4.6 Article

Enhancing Uptake of Nature-Based Solutions for Informing Coastal Sustainable Development Policy and Planning: A Malaysia Case Study

Journal

FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fevo.2021.708507

Keywords

sustainable development; conservation; mangrove; seagrass; coral reefs; marine protected areas

Categories

Funding

  1. UK Natural Environment Research Council [NE/R002738/1]
  2. NEA PANACEA project [110661/2020/839628/SUB/ENV.C.2.RWS]
  3. UK Department of Food, Environment, and Rural Affairs Systems Research Programme
  4. Newton Fund Impact Scheme [IF025-2020]

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Nature-based Solutions (NbS) aim to protect and enhance ecosystems, benefiting humans and biodiversity. The uptake and success of NbS vary regionally, with fragmented knowledge in many areas. Through a case study in Malaysia, trialed and tested NbS efforts in marine and coastal environments were detailed, providing insights for informing coastal sustainable development policies. Improving education, cooperation, environmental monitoring, and sustainable finance instruments are key actions identified to enhance NbS uptake globally.
Nature-based Solutions (NbS) have been advocated to protect, sustainably manage, and restore natural or modified ecosystems, simultaneously providing human well-being and biodiversity benefits. The uptake of NbS differs regionally with some countries exhibiting greater uptake than others. The success of NbS also differs regionally with varying environmental conditions and social-ecological processes. In many regions, the body of knowledge, particularly around the efficacy of such efforts, remains fragmented. Having an inventory or tool box of regionally-trialed methods, outcomes and lessons learnt can improve the evidence base, inform adaptive management, and ultimately support the uptake of NbS. Using Malaysia as a case study, we provide a comprehensive overview of trialed and tested NbS efforts that used nature to address societal challenges in marine and coastal environments (here referring to mangroves, seagrass, coral reefs), and detailed these efforts according to their objectives, as well as their anticipated and actual outcomes. The NbS efforts were categorized according to the IUCN NbS approach typology and mapped to provide a spatial overview of IUCN NbS effort types. A total of 229 NbS efforts were collated, representing various levels of implementation success. From the assessment of these efforts, several key actions were identified as a way forward to enhance the uptake of Nature-based Solutions for informing coastal sustainable development policy and planning. These include increasing education, training, and knowledge sharing; rationalizing cooperation across jurisdictions, laws, and regulations; enhancing environmental monitoring; leveraging on existing policies; enabling collaboration and communication; and implementing sustainable finance instruments. These findings can be used to inform the improved application and uptake of NbS, globally.

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