Identifying Ecosystem-Based Alternatives for the Design of a Seaport’s Marine Infrastructure: The Case of Tema Port Expansion in Ghana
Date
2019
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Sustainability
Abstract
Long-term sustainable port development requires accounting for the intrinsic values of
ecosystems. However, in practice, ecosystem considerations often only enter the planning and design
process of ports when required by an Environmental Impact Assessment. At this late stage, most of
the design is already fixed and opportunities to minimize and restore ecosystem impacts are limited.
In this paper, we adopt a large-scale, ecosystem perspective on port development with the aim to
identify ecosystem-based design alternatives earlier and throughout the planning and design of a
port’s marine infrastructure. We present a framework, termed the ‘ecosystem-based port design
hierarchy’ (EPDH), to identify ecosystem-based alternatives at four hierarchical design levels: 1)
alternatives to port developments, 2) port site selection, 3) port layout design, and 4) design of
structures and materials. In applying the EPDH framework retrospectively to a case study of port
expansion in Tema, Ghana, we establish that ecosystem considerations played only a limited role
in identifying and evaluating alternatives at all four design levels in the case study, with more
eco-friendly alternatives in terms of port layouts, structures, and materials are identified using the
EPDH framework. This reveals that opportunities for ecosystem-friendly port designs may have been
missed and demonstrates the need for and the potential added value of our framework. The framework
can assist practitioners in earlier and wider identification of ecosystem-based alternatives for a port’s
marine infrastructure in future seaport developments and, hence, represents an important step
towards more sustainable port designs.
Description
Research Article
Keywords
sustainable ports, ecosystem-based management, environmental impacts, port design, nature-based engineering, coastal environment