1. Environmental Effects of Offshore Wind Development. Fiscal Year 2012 Progress Report
- Author
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Michele B. Halvorsen, Jonathan Whiting, Corey A. Duberstein, Thomas J. Carlson, Kara M. Blake, Luke A. Hanna, R. Scott Butner, Andrea E. Copping, Shari Matzner, and Jessica Stavole
- Subjects
Fiscal year ,Offshore wind power ,Wind power ,Evaluation system ,Knowledge base ,Habitat ,business.industry ,Marine energy ,Environmental science ,business ,National laboratory ,Environmental planning - Abstract
Potential environmental effects of offshore wind (OSW) energy projects are not well understood, and regulatory agencies are required to make decisions in spite of substantial uncertainty about environmental impacts and their long-term consequences. An understanding of risks associated with interactions between OSW installations and aquatic receptors, including animals, habitats, and ecosystems, can help define key uncertainties and focus regulatory actions and scientific studies on interactions of most concern. To examine the environmental risks associated with OSW developments in the U.S. Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) focused on the following four priority research areas in FY 2012: • Environmental Risk Evaluation System (ERES) - Followed project developments on the two OSW projects that PNNL screened in FY 2011 for environmental consequence: Fishermen’s Energy off the coast of Atlantic City, NJ and LEEDCo. near Cleveland, OH in Lake Erie. • Tethys - Developed a smart knowledge base which houses environmental research, data and information pertaining to OSW energy: • Technical Assessment - Produced a new software to create an automated process of identifying and differentiating between flying organism such as birds and bats by using thermal imagery; and • North Atlantic Right Whales - Developed an environmental risk management system to mitigatemore » the impacts on North Atlantic Right Whales (NARW) during installation and piledriving stages of OSW developments. By identifying and addressing the highest priority environmental risks for OSW devices and associated installations the ERES process assists project proponents, regulators, and stakeholders to engage in the most efficient and effective siting and permitting pathways.« less
- Published
- 2012