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World Journal of Forest Research(WJFR)

ISSN: 2994-5569 | DOI: 10.33140/WJFR

“Global Coastal Environmental Management Master Plan”, Embracing Environmental Mechanisms, for Protection, Care and Maintenance of our Planet

Abstract

Robert Kempton

Two spheres of Influence embracing ‘Earth’s Environmental Mechanisms’ are identified as the surface area, and the surrounding atmospheric elastic fluids which are devoid of boundary conditions within their circumferential mass, unlike set boundary conditions around the planet’s surface. A global atmospheric organizational plan proposes embracing Man’s Science’s ‘Fluid Mechanics’ to manage elastic fluids without boundary conditions, within Earth's Atmosphere. Legislation, must be continent based to regulate air pollution between land masses, enabling effective legal processes. The framework to be governed through Transitional Coastal Plan Zones of the five main Continents—two in the northern hemisphere and three in the southern hemisphere. The importance of the Coastal Transition Zone boundary conditions is paramount for anthropogenic reasons, to allow mankind to perceive a ‘boundary state’ tool able to monitor / record / control movement of elastic fluids in Earth’s atmosphere, and the main continents may be used for part of a ‘total environmental management plan’. The concept for integrated Coastal Zone Management (ICZM) was first introduced at the national policy scale in the Coastal Zone Management Act (CZMA) enacted by the Congress of the United States in 1972. Master Plans for regional coastal management frameworks to be structured and developed around the world. A ‘Global Coastal Environmental Management Plan Model’ is now required for our unique planet, to embrace, develop and manage several important tasks including, Global Atmospheric Pollution / Oceans Plastics Pollution / Ocean Total Renewable Energy facilities / Man’s anthropogenic environmental mechanism named ‘Climate Change’, as well as the Beaches, Rivers & associated Agricultural Pollution and Coastal areas, identified under earlier Coastal Zone Management initiatives.

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