Does changing behavioral intentions engender actual behavior change? The context of coastal ecological engineering DOI
Yali Huang,

Xiaoling Zhang,

Kmy Leung

et al.

Marine Pollution Bulletin, Journal Year: 2025, Volume and Issue: 216, P. 117978 - 117978

Published: April 16, 2025

Language: Английский

ADVANCES IN UNDERSTANDING THE CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES OF HYBRID SEA DEFENCE APPROACHES FOR COASTAL RESILIENCE DOI Creative Commons

Xihang Xu,

John O’Sullivan, Soroush Abolfathi

et al.

Environmental Challenges, Journal Year: 2025, Volume and Issue: unknown, P. 101130 - 101130

Published: March 1, 2025

Language: Английский

Citations

1

Novel marine-climate interventions hampered by low consensus and governance preparedness DOI Creative Commons
Emily Ogier, GT Pecl, Terry P. Hughes

et al.

Nature Climate Change, Journal Year: 2025, Volume and Issue: unknown

Published: April 3, 2025

Language: Английский

Citations

1

Stakeholders support marine eco‐engineering, but what are the perceived benefits and who should pay? DOI Creative Commons
Kate Dodds, Maria L. Vozzo, Mariana Mayer‐Pinto

et al.

People and Nature, Journal Year: 2025, Volume and Issue: unknown

Published: Jan. 31, 2025

Abstract Despite the ecological and socio‐economic benefits of nature‐based solutions (NbS), application principles to design seawalls (termed ‘seawall eco‐engineering’) mitigate their impacts remains low. We investigated stakeholder perspectives of, support for willingness pay (WTP) seawall eco‐engineering in one most diverse urbanised harbours world, Sydney Harbour, Australia. Using a series workshops surveys targeting general public, Local Government, built environment natural professionals, we identified ranked perceived risks seawalls, common infrastructure Harbour. Additionally, WTP was using an existing, large‐scale project. Overall, workshop participants rated be almost double risks. The key were increased habitat/biodiversity, improved water quality enhanced environmental stewardship/awareness. Key potential damage use greenwashing facilitate new development. Across all groups, very supportive statements regarding eco‐engineered need included seawalls. strong eco‐engineering, estimated at third actual cost was, part, attributable lack shared evidence base from successful projects, unclear guidance policy around implementation. Synthesis applications : Our results showed that establishing rigorous monitoring evaluation programs cost–benefit analyses are critical enhancing uptake projects. Furthermore, more cost‐effective technologies funding models may overcome existing financial impediments. also found integrative legislation implementation such NbS, given policies viewed as unsupportive. Read free Plain Language Summary this article on Journal blog.

Language: Английский

Citations

0

Does changing behavioral intentions engender actual behavior change? The context of coastal ecological engineering DOI
Yali Huang,

Xiaoling Zhang,

Kmy Leung

et al.

Marine Pollution Bulletin, Journal Year: 2025, Volume and Issue: 216, P. 117978 - 117978

Published: April 16, 2025

Language: Английский

Citations

0