We may not know much about the deep sea, but do we care about mining it?

Abstract The way we value the environment affects how we treat it. While public awareness of human impacts on the ocean is increasing, industrial activities in the deep sea are accelerating rapidly and out of sight. The underlying values we hold for the environment were increasingly recognised as an...

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Main Authors: Laura Kaikkonen, Ingrid vanPutten
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-08-01
Series:People and Nature
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/pan3.10224
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spelling doaj-1a38c612778d4f2b8bf3a8666af1536f2021-08-01T15:28:31ZengWileyPeople and Nature2575-83142021-08-013484386010.1002/pan3.10224We may not know much about the deep sea, but do we care about mining it?Laura Kaikkonen0Ingrid vanPutten1Ecosystems and Environment Research Programme Faculty of Biological and Environmental Sciences University of Helsinki Helsinki FinlandCSIRO, Oceans and Atmosphere Hobart Tasmania AustraliaAbstract The way we value the environment affects how we treat it. While public awareness of human impacts on the ocean is increasing, industrial activities in the deep sea are accelerating rapidly and out of sight. The underlying values we hold for the environment were increasingly recognised as an important factor in environmental decision‐making, and it was thus important to evaluate public values towards deep‐sea environments. Here, we explored people's care for the deep sea and related this to the perceived risks of seafloor mining by comparing the deep sea to three other remote environments: Antarctica, remote terrestrial environments and the Moon. We conducted an online survey to investigate symbolic values, which we define as the emotions, moods and meanings an environment evokes, as an element affecting people's care for the environment. In addition, we investigated the respondent's knowledge, worldviews and the perceived environmental and societal risk of mining in these four environments. We found that symbolic values shape people's environmental care and that the overall symbolic value attributed to each of the environments differs. People perceived it likely that mining will take place in the deep sea, and the majority of respondents (81%) stated to care a lot or very much about human activities harming the deep sea. In comparison to the other remote environments, in a general sense people cared less about the deep sea, and their self‐assessed knowledge of the deep sea was lower. These results suggest that it was fundamental to account for the underlying values and emotions towards the environment when evaluating the risks of human activities in remote settings. Our results further highlighted the need to improve public understanding and connection with the deep sea and its role within wider society to engender deep‐sea stewardship. A free Plain Language Summary can be found within the Supporting Information of this article.https://doi.org/10.1002/pan3.10224deep‐sea miningenvironmental meaningsremote environmentsrisk perceptionsstewardshipsymbolic values
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Laura Kaikkonen
Ingrid vanPutten
spellingShingle Laura Kaikkonen
Ingrid vanPutten
We may not know much about the deep sea, but do we care about mining it?
People and Nature
deep‐sea mining
environmental meanings
remote environments
risk perceptions
stewardship
symbolic values
author_facet Laura Kaikkonen
Ingrid vanPutten
author_sort Laura Kaikkonen
title We may not know much about the deep sea, but do we care about mining it?
title_short We may not know much about the deep sea, but do we care about mining it?
title_full We may not know much about the deep sea, but do we care about mining it?
title_fullStr We may not know much about the deep sea, but do we care about mining it?
title_full_unstemmed We may not know much about the deep sea, but do we care about mining it?
title_sort we may not know much about the deep sea, but do we care about mining it?
publisher Wiley
series People and Nature
issn 2575-8314
publishDate 2021-08-01
description Abstract The way we value the environment affects how we treat it. While public awareness of human impacts on the ocean is increasing, industrial activities in the deep sea are accelerating rapidly and out of sight. The underlying values we hold for the environment were increasingly recognised as an important factor in environmental decision‐making, and it was thus important to evaluate public values towards deep‐sea environments. Here, we explored people's care for the deep sea and related this to the perceived risks of seafloor mining by comparing the deep sea to three other remote environments: Antarctica, remote terrestrial environments and the Moon. We conducted an online survey to investigate symbolic values, which we define as the emotions, moods and meanings an environment evokes, as an element affecting people's care for the environment. In addition, we investigated the respondent's knowledge, worldviews and the perceived environmental and societal risk of mining in these four environments. We found that symbolic values shape people's environmental care and that the overall symbolic value attributed to each of the environments differs. People perceived it likely that mining will take place in the deep sea, and the majority of respondents (81%) stated to care a lot or very much about human activities harming the deep sea. In comparison to the other remote environments, in a general sense people cared less about the deep sea, and their self‐assessed knowledge of the deep sea was lower. These results suggest that it was fundamental to account for the underlying values and emotions towards the environment when evaluating the risks of human activities in remote settings. Our results further highlighted the need to improve public understanding and connection with the deep sea and its role within wider society to engender deep‐sea stewardship. A free Plain Language Summary can be found within the Supporting Information of this article.
topic deep‐sea mining
environmental meanings
remote environments
risk perceptions
stewardship
symbolic values
url https://doi.org/10.1002/pan3.10224
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