Developing a sustainability framework for eco-engineering of blue infrastructure

Joseph W. Parkinson, Ciaran McLaverty, Pernille Nielsen, Jon C. Svendsen, Ana T. Lima, Martin McNaughton, Wolfgang Kunther*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Abstract

Coastal hardening, via marine infrastructure construction (MIC), is contributing to the urbanisation of coastal environments, adding challenges for the resilience of marine ecosystems. Concrete is the preferred material for MIC due to desirable construction properties. Ecological-engineering efforts aim to increase the ecological value of concrete use in MIC via artificial material modifications, promoting ecological functions of MIC and creating new artificial marine habitats. Generally, ecological-engineering efforts include a wide array of stakeholders with variations for any singular project dependent on a myriad of environmental, resource and societal factors which affect the scale, scope and budget of projects. This can potentially lead to missing elements for obtaining an encompassing sustainability assessment of these types of projects on a societal, environmental and economic level. This perspective communication identifies and discusses experiences from recent ecological-engineering projects with concrete. Development of a collaborative, interdisciplinary framework will hope to guide current and future projects to achieve sustainability for ecological engineering practices for MIC.
Original languageEnglish
Article number107604
JournalEcological Engineering
Volume215
Number of pages9
ISSN0925-8574
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2025

Keywords

  • Sustainability
  • Marine infrastructure
  • Eco-engineering
  • Design & monitoring
  • Biodiversity

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