TY - CHAP TI - Renewables, Shipping, and Protected Species: A Vanishing Opportunity for Effective Marine Spatial Planning? AU - Petruny, L AU - Wright, A AU - Smith, C T2 - The Effects of Noise on Aquatic Life II AB - Anthropogenic noise is a by-product from human activity that impacts protected species and is increasingly being considered in environmental management decisions. Offshore energy development presents a navigational hazard to existing shipping, making the locations of these two sources of noise mutually exclusive. This fact means that licensing decisions are stepping into the realm of coastal and marine spatial planning (CMSP). To be effective, conservation measures must also be considered in the CMSP process to mitigate potential cumulative adverse effects associated with resource development, particularly with multiuse conflicts. Thus managers should consider shipping lane relocation to make environmentally optimal decisions. CY - New York DA - 2016/01// PY - 2016 VL - 875 SP - 815 EP - 820 PB - Springer UR - https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-1-4939-2981-8_100 U1 - George Mason University LA - English KW - Marine Energy KW - Noise KW - Human Dimensions KW - Legal & Policy KW - Marine Spatial Planning KW - Navigation ER -