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Related: About this forumFirst Evidence That Offshore Wind Farms Are Changing the Oceans
https://www.technologyreview.com/s/608930/first-evidence-that-offshore-wind-farms-are-changing-the-oceans/
First Evidence That Offshore Wind Farms Are Changing the Oceans
First Evidence That Offshore Wind Farms Are Changing the OceansWind turbines can support vast colonies of marine species in areas where they were previously rare.
Emerging Technology September 22, 2017
Offshore wind farms are becoming increasingly common in our oceans. In Europe, the goal is for them to supply over 4 percent of the continents electricity by 2030. And thats triggering a wind power boomthe amount of electricity they generate is expected to increase 40-fold by 2030.
Offshore wind turbines are hugemuch bigger than their land-based counterparts. They can be over 200 meters talltwice the height of the Big Ben clock tower in Londonand generate up to nine megawatts of power. But most of their mass is in the concrete and steel bases that sit underwater.
Naturally, these bases become home to complex ecosystems. In the North Sea, where most of the European farms are being built, these ecosystems are dominated by blue mussels. These feed by filtering phytoplankton from the water. Mussels are also a food source for other marine animals, such as fish and crabs, and this has the potential to significantly alter the food web.
And that raises an important question. How are offshore wind farms, and the new colonies of blue mussels they support, changing the oceans?
Today we get an answer thanks to the work of Kaela Slavik at the Helmholtz Centre for Materials and Coastal Research in Germany and a few pals, who have investigated the impact of offshore wind power on marine ecosystems for the first time. Their conclusions are starkthey say offshore wind platforms are changing the nature of marine ecosystems in complex, unanticipated, and beneficial ways.
The value of Empirical Evidence vs speculative projections.
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First Evidence That Offshore Wind Farms Are Changing the Oceans (Original Post)
NeoGreen
Oct 2017
OP
List left
(595 posts)1. they act as marine preservation areas
Their conclusions make for interesting reading. Slavik and co say one important effect of offshore wind farms is that they act as marine preservation areas, because fishing and bottom trawling is not allowed for safety reasons. So these areas can support greater biodiversity than unprotected areas.
Loki Liesmith
(4,602 posts)2. Any extractive energy system
Of sufficient scale to power our civilization is going to change the planet.
The trick is to change it judiciously.