Etudes Spatiales and European Space Agency. Laura contributed to the African economic outlook, covering recent developments in macroeconomic and structural issues and participating in forecasting. She is regularly invited as referee in events on infrastructure and has media appearances in Le Monde, Financial Times, Les Afriques, RFI, amongst others. She contributed to ministerial meetings on infrastructure (African Union, OECD-NEPAD). She gives courses on environmental economics and mineral resources. She holds a B.A. degree on engineering, an MBA on international trade (Polytechnic University of Madrid) and a PhD in economics (Toulouse School of Economics). Her current research interests are related to climate mitigation through better coastal and marine management, with a particular interest on Africa. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 72 PML Plymouth Marine Laboratory, Prospect Place, The Hoe, PLYMOUTH, PL1 3DH UNITED KINGDOM ct@pml.ac.uk Dr Carol Turley’s research has been centred on the ocean’s biogeochemical cycles looking at habitats from shallow and deep-sea sediments, estuaries, frontal systems to large enclosed waters. In the last 10 years she became interested in ocean acidification and was a member of The Royal Society Working Group on ocean acidification and a Lead Author on the 2007 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) 4th Assessment Report on Climate Change. She was/is a member of the Executive Board of the EU funded European Project on Ocean Acidification (EPOCA), the EU funded Mediterranean Sea Acidification in a Changing Climate (MedSeA) project and is the Knowledge Exchange Coordinator for the UK Ocean Acidification (UKOA) Research Programme funded by NERC, Defra and DECC. She has contributed to several UNFCCC events, including giving evidence to its SBSTA in Bonn and since 2009 presenting at side-events at the annual UN Conferences on Climate Change in Copenhagen (COP15), Cancun (COP 16), Durban (COP17), Doha (COP18) Warsaw (COP19) and Lima (COP20) and at the Earth Summit, Rio+20 in 2012 and in 2013 at the UN in New York. She spoke at the Ocean Acidification Panel, giving the science presentation at the Our Ocean Summit at the US State Department in 2014 attended by Heads of State from 80 countries. She briefs a wide range of interested global stakeholders including UK Government departments, Ministers and Chief Scientists on the latest science of ocean acidification and has presented in the Houses of Parliament and European Parliament. She has published and presented on a wide range of topics within the field of ocean acidification, ranging from its cause, chemistry, impacts and the potential social, economic and political consequences. She was a Review Editor for the 5th IPCC Assessment Report on Climate Change. She has over 120 peer reviewed publications and has been an invited speaker at numerous international conferences. She received an OBE for services to science in the 2011 New Year’s Honours List. PUBLICATIONS ü CBD (2014). An Updated Synthesis of the Impacts of Ocean Acidification on Marine Biodiversity (Eds: S. Hennige, J.M. Roberts & P. Williamson). T. Aze, J. Barry, R. Bellerby, L. Brander, M. Byrne, S. Dupont, J-P. Gattuso, S. Gibbs, L. Hansson, C. Hattam, C. Hauton, J. Havenhand, JH. Fossa, C. Kavanagh, H. Kurihara, R. Matear, F. Mark, F. Melzner, P. Munday, B. Niehoff, P. Pearson, K. Rehdanz, S. Tambutte, C. Turley, A. Venn, M. Warnau, J. Young. Montreal, Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity Technical Series No. 75, 99 pages. ü Williamson P. and Turley C. (2014) The US gets serious on global ocean health. The Marine Biologist. Autumn 2014, 22-24. ü D Herr, K. Isensee, E. Harrould-Kolieb and C. Turley (2014). Ocean Acidification: International Policy and Governance Options. Gland, Switzerland: IUCN. iv + 52pp. ü Turley, C., T. Keizer, P. Williamson, J.-P. Gattuso, P. Ziveri, R. Monroe, K. Boot and M. Huelsenbeck (2014) Hot, sour and breathless-ocean under stress. World Meteorological Organization Bulletin 63 (1) 3-7. ü Williamson, P., Turley, C., Brownlee, C., Findlay, H.S., Ridgwell, A., Schmidt, D.N., Schroeder, D.C., Blackford, J., Tyrell, T. and Pinnegar, J.K. (2013) Impacts of ocean acidification. MCCIP Science Review 2013, 34-48. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 73 IOC UNESCO Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission of UNESCO 7 place de Fontenoy 75732 PARIS CEDEX 07 FRANCE jl.valdes@unesco.org Dr. Luis VALDÉS SANTURIO (Spain) is, since January 2009, the Head of Ocean Sciences at the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission of UNESCO, and formerly (2000-2008) he has been the Director of the Centro Oceanográfico de Gijón - Instituto Español de Oceanografía (CO Gijón-IEO). With more than 30 years of experience in marine research and field studies related with marine ecology and climate change, he established in 1990 the time series programme based on ocean sampling sites and marine observatories which is maintained by Spain in the North Atlantic. He has advised various governmental, intergovernmental and international organizations as well as research funding agencies. He has a vast experience in ICES where he has chaired different Working Groups and Committees including the Oceanographic Committee. He also served as Spanish Delegate in ICES and in the IOC-UNESCO. PUBLICATIONS ü Valdés L, Lopez-Urrutia A., Cabal J., Alvarez-Ossorio M., Bode A., Miranda A, Cabanas M., Huskin I, Anadón R, Alvarez-Marqués F., Llope M, Rodriguez N. 2007. A decade of sampling in the Bay of Biscay: What are the zooplankton time series telling us?. Progress in Oceanography, 74 (2-3): 98-114. ü Nellemann, C., E. Corcoran, C. Duarte, L. Valdés, C. De Young, L. Fonseca and G. Grimsditch. 2009. Blue Carbon. A Rapid Response Assessment. United Nations Environment Programme, GRID-Arendal, ISBN: 978-82-7701-060-1. 78 pp. ü Valdés, L, L. Fonseca, and K. Tedesco. 2010. Looking into the future of Ocean Sciences: an IOC perspective. Oceanography, 23(3): 160-175. ü Reid, P. C., and Valdés, L. 2011. ICES status report on climate change in the North Atlantic. ICES Cooperative Research Report No. 310. 262 pp. ü Bode, A., Lavín, A., Valdés, L., 2012. Cambio climático y oceanográfico en el Atlántico del norte de España. Temas de Oceanografía, 5. Instituto Español de Oceanografía, Madrid, 280 pp. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 74 Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission – Ocean Science Section UNESCO 7, place de Fontenoy 75732 PARIS CEDEX 7 FRANCE k.isensee@unesco.org • 2007 - 2010 • 2010 - 2012 • 2012 - today PhD student. Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research, IOW, Warnemünde, Germany Postdoctoral fellow. University of Oviedo, Spain. Consultant - Ocean Carbon Sources and Sinks, Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission of UNESCO, Ocean Science Section, Paris, France. Kirsten Isensee is an Consultant at the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission of UNESCO, responsible for work conducted under the umbrella of ocean carbon, including projects related to Ocean Acidification, Blue Carbon habitats and biogeochemical Time Series,. She is a marine biologist. During her Diploma at the University of Rostock (2006) she investigated the eu- and infralitoral soft bottom communities of the Kongs- and Isfjord, Spitsbergen. Her doctoral research (2012) focused on growth and nitrogen-fixation of cyanobacteria within the framework of the BMBF funded project ‘Surface Ocean Processes in the Anthropocene: SOPRAN’ at the Leibniz Institute of Baltic Sea Research, IOW, Warnemünde, Germany. During her postdoctoral position at the University of Oviedo, she broadened her knowledge and conducted experiments to measure the impact of elevated CO2 concentrations on the physiology of unicellular marine algae, with respect to the stable isotopic fractionation of the particulate organic and inorganic matter (http://geol.uniovi.es/ pace), funded by the European Research Council. Currently her work includes coordinating activities and facilitating collaboration on Ocean Carbon-related initiatives at the International Oceanographic Commission of UNESCO. Within this framework, she participated in and organized various networks, events, meetings and workshops. PUBLICATIONS ü J. Howard, S. Hoyt, K. Isensee, E. Pidgeon, M. Telszewski, (eds.) 2014. Coastal Blue Carbon: Methods for assessing carbon stocks and emissions factors in mangroves, tidal salt marshes, and seagrass meadows. Conservation International, Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission of UNESCO, International Union for Conservation of Nature. Arlington, Virginia, USA. ü D. Herr, K. Isensee, E. Harrould-Kolieb, C. Turley, 2014. Ocean Acidification: International Policy and Governance Options. Gland, Switzerland: IUCN. iv + 52pp. ü K. Isensee, J. Erez, and H.M. M. Stoll, 2014. Detection of a variable intracellular acid‐labile carbon pool in Thalassiosira weissflogii (Heterokontophyta) and Emiliania huxleyi (Haptophyta) in response to changes in the seawater carbon system. Physiologia plantarum, 150.2: 321-338. ü IGBP, IOC, SCOR, 2013. Ocean Acidification Summary for Policymakers–Third Symposium on the Ocean in a High-CO2 World. ü L.M Mejia, K. Isensee, A. Mendez-Vicente., J. Pisonero, N. Shimizu, C. Gonzalez, B. Monteleone, H.M. Stoll, 2013. B content and Si/C ratios from cultured diatoms (Thalassiosira pseudonana and Thalassiosira weissflogii): Relationship to seawater pH and diatom carbon acquisition. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 23: 322-337. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 75 _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 76 77 CSM Centre Scientifique de Monaco 8 Quai Antoine 1er MC 98000 MONACO hilmi@centrescientifique.mc Dr Nathalie Hilmi is a specialist in Macroeconomics and International Finance. After doing research and giving lectures at the CEMAFI (Centre d’études en Macroeconomie et Finance Internationale), University of Nice-France, she obtained her PhD thesis entitled «The real dimension of the global and regional integrations process: the case of Turkey » with honours in 2000. She then joined Allergan, a pharmaceutical American group, as a financial analyst and continued giving lectures in economics and management in private business schools. Subsequently she taught at EDHEC Business School and continued her research work with EDHEC Risk and Asset Management Research Centre. In 2006, she was employed at the International University of Monaco as Professor of Macroeconomics and Finance. Her research work encompassed academic studies and conference presentations to develop the network of the Hedge Funds Research Institute (HFRI), and applied researches on investment strategies in Alpstar, a hedge fund in Geneva. She was responsible of research in Macroeconomics for HFRI and Alpstar, and was the head of external activities for HFRI. She continued to teach in executive programs in EDHEC and a national training centre for banking executives. Concomitantly, she continued working at the CEMAFI, University of Nice-Sophia-Antipolis (France) as an associate researcher. Recently, she organized conferences for HFRI and UNSA: on “Bridging Mathematics, Social Sciences and Finance” and the “8th MEEA International Conference”. Dr Nathalie Hilmi is a member of several international associations in economics and finance and she actively participates in the reviewing and editing of specialized publications. In 2010, she joined the Centre Scientifique de Monaco as section head of environmental economics and collaborated with IAEA’s Environment Laboratories to initiate correlation studies between environmental sciences and economics to better evaluate the socioeconomic extent of impacts and costs of action versus inaction with regard to carbon emissions. On the basis of the outcomes of the workshop “Bridging the gap between ocean acidification impacts and economic valuation” held in Monaco the 16-18 November 2010; she was in charge of the coordination for the preparation and organization of the follow-up workshops in November 2012 and January 2015. PUBLICATIONS ü Hilmi N., Allemand D., Cinar M., Cooley S., Hall-Spencer J. M., Haraldsson G., Hattam C., Jeffree R. A., Orr J. C., Rehdanz K., Reynaud S., Safa A. & Dupont S., (2014): “ Exposure of Mediterranean countries to ocean acidification”. Water(6):1719-1744. ü Carrière S., Claudet J., Allenbach M., Bambridge T., Chave J., Couteron P., Frtz H., Fromard F., Gourlet-Fleury S., Garine E., Hilmi N., Le Port G., Marchand C., Meziane T., Moizo B. McKey D., Pascal N., Thomas Y., 2014 “Services écosystémiques” in Prospective écologie tropicale, Les cahiers Prospectives INEE-CNRS No6-Juillet 2014 ü Hilmi N., Allemand D., Dupont S., Safa A., Haraldsson G., Nunes P. L. D., Moore C., Hattam C., Reynaud S., HallSpencer J. M., Fine M., Turley C., Jeffree R., Orr J., Munday P. L., Cooley S. R., (2012), “Towards improved socioeconomic assessments of ocean acidification’s impacts”, Marine Biology (2012), pp. 1-15 ü Sumaila U. R., Cheung W. W. L., Cooley S., Flaaten O., Lam V. W. Y., Hilmi N., Safa A., Amundsen H., Gjertsen A., Hovelsrud G. K., (2013) « Potential Economic and Social Impacts of Ocean Acidification on Arctic Fisheries » in “Ocean Acidification's Biophysical and Economic Impacts on Arctic Fisheries”, AMAP ü Hilmi N., Bambridge T., Claudet J., David G., Failler P., Feral F., Leopold M., Pascal N., Safa A., (2013), « Préserver la biodiversité des récifs coralliens: l'évaluation économique comme outil d’une gouvernance multiéchelle », in « Les sciences humaines et sociales dans le Pacifique Sud, terrains, questions et méthodes » édité par Marie Salaün, Barbara Glowczewski et Laurent Dousset au pacific-credo Publications, Marseille (2013) Marseille Université – CNRS – EHESS. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 78 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco International Atomic Energy Agency Environment Laboratories Radioecology Laboratory 4a Quai Antoine 1er MC 98000 Monaco m.metian@iaea.org • 2004 - 2007 • 2007 - 2008 • 2008 - 2009 • 2009 - 2011 • 2011 • 2011 - 2013 • 2013 - today Atoms for Peace PhD student. Marine Environment Laboratory, International Atomic Energy Agency, Monaco and Laboratoire de Biologie et d'Environnement Marins, Université de La Rochelle, France. Postdoctoral fellow. Hawaiian Institute of Marine Biology, University of Hawaii, USA. Postdoctoral fellow. Hawaiian Institute of Marine Biology, University of Hawaii, USA. Project Manager, Consultant/reviewer and Visiting scientist o Scientific Institute for Intelligent Nutrition, Brussels, Belgium. o Fisheries and Aquaculture Department, Food and Agriculture Organization, Rome, Italy. o Hawaiian Institute of Marine Biology, University of Hawaii, USA. Postdoctoral fellow. LIttoral ENvironnement et Sociétés, Université de La Rochelle, France NF-SRC Senior Nereus Fellow. Stockholm Resilience Centre, University of Stockholm, Sweden. Research Scientist. Radioecology Laboratory, Environment Laboratories, IAEA, Monaco. Marc Metian is a researcher at the Environment Laboratories of the International Atomic Energy Agency (Monaco), host of the Ocean Acidification International Coordination Centre. He is a radio-ecologist, holds a degree in bioengineering from the Free University of Brussels, Belgium (2003) and a PhD in Biological Oceanology and Marine Environment from the University of La Rochelle, France (2007). His doctoral research focused on the bioaccumulation of radiotracers in marine invertebrates and risk assessment of contamination to human consumers and was conducted in collaboration with NAEL. During a postdoctoral fellowship at the University of Hawaii, he further specialized in aquaculture nutrition and sustainable aquaculture and conducted collaborative studies on sustainable aquaculture and on food security and safety with the University of Hawaii, the University of La Rochelle, the Stockholm Resilience Center and FAO. During two years, he worked as a Nippon Foundation senior Nereus fellow (Stockholm Resilience Center, Sweden) and investigated 1) the links between sustainable aquaculture, food security and governance, particularly in light of a projected substantial increased demand for seafood due to both population growth and global per capita consumption and 2) the social-ecological trade-offs between aquatic and terrestrial ingredients used for feeds in aquaculture and direct human consumption. His current work consists of realizing experiments on marine organisms to respond to key questions (contamination, physiology, ocean acidification) by using nuclear techniques (radiotracers) and also providing technical assistance to Member States on the use of nuclear techniques for similar purposes. PUBLICATIONS ü Troell M, Naylor R, Metian M, Beveridge M, Tyedmers P, Folke C, Österblom H, de Zeeuw A, Scheffer M, Nyborg K, Barrett S, Crépin A-S, Ehrlich P, Levin S, Xepapadeas T, Polasky S, Arrow K, Gren A, Kautsky N, Taylor S & B Walker (2014) Does Aquaculture Add Resilience to the Global Food System? Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 111 (37): 13257– 13263. ü Kavanagh C, Hansson L, Metian M, Osborn D and M Warnau (2014) Case study: The impact of ocean acidification in Washington State, USA. in: How oceans- and seas-related measures contribute to the economic, social and environmental dimensions of sustainable development: Local and regional experiences. (UNDESA, UN-DOALOS/OLA, IAEA, IMO, IOCUNESCO, UNDP, UNEP, UNWTO) Online publication. pp. 21-29. ü Metian M, Warnau M, Teyssié J-L & P Bustamante (2011) Characterization of 241Am and 134Cs bioaccumulation in the king scallop Pecten maximus: investigation via three exposure pathways. Journal of Environmental Radioactivity 102 (6): 543-550. ü Tacon AGJ, Metian M & SS De Silva (2010) Climate change, food security and aquaculture : Policy implications for ensuring the continued green growth & sustainable development of a much needed food sector (Chapter 2) in: Proceeding of the Workshop on Advancing the aquaculture agenda : policies to ensure a sustainable aquaculture sector, French Ministry for Food, Agriculture and Fisheries and OECD (15- 16 April 2010), pp 109-120. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 79 International Atomic Energy Agency Environment Laboratories 4a Quai Antoine 1er MC 98000 MONACO d.osborn@iaea.org • • • • 1991-1995 1996-2001 2001-2005 2005-2007 • 2007-2008 • 2008-2012 • 2013-present Atoms for Peace Seaman Officer, Royal Australian Navy Senior Policy Officer, Australian Government’s Department of Environment and Heritage Programme Officer, United Nations Environment Programme Director, Coastal Policy and Water Quality, Australian Government’s Department of Environment and Heritage Director, Community Partnerships, Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority Coordinator, UNEP Global Programme of Action for the Protection of the Marine Environment from Land-based Activities Director, Environment Laboratories, International Atomic Energy Agency Mr David Osborn joined the International Atomic Energy Agency as Director, Environment Laboratories, in Monaco in January 2013. Formerly with the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) in Nairobi and The Hague, he was Coordinator of the 1995 Global Programme of Action for the Protection of the Marine Environment from Land-Based Activities and Coordinator of UNEP’s Ecosystem Management Programme. A national of Australia with qualifications in both environmental science and environmental law, his interests and career have focussed extensively on the link between robust science and good governance. He has held director posts at the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority and the Australian Government’s Department of the Environment and Water Resources, and has served as an Advisor to the Australian Government Minister for the Environment. He was formerly an officer in the Royal Australian Navy. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 80 81 _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3rd Workshop (IAEA – CSM) - « Ocean acidification impacts on coastal communities » 12 au 14 janvier 2015 – Musée océanographique de Monaco 82