3.1 At what point in account development to consider global data

The Inventory aims to enable the initial development and pilot testing of national ocean accounts where suitable national data are not available. As outlined in the GOAP Technical Guidance (Chapter 3) and the draft Implementation Strategy for the SEEA EA, key data sources and available data should be identified in the initial strategic planning and implementation preparation phase of the account development process (Figure 2).


Figure 2: National implementation process presented in the draft implementation strategy for the SEEA EA. The red circle highlights the initial strategic planning and implementation preparation phase. The two yellow boxes indicate activities that the Inventory can support.


The first step in the process is strategic planning of the priorities for the account development. The strategic planning process should begin by convening key stakeholders a) from the organisations that contribute data and expertise to the compilation of ocean asset accounts and b) from the agencies that will use the accounts in planning and decision-making. In consultation with these stakeholders, the planning process should then determine 1) the policy question (or analytical objectives) that the ocean accounts are intended to address, 2) the type of accounts needed, and 3) what account development is feasible with the available resources (including data). One of the central activities is the identification of relevant data sources and the evaluation of availability and quality of the data.

The priority should be to investigate national data sources. Where national data of suitable quality are not available, the Global Ocean Asset Data Inventory can support the strategic planning by providing an overview of possible global data sources. For example, the Inventory can be used as part of diagnostic tools for strategic account planning (see Box 1).

Box 1. Using the Inventory as part of diagnostic tools for strategic account planning

Ecosystem accounting experiences and ocean accounts pilots have shown that account development should be a collaborative process involving account producers, data providers and account users. To facilitate the collaboration, diagnostics tools such as the SEEA Diagnostic Tool[5] or the Diagnostic Tool for Strategic Planning from the UN ESCAP ocean accounts pilot studies, can be used in the strategic account planning step. One of the areas covered by the diagnostic tools is ‘Knowledge’, i.e. the identification of national data sources and availability. Where the diagnostic tool reveals gaps in national data that would prevent moving forward with the account development, the Inventory can be reviewed as part of the consultation exercise. This would provide an initial overview of available global data.

By the end of the strategic planning, it should be clear what policy question (or analytical objective) the ocean accounts are intended to address, what accounts will be developed for this and what national data is available. The next step is building mechanisms for implementation of the accounts (see Figure 2). As part of this, the specific key datasets need to be identified that can be used to build the accounts. National data should be prioritised where available at suitable quality. Where national data are not available or not possible to obtain (e.g. through data sharing options, original fieldwork or socio-economic surveys), the Inventory can be consulted to identify and select suitable global datasets.

At this point, available global datasets in the Inventory should be critically assessed. The filter and search functions in the Inventory allow users to identify datasets that are relevant to the policy priorities and accounts to be developed. If relevant datasets are available, the stepwise approach described in Chapter 4 can help guide the critical assessment of quality and relevance of the data. This should enable an informed decision about what global data to use in the specific national context for ocean accounts determined in the strategic planning process.

note

[5] The SEEA Diagnostic Tool is included as Annex II in the SEEA Implementation Guide: https://unstats.un.org/unsd/envaccounting/ceea/meetings/ninth_meeting/UNCEEA-9-6d.pdf

[5] The SEEA Diagnostic Tool is included as Annex II in the SEEA Implementation Guide: https://unstats.un.org/unsd/envaccounting/ceea/meetings/ninth_meeting/UNCEEA-9-6d.pdf

3.2 Advantages and limitations of global ocean asset datasets

Whether global data is useful for developing national ocean accounts, and what the limitations are, will depend on the specific national context and ocean accounting priorities and on the global datasets that are relevant to these. Nonetheless, a few general observations can be made on the advantages and limitations of global ocean asset datasets. These observations can be helpful when considering the use of global data.

3.2.1 Advantages

Country experience:

In creating an initial pilot for Canada’s ocean accounts, key condition indicators were sea surface temperature and salinity. Although Canadian data exist, the datasets that were located were not considered suitable for the accounts. Data were either point data with limited spatial coverage or raw spatial data that would have required a significant amount of compilation work. Through using the World Ocean Atlas data, which has a common granularity across all of Canada’s EEZ, a first estimate of sea surface temperature and salinity change could be made. This allowed conditions to be compared across the Atlantic, Arctic and Pacific Ocean regions as data had the same time period and spatial granularity.

3.2.2 Limitations and sources of error

When using global data, it is important to know how the datasets were produced in order to understand their limitations and sources of error. There are three main approaches for creating global maps[6]: 1) by combining different local or regional datasets (e.g. World Atlas of Seagrasses), 2) by using satellite imagery or other remotely sensed data (e.g. Global Mangrove Watch), or 3) by combining remote sensing and in-situ data in a hybrid approach (e.g. Global Distribution of Coral Reefs[7]). In their paper on ‘Spatial Data Collection for Conservation and Management of Coastal Habitats’, Pruckner et al. (2021) identify a number of limitations and sources of error that these global ocean ecosystem maps have:

Other limitations and sources of error for global datasets include:

note

[5] Pruckner S., McOwen C.J., Weatherdon L.V. and McDermott Long O. 2021. Spatial Data Collection for Conservation and Management of Coastal Habitats. In: Leal Filho W., Azul A.M., Brandli L., Lange Salvia A., Wall T. (eds) Life Below Water. Encyclopedia of the UN Sustainable Development Goals. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-71064-8_136-1

[6] Pruckner S., McOwen C.J., Weatherdon L.V. and McDermott Long O. 2021. Spatial Data Collection for Conservation and Management of Coastal Habitats. In: Leal Filho W., Azul A.M., Brandli L., Lange Salvia A., Wall T. (eds) Life Below Water. Encyclopedia of the UN Sustainable Development Goals. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-71064-8_136-1

[7] Global Distribution of Coral Reefs, available on the Ocean Data Viewer: https://data.unep-wcmc.org/datasets/1

[5] Pruckner S., McOwen C.J., Weatherdon L.V. and McDermott Long O. 2021. Spatial Data Collection for Conservation and Management of Coastal Habitats. In: Leal Filho W., Azul A.M., Brandli L., Lange Salvia A., Wall T. (eds) Life Below Water. Encyclopedia of the UN Sustainable Development Goals. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-71064-8_136-1

[6] Pruckner S., McOwen C.J., Weatherdon L.V. and McDermott Long O. 2021. Spatial Data Collection for Conservation and Management of Coastal Habitats. In: Leal Filho W., Azul A.M., Brandli L., Lange Salvia A., Wall T. (eds) Life Below Water. Encyclopedia of the UN Sustainable Development Goals. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-71064-8_136-1

[7] Global Distribution of Coral Reefs, available on the Ocean Data Viewer: https://data.unep-wcmc.org/datasets/1

3.3 Additional global data sources

The Inventory focuses on a specific selected set of datasets relevant to ocean asset accounts. It is not meant to be an exhaustive list of all available datasets that might be relevant to ocean asset accounts. Other data sources may provide additional useful resources to support the initial compilation of national ocean accounts. A growing number of platforms, portals, repositories and initiatives are working to increase and facilitate access to global ocean data. Some of these global ocean data sources were identified during the search for global ocean asset datasets and are listed in a separate tab in the Inventory (see ‘Portals, Repositories’ tab).

Two of these additional global ocean data sources are the UN Biodiversity Lab and Ocean+. The UN Biodiversity Lab is a free, open-source spatial data platform brought together by the United Nations Development Programme, the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and the UN Environment Programme World Conservation Monitoring Centre (UNEP-WCMC). The platform provides access to over 400 global spatial datasets on nature, climate change and sustainable development. This includes 25 datasets with marine relevance, providing data on:

Ocean+ is UNEP-WCMC’s umbrella initiative for marine biodiversity data and information. One of the products under the initiative is the Ocean+ Library which guides the user to a range of selected, high quality marine datasets and online resources with applicability to marine decision making. This includes both global and regional resources, as well as detailed metadata on each dataset.

Efforts are also on going to support ocean accounting using global and other readily available data via the Group on Earth Observations for Ecosystem Accounting initiative and via the ARIES for SEEA project. These platforms are aiming to provide data and applications for ecosystem accounting in the near future. Within the Group on Earth Observations (GEO), the GEO Blue Planet initiative is also working to develop global ocean data for policy and decision-making.

The GOAP Technical Guidance (section 4.2) highlights two key sources for ocean satellite remote sensing, in-situ and modelling observational data:

For information related to marine activities or produced assets, commercial, sector specific data service providers may be an additional source of data. These data services will generally involve a cost. However, paid services may provide the benefit of getting quality assured data tailored to specific user needs. These services might be worth considering in some cases where a country might have a very specific data need.