Tuesday, June 2, 2026

A vast dam across the Bering Strait could stop the AMOC collapsing

The Bering Strait separates Alaska and Russia
Ocean Color/OB.DAAC/OBPG/NASA
 
From NewScientist y Joshua Howgego  
 
If a key ocean current collapses it could plunge northern Europe into a big freeze.
Now researchers are weighing up a drastic intervention – building a 130-kilometre-wide dam between the US and Russia


It would be an engineering project on a truly epic scale, but we may one day need to consider building a dam between Alaska and eastern Russia.
The audacious proposal would be designed to stave off the worst consequences of the collapse of a vital ocean current, and researchers have been mulling it over this week at a major conference.

The idea comes from Jelle Soons and his colleague Henk Dijkstra at the University of Utrecht in the Netherlands, who study the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation or AMOC.
This current system, which includes the Gulf Stream, is a major reason why northern Europe has a relatively mild climate for its latitude.

However, we know the current is weakening. 
There is huge uncertainty about what would happen if it collapses, but some models suggest it could see temperatures in northern Europe drastically plunge.

Soons thought a dam could be a possible intervention after hearing about how during the Pliocene era, from roughly 5.3 to 2.6 million years ago, sea levels were lower and there was a land bridge where we now find the Bering Strait.
Simulations of the Pliocene climate show the AMOC was stronger then, mainly thanks to that land bridge.
“I was like: ok, could we do this again?” says Soons.
To investigate the effects of building such a dam, Soons and Dijkstra ran simulations of the AMOC varying both the date when the dam would be built and the exact amount of freshwater present.
Freshwater is a key part of the equation because it currently flows from the Pacific through the Bering Strait into the north Atlantic, which weakens the AMOC.
Building a dam would stop or slow the flow.
In work published a few weeks ago, Soons and Dijkstra obtained mixed results: in some scenarios the dam appeared to strengthen the AMOC, but in others it had the opposite effect.
However, those results came from a relatively simple and low-resolution model.
On 5 May at the European Geosciences Union general assembly in Vienna, Austria, Soons presented work that repeated the simulations on a supercomputer using a much more advanced climate model.
This indicated that closing the Strait would strengthen AMOC, especially if the dam were built early – by at least 2050.
“I was surprised at how strong the recovery was,” says Soons.

The Bering Strait is only 59 metres deep at its deepest point and there are two small islands in the middle, meaning any barrier could conceivably be built in two halves.
Ed McCann, a past president of the Institution of Civil Engineers and now at Expedition Engineering says the best way to do this would be to avoid concrete and instead use floating machinery to build a barrier of rock and dredged sand.
“This sort of construction is pretty simple, just very big and very expensive,” he wrote in an email.
Jonathan Rosser at the London School of Economics says that the work is interesting but that because we don’t fully understand the AMOC, we can’t be sure of the consequences of such an intervention.
“These drastic things really do have big uncertainties attached.”
Soons agrees and says that while building a dam might be helpful to northern Europe, it could create other problems, such as altering rainfall patterns, elsewhere.
“Whether you would consider this a serious proposal? I don’t think we’re there yet,” he says.
This is not the first time that researchers have mulled the idea of building a huge sea dam to mitigate climate change.
In 2020, Sjoerd Groeskamp at the Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research unveiled an idea called the Northern European Enclosure Dam, which would involve building two barriers to hem in the sea between the UK and Europe and prevent rising sea levels from inundating low-lying parts of the continent.
As well as effects on climate, any such dam would have other side effects on things like marine-mammal migrations, tides and shipping to remote communities.
Soons says he has toyed with ideas like building half a barrier or having it descend to a depth of only say 10 metres.
These are “interesting ideas” he says, although he hasn’t yet had a chance to consider their merits properly.
 
 Links :

Monday, June 1, 2026

ECDIS knowledge gaps exposed: what 5,000 bridge team assessments reveal about navigational risk



The recently released NorthStandard ECDIS Training Assessment (ETA) Report provides one of the most revealing datasets yet on how bridge teams understand and use ECDIS onboard.

Based on more than 5,000 assessments conducted since February 2024, the report exposes a reality the industry has long suspected but rarely quantified: mandatory ECDIS certification does not necessarily translate into operational competence.

The findings are important because ECDIS today is no longer simply a chart display tool.
It is effectively the primary navigation environment onboard most SOLAS vessels.
When bridge teams misunderstand safety contours, datums, ENC updates, alarms, display layers or data quality indicators, the result is not merely inefficiency.
It creates elevated grounding risk, unsafe passage planning, alarm fatigue, positional inaccuracies and degraded situational awareness.

The report is particularly valuable because it moves beyond generic “training awareness” discussions and identifies where the actual knowledge gaps exist at a granular operational level.

What the ETA initiative is about

NorthStandard launched the ECDIS Training Assessment (ETA) platform in February 2024 as a structured competency assessment tool for bridge teams.
The objective is to evaluate practical ECDIS knowledge across the four pillars of passage management: Appraisal, Planning, Execution and Monitoring.

The platform is not designed merely as another CBT module.
It functions more as a diagnostic intelligence tool for identifying competency weaknesses at both individual and fleet level.
The assessment evaluates how bridge teams understand:
  • ENC installation and updates
  • Safety settings and contours
  • Alarm management
  • Display layers and scale usage
  • Datum interpretation
  • CATZOC and data quality
  • Passage plan verification
  • Monitoring and positional awareness
The report’s core message is clear: many bridge teams can operate ECDIS mechanically, but a significant portion do not fully understand the underlying navigational logic and limitations of the system.

That distinction matters enormously.
 
 

Why the report is important

The significance of the report lies in the fact that it moves beyond theoretical training discussions and quantifies actual operational weaknesses using real assessment data.

The findings suggest that while most bridge teams can operate ECDIS functionally, many officers still lack a strong understanding of the system’s logic, limitations and risk implications.
This distinction is critical.

Modern navigational incidents increasingly stem not from absence of technology, but from overreliance on automation, alarm fatigue, poor understanding of safety settings and incorrect interpretation of navigational data.

Among the report’s key findings:
  • Around one-third of bridge teams lacked understanding of critical ECDIS features such as datum discrepancies and ENC updates.
  • Nearly half failed to prioritise correct ENC scale during passage planning.
  • Half of respondents struggled to distinguish alarms from alerts and highlights.
  • Significant gaps were identified regarding safety contours, symbols, display layers and ENC update management.
  • Perhaps most concerning, the report found that many bridge teams relied excessively on automated route checking without performing sufficient visual verification of planned passages.
The broader implication is clear: compliance with mandatory ECDIS certification requirements does not necessarily guarantee operational competency.

10 Key lessons learned from the ETA Report

1. Mandatory ECDIS certification is not enough

The report demonstrates that certified officers still show major competency gaps in operational ECDIS use.
Knowledge deficiencies appeared consistently across all four operational pillars.
This reinforces that compliance-driven training does not automatically produce operational mastery.

2. Datums remain a major industry weakness

Datum-related misunderstanding appeared repeatedly throughout the report.
Many bridge teams failed to understand WGS84 discrepancies, sounding datums and vertical datum implications.
This is dangerous because datum errors directly affect positional accuracy, under-keel clearance calculations and air draft assessments.

3. ENC updating is poorly understood

Nearly two-thirds of crews struggled to recognise ENC updates and understand update content.
This is not a procedural detail.
Outdated or improperly updated ENCs can create direct navigational hazards.

4. Officers overtrust automation
The report highlights overreliance on automated route checks and automated alarm logic.
ECDIS should support navigational judgement, not replace it.
Visual verification and critical assessment remain essential bridge team responsibilities.

5. Alarm fatigue and alarm confusion are still widespread
Half of the assessed personnel struggled to distinguish alarms, alerts and highlights.
Poor alarm understanding leads directly to alarm desensitisation, which is a recurring contributor in navigational incidents and casualty investigations.

6. ENC scale selection is frequently mishandled
Nearly half of bridge teams failed to prioritise correct ENC scale during passage planning.
Using the wrong scale can hide critical hazards or create excessive clutter that reduces situational awareness.

7. Safety contours are commonly misunderstood

The report repeatedly identified confusion around safety contours, deep contours and available charted depth contours.
This is one of the most operationally critical findings because incorrect contour logic directly affects grounding prevention.

8. Crews often do not understand data quality indicators

Many respondents misunderstood CATZOC, M_SREL, pick reports and survey reliability indicators.
ECDIS is only as reliable as the underlying hydrographic data.
If officers cannot assess data quality, they cannot assess navigational risk properly.

9. GPS overreliance persists

Some respondents reportedly believed GPS provides “100% accuracy.” This remains a dangerous mindset in an era of spoofing, jamming and sensor degradation.

10. Practical familiarisation is still weak

The report identified weak understanding of hover-over functions, display layers, symbol recognition, time zones and practical monitoring features.
This suggests that many officers use ECDIS functionally but not fluently.
There is a major difference.

Action plan for ship managers and maritime stakeholders

The ETA findings suggest that ECDIS competence should increasingly be treated as an operational risk management issue rather than purely a training compliance matter.

Ship managers and maritime stakeholders should consider the following actions:

Conduct fleetwide ECDIS competency assessments

Managers should identify vessel-specific and rank-specific weaknesses through structured assessments and scenario-based evaluations.

Prioritise high-risk competency areas


According to the report, urgent attention should focus on:
  • ENC installation and updating
  • Datum understanding
  • Safety contours and safety settings
  • Alarm management
  • ENC scale usage
  • Symbol recognition
  • Display layer configuration
Strengthen practical, scenario-based training

Traditional CBT and generic certification alone are insufficient.
Practical simulator-based training involving real operational scenarios should become standard.

Rebuild manual verification culture

Bridge teams should be encouraged to challenge automation rather than rely blindly on automated checks and alerts.

Standardise ECDIS procedures fleetwide

Companies should harmonise:
  • Safety setting procedures
  • Alarm management protocols
  • ENC update verification
  • Passage planning standards
  • Watch handover checks
Improve bridge audits and navigational assurance

Internal audits should focus more closely on actual ECDIS operational practices, including alarm settings, ENC management and safety contour logic.

Enhance type-specific familiarisation

Differences between ECDIS manufacturers and presentation libraries remain a source of confusion and require more robust familiarisation practices.

Integrate ECDIS competence into SMS risk management


ECDIS competency should become part of navigational risk assessment frameworks and not remain isolated within training departments alone.

Final thoughts

The NorthStandard ETA report sends an important message to the industry: ECDIS competency gaps remain widespread despite years of mandatory implementation.

The issue is no longer whether bridge teams can operate ECDIS systems mechanically.
The challenge is whether they fully understand how those systems behave under operational conditions, how to interpret their limitations and how to manage navigational risk when automation fails or becomes misleading.
As vessels increasingly depend on integrated digital navigation systems, strengthening operational ECDIS competence may become one of the most important loss prevention priorities for the maritime industry over the coming years.

Links :

Sunday, May 31, 2026

Birth of a rainbow

Saturday, May 30, 2026

The secret life of the Arctic: what's really happening under the ice


A snail fish, or Liparidae, passes near the upward-looking camera in Inglefield Bredning, Greenland. 
Far below Greenland's frozen surface, cameras have captured a rarely seen world where narwhals glide through darkness and strange deep-sea creatures drift beneath melting ice.
Researchers studying Inglefield Bredning Fjord lowered a video camera equipped with red lights and a hydrophone 260 meters (853 feet) to the seafloor.
Over the course of a week, they recorded rare sights including a backward-swimming fish and narwhal vocalizations, alongside other elusive deep-sea creatures.
 
From ArcticToday

Far below Greenland’s frozen surface, cameras have captured a rarely seen world where narwhals glide through darkness and strange deep-sea creatures drift beneath melting ice.

Researchers studying Inglefield Bredning Fjord lowered a video camera equipped with red lights and a hydrophone 260 meters (853 feet) to the seafloor.
Over the course of a week, they recorded rare sights including a backward-swimming fish and narwhal sounds, alongside other elusive deep-sea creatures, according to findings published in PLOS One.

The team’s primary goal was to study narwhals in the area, so they angled the camera upward to maximize observation without sediment clouding the lens — narwhals are known to approach filming equipment from above.
What they found exceeded their expectations.

“Arctic glacial fjords are hotspots of marine life, but they are understudied as a result of their remoteness and difficult access, particularly their seafloor ecosystems,” the authors wrote.

Although the camera caught only a single glimpse of a narwhal tusk during the filming period, researchers were rewarded with an entire hidden underwater world.
“Overall, the results show that portable moorings with video recorders are an important tool for exploration of the Arctic seafloor,” the study concludes.

Key Takeaways
 
  • Elusive Arctic marine life on display: The footage documented a range of organisms living just above the seafloor, including shrimp, jellyfish, amphipods, copepods, snailfish, and narwhals.
  • A strange backward-swimming fish drew particular attention: Researchers observed a snailfish drifting backward with its tail curled — a behavior rarely documented in the wild. “It curled its tail and remained motionless for at least 16 seconds before disappearing from view.”
  • Narwhals were detected both visually and acoustically: Hydrophones recorded narwhal vocalizations nearly every day, and one narwhal tusk passed within centimeters of the camera lens.
  • The system was designed to minimize wildlife disturbance: Rather than bright white lights, researchers used red LEDs, which are less visible to many deep-sea species, enabling more natural behavior to be observed.
  • Dramatic shifts in “marine snow” were also recorded: Organic particles drifting through the water column doubled in concentration within hours and changed direction with tidal currents, underscoring how dynamic Arctic deep-water systems can be.
  • The technology could expand Arctic monitoring globally: Because the system is relatively lightweight and portable, scientists say it could make long-term monitoring of remote polar ecosystems easier and more affordable.

Why It Matters

Much of the Arctic’s underwater world remains poorly understood — even as climate change rapidly reshapes the region.
Fjords like Inglefield Bredning are biological crossroads, where glaciers, ocean currents, marine mammals, and deep-sea ecosystems converge in ways scientists are only beginning to document.

This study offers a rare, direct window into that hidden environment.
Beyond its striking imagery, it demonstrates how new technology could allow scientists to track ecological shifts in real time as warming oceans, retreating glaciers, and shrinking sea ice reshape Arctic food webs.

What makes the research especially urgent is what it reveals about the limits of our current knowledge: the most consequential environmental changes in the Arctic are often happening out of sight — beneath the ice, below the surface, in the dark.
As the Arctic continues to warm faster than anywhere else on Earth, understanding these invisible systems may matter more than we yet realize. 

Friday, May 29, 2026

Utilizing hydrographic backscatter data



From Hydro by Onogateoghene Idoge
 
Seabed intelligence at scale for the blue economy

Hydrography has long been defined by depth.
From nautical charting to navigation safety, bathymetry remains the primary deliverable.
But many blue economy activities – offshore wind, subsea cables, marine spatial planning – demand more than depth; they need to know what the seabed is made of.
Backscatter, which is routinely collected alongside bathymetry, holds this answer – yet it remains underutilized.
In my view, this is no longer a technical oversight.
It is a missed strategic opportunity.

The global blue economy is valued at approximately US$2.5 trillion annually and continues to expand rapidly.
Offshore wind capacity alone is projected to reach hundreds of gigawatts in the coming decade, while subsea infrastructure – telecommunications cables, power interconnectors and carbon capture systems – is being deployed at unprecedented rates.
Each of these developments depends on reliable seabed characterization.
Yet traditional methods such as grab sampling, coring and video inspection remain inherently limited in spatial coverage.
They provide valuable point data, but cannot scale to meet modern demands.

Backscatter offers a different path.
Acquired as part of routine hydrographic surveys, it provides continuous seabed information across entire survey areas without additional acquisition time.
The data already exists.
The real challenge lies in how effectively it is processed, interpreted and integrated into decision-making workflows.

Hydrography beyond depth

Hydrographic surveying has traditionally focused on accurate depth measurement to support safe navigation, guided by S-44 International Hydrographic Organization (IHO) standards for hydrographic surveys.
Multibeam echosounding (MBES) has greatly advanced this objective, enabling high-resolution mapping of seafloor morphology.
However, MBES systems inherently collect more than depth; they record both bathymetry and backscatter simultaneously.
While bathymetry defines the geometry of the seabed, backscatter provides insight into its composition and physical properties.
As hydrography evolves to support broader applications, it is increasingly necessary to treat backscatter data not as a secondary output, but as a core hydrographic dataset.
What bathymetry alone cannot reveal

Backscatter represents the strength of acoustic energy returned from the seabed following sonar interaction.
Its response is influenced by seabed composition (mud, sand, gravel, rock), surface roughness and heterogeneity, acoustic frequency, incidence angle and environmental conditions.

Operational guidance from organizations such as the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) shows that areas of similar bathymetry can produce significantly different backscatter signatures.
Whereas bathymetry describes geometry, backscatter reveals composition.

Figure 1: Comparison of bathymetry and backscatter from the same survey area, highlighting how similar depths can produce different acoustic responses due to seabed variability. 
(Image courtesy: NORBIT Subsea)

Why backscatter remains underutilized

There are various reasons why backscatter data is currently underutilized.
First, backscatter quality depends heavily on consistent sonar settings, vessel motion and survey design.
This sensitivity means that variations in acquisition parameters directly affect the reliability of the final mosaic.
Second, the intensity of the returned signal varies with beam incidence angle.
Without proper angular corrections, artifacts may obscure true seabed characteristics.
Last but not least, processing backscatter data is complex.
Unlike bathymetry, backscatter workflows lack full standardization.
Differences in processing methodologies can lead to inconsistencies across datasets, complicating interpretation.
However, these challenges are not limitations of backscatter itself, but indicators of the need for improved workflow discipline and training within hydrographic practice.
From data to insight: a practical workflow perspective

Transforming backscatter into a usable hydrographic product requires a structured and consistent workflow.
In survey operations I have been involved in, bathymetric data is processed using software such as QPS Qimera, CARIS and so on.
Backscatter is refined using tools such as QPS-FMGT to generate normalized mosaics.
Key factors influencing output quality include consistent acquisition parameters, appropriate frequency selection, radiometric and geometric corrections, and robust mosaicking techniques.
In other words, the transition from raw acoustic intensity to interpretable seabed information is not automatic.
It requires both technical expertise and deliberate workflow design.

Figure 2: Conceptual illustration showing variation in backscatter intensity with beam incidence angle.
Delivering value across industries

Backscatter is fundamentally a hydrographic dataset, but its value extends across multiple maritime sectors, including:Offshore energy: backscatter supports foundation design, cable routing and scour assessment by identifying sediment type and seabed variability, directly reducing uncertainty and optimizing engineering decisions.
Ports and navigation: it enables precise identification of dredgeable versus non-dredgeable materials, improving efficiency and reducing operational costs.
Subsea infrastructure: backscatter reveals hazards such as rock outcrops, boulders and mobile sediments that are not evident from bathymetry alone.
Environmental management: it provides scalable habitat mapping to support environmental assessments, conservation planning, and regulatory compliance.

These applications highlight how hydrographic data, particularly backscatter, directly supports critical blue economy sectors, transforming hydrography from a navigation-focused discipline into a key enabler of sustainable ocean development.
The future: calibration, data and intelligence

Historically, backscatter has often been used as a qualitative dataset.
However, advances in calibration, angular response analysis and processing workflows are enabling quantitative backscatter products.
When properly calibrated and archived, backscatter becomes a time-series dataset capable of supporting long-term monitoring of seabed change and predictive analysis.
Emerging machine learning techniques are further enhancing its value.
As these models require large, high-quality datasets, organizations that invest in backscatter today will be better positioned to leverage automated seabed classification in the future.
This is particularly critical in data-sparse regions where improved seabed intelligence can directly support national hydrographic development and sustainable ocean use.
Conclusion

Hydrography is no longer solely about measuring depth; it is about understanding the seafloor.
Backscatter is not an optional by-product – it is a critical dataset that enables this transformation.
Promoting hydrography in today’s context means demonstrating its value beyond navigation.
Backscatter provides a clear example of how hydrographic data products support modern maritime operations and the global blue economy.
In view of the expansion of the blue economy and the increasing demands on ocean data, the integration of bathymetry and backscatter will define the future of hydrographic surveying.
The real question is no longer whether to collect backscatter.
It is whether we are ready to use it to its full potential.

 
Figure 3: Processed backscatter mosaic showing tonal variations associated with different seabed compositions.
(Image courtesy: Geosciences/Craig J. Brown)


Links :
  • International Hydrographic Organization (2020), Standards for Hydrographic Surveys (S-44)
  • National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration – Office of Coast Survey, Multibeam Backscatter Resources
  • Lamarche, G., et al.
    (2011), Guidelines for Backscatter Acquisition and Processing
  • Brown, C.
    J., et al.
    (2011), Mapping Benthic Habitats Using Multibeam Backscatter
  • Buscombe, D.
    (2021), Machine Learning for Seabed Classification