Comprehensive Renewable Energy 2022
DOI: 10.1016/b978-0-12-819727-1.00036-4
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Environmental Issues for Offshore Renewable Energy

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Cited by 5 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…A step-change is occurring in the use of coastal seas globally, specifically by the addition of large-scale ORE developments, to combat climate change and achieve sustainable affordable green energy. Considering the relationship between species distribution, population dynamics and physical habitats, and to ensure the compatibility of ORE developments with other marine management sectors, it is evident that a holistic approach, to account for cumulative impacts of ORE at an ecosystem scale, is an essential goal to address baselines for consenting and decision processes (Wolf et al 2021). Using ecosystem models at ecologically meaningful scales to understand how ecosystems respond to multiple stressors will support the cumulative assessment process and the inherent multi-objective decision process of integrating ORE into the marine environment (Piroddi et al 2015).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A step-change is occurring in the use of coastal seas globally, specifically by the addition of large-scale ORE developments, to combat climate change and achieve sustainable affordable green energy. Considering the relationship between species distribution, population dynamics and physical habitats, and to ensure the compatibility of ORE developments with other marine management sectors, it is evident that a holistic approach, to account for cumulative impacts of ORE at an ecosystem scale, is an essential goal to address baselines for consenting and decision processes (Wolf et al 2021). Using ecosystem models at ecologically meaningful scales to understand how ecosystems respond to multiple stressors will support the cumulative assessment process and the inherent multi-objective decision process of integrating ORE into the marine environment (Piroddi et al 2015).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The UK created MEDIN, an open-access metadata portal, gathering marine datasets on geophysics, primary producers, fish and fisheries activities, top predators from the MSFD, industrial actors, decisionmaking bodies, stakeholders and academics. Although MARLIN and MEDIN share similar objectives, some sectors remain unwilling to upload their data on MEDIN due to commercial data sensitivity concerns, but none yet contain outputs from ecosystem models (Wolf et al, 2022).…”
Section: Tool 3: a Holistic Databasementioning
confidence: 99%
“…In regions where fish stocks are managed or listed for special protections, regulators require monitoring for potential effects for fish as a condition for licensing tidal and other marine renewable energy (MRE) projects. Depending on local flow and bathymetric characteristics in the nearshore environments, the current flows suitable for tidal energy development can be turbulent (Cornett et al, 2015;Melvin and Cochrane, 2015;Williamson et al, 2017;Perez et al, 2021;Wolf et al, 2022), entraining persistent and deeply penetrating air into the water column. An efficient backscatterer of sound, the presence of air in the water column complicates the post-processing activities for data collected with acoustic instruments.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%