Tuesday, December 7, 2021

Data storage, mining and wind: oceans seen as new frontier but at what cost?

Nordenskiold glacier in Svalbard, a northern Norwegian archipelago.
Industries are increasingly looking out to sea for space, resources, wind and cold, clean water.
Photograph: Olivier Morin/AFP/Getty Images


From The Guardian by Helen Scales

Industries gazing out to sea for more space, more cold, clean water and more wind offer a glimpse of the future and its risks

In September 2017, a giant, floating fish farm capable of raising 1.5 million salmon was installed in central Norway.
Besides its vast size – the circular structure is roughly the equivalent of two baseball fields – what set SalMar’s Ocean Farm 1 apart was its location three miles off the coast.
It was hailed as the world’s first offshore salmon farm.

Four years later, there have been two production cycles with better growth and survival of salmon compared with inshore farms, according to the company, hence less food waste and a lower carbon footprint.
Energydemand was also reduced compared with traditional inshore farms because seawater naturally flows through the nets, oxygenating salmon with no need for the pumps used on traditional inshore farms.

But the facility now lies empty, awaiting the development of new nets after farmed salmon escaped through a tear.
Tougher nets will be vital for SalMar’s next-generation Smart Fish Farm that’s slated to be four times bigger and will operate even farther from the coast.

Plans to place fish cages offshore are part of a wider trend among industries that are gazing out to sea in an effort to find more space, more cold, clean water and more wind.
Many are chasing an ambition of greater sustainability.
These initiatives are mostly at an early proof-of-concept stage, but they offer a glimpse of what the future of the ocean could look like, as well as some of the risks.

SalMar’s Ocean Farm 1, three miles off the coast of Norway.
Photograph: SalMar ASA/PA

“It’s not the first time we’ve had a kind of offshoring initiative,” said Klaus Dodds, professor of geopolitics at Royal Holloway, University of London.
Popular culture in the 1960s and 70s portrayed the ocean as offering a brighter, shinier future with new opportunities to advance humanity, from seabed mining to living underwater.
“I have a suspicion that the ocean yet again will become either a place for technical scientific fixes or for capitalism to constantly reinvent itself with clever new solutions,” says Dodds.

Part of the new wave of industrial interest in offshore waters comes from tech companies.
Microsoft has tried sinking data centres to see how well the sea can cool the systems and save power.
After two years underwater a mile off Orkney in Scotland, a storage device was brought up encrusted in sea life.
It performed well in its time underwater, according to the company, with fewer failures than land-based systems, and its energy efficiency is being analyzed.

A number of problems could arise if seabed data storage takes off.
“Where does all the heat go for oceans and seas that we’re already worried about in terms of warming?” Dodds said.
It’s also unclear whether operators would carefully remove units at the end of their lifespans, possibly raising equivalent problems as encountered with decommissioning oil rigs in the North Sea.
“I want to see some more careful research that really reassures me that overall, given the scaling-up implications, that it really is better to be offshore as opposed to on land,” Dodds said.
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He has seen a lot of interest from companies in data storage in the cold climate of Arctic regions but little research into the implications for ocean biodiversity.
“There’s this presumption that just because we can’t see something or just because the ocean is so enormous, we can probably crack on.”

As well as new ideas for using the ocean, old ones are coming back.
After a decades-long hiatus, mining companies are once again planning to exploit metallic deposits on the deep seabed.
This latest rush to mine the deep is facing growing opposition.
Civil society, governments, scientists and corporations are calling for a moratorium on seabed mining due to the likely impacts on biodiversity and climate.

The International Seabed Authority (ISA), the global regulator, is holding an in-person meeting in December at its headquarters in Jamaica, despite requests from states and observers to postpone – pandemic-related travel restrictions mean the meeting is not likely to be well-attended.
In a letter to the ISA in October, the Deep-Sea Conservation Coalition criticised the plan as “out of step with the growing calls for more inclusion in global decision-making”.
Critics are concerned the ISA may take the opportunity in December to give the deep-seabed mining industry the go-ahead to commence in 2023.

Deep-sea mining robot Patania II was trialled in the Pacific Ocean in April 2021.
Photograph: GSR/Reuters


The race for the ocean has caused conflicts to unfold between different offshore users.
While offshore aquaculture companies are keen to emphasise the sustainable credentials of their operations, they face opposition.

The Don’t Cage Our Ocean Coalition, a group of environmentalists, consumer advocacy organisations and fishing organisations, liken these offshore operations to land-based industrial feedlots.
Their concerns include escaped fish mingling with wild populations and adding nutrients and pollutants to waters that in many places are already struggling.
“It’s all going somewhere, even if we don’t see it,” says founding member Marianne Cufone.
The organisation is campaigning against US federal waters being opened to large-scale fin fish farming, such as salmon and tuna.

At present, there’s no aquaculture in US federal waters but that could change if plans go ahead to streamline the permitting process.
Other regions, Cufone says, are stepping away from fish farms both inshore and offshore, including a Danish moratorium on new fish farms and Canadian plans to phase out ocean fish farms in waters off British Columbia.
“We should learn from what comes before us and move on to smart, progressive, thoughtful, sustainable approaches if we want to increase domestic seafood production without harming our fishing communities and others who care about and want to use the waters,” she said.

The wind energy sector is also looking to move further offshore and meeting resistance from environmentalists and fishing industries.
Earlier this year, the Biden administration committed to building 30 gigawatts of offshore wind capacity by 2030.
Many fishers feel they are being forgotten in the race to tackle the climate crisis.
They are worried about losing access to fishing grounds and that windfarm installations could disrupt ocean currents and fish populations.

Offshore wind developers have held meetings with fishermen to plan windfarms more collaboratively.
After talking with fishers, Empire Wind, a proposed offshore windfarm south of Long Island, changed its plans to include an area open to fishing.

A lack of inclusive planning risks causing problems in UK waters, where the government has pledged to install 40 gigawatts of offshore wind by 2030.
Nature conservation groups are worried the current planning regime is not fit for purpose.
“At the moment, the industry is very project-led,” says Joan Edwards, director of marine conservation at The Wildlife Trusts.

Windfarm developers in the UK can pick an area and approach the crown estate, which owns most of the seabed around the UK out to 12 nautical miles, for a lease.
A better approach, Edwards says, would be to identify places nationally where offshore wind will not affect important parts of the marine environment, via noise pollution and digging up the seabed for cabling.
“We need to work out just how best to develop this industry so that it gives us renewable energy but doesn’t create more of a problem for nature,” she says.

With industries rushing offshore, the ocean is on a course to become more crowded.
To avoid a messy and damaging scramble for marine real estate, a coordinated approach is needed.
“We’re really going to have to be very confident these things are being regulated, monitored and evaluated holistically, and over the long term as well,” says Klaus Dodds.
“There’s a real danger that we think the oceans are this kind of frontier space, that we can just do things and worry about the implications later.
That’s patently not true.”
 
Links :

Monday, December 6, 2021

Plastic trash in the ocean is a global problem, and the US is the top source – a new report urges action

Plastic debris on a beach on Lanai, a sparsely populated Hawaiian island. 
Matthew Koller, CC BY-ND
From The Conversation by Matthew Savoca, Anna Robuck and Lauren Kashiwabara

Plastic waste of all shapes and sizes permeates the world’s oceans.
It shows up on beaches, in fish and even in Arctic sea ice.
And a new report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine makes clear that the U.S. is a big part of the problem.

As the report shows, the U.S. produces a large share of the global supply of plastic resin – the precursor material to all plastic industrial and consumer products.
It also imports and exports billions of dollars’ worth of plastic products every year.

On a per capita basis, the U.S. produces an order of magnitude more plastic waste than China – a nation often vilified over pollution-related issues.
These findings build off a study published in 2020 that concluded that the U.S. is the largest global source of plastic waste, including plastics shipped to other countries that later are mismanaged.

And only a small fraction of plastic in U.S. household waste streams is recycled.
The study calls current U.S. recycling systems “grossly insufficient to manage the diversity, complexity and quantity of plastic waste.”
 

As scientists who study the effects of plastic pollution on marine ecosystems, we view this report as an important first step on a long road to reducing ocean plastic pollution.
While it’s important to make clear how the U.S. is contributing to ocean plastic waste, we see a need for specific, actionable goals and recommendations to mitigate the plastic pollution crisis, and would have liked to see the report go further in that direction.

Plastic is showing up in seafood

Researchers started documenting marine plastic pollution in the late 1960s and early 1970s.
Public and scientific interest in the issue exploded in the early 2000s after oceanographer Charles Moore drew attention to the Great Pacific Garbage Patch – a region in the central north Pacific where ocean currents concentrate floating plastic trash into spinning collections thousands of miles across.

More plastic garbage patches have now been found in the South Pacific, the North and South Atlantic, and the Indian Ocean.
Unsurprisingly, plastic pervades marine food webs.
Over 700 marine species are known to ingest plastic, including over 200 species of fish that humans eat.

Humans also consume plastic that fragments into beverages and food from packaging and inhale microplastic particles in household dust.
Scientists are only beginning to assess what this means for public health.
Research to date suggests that exposure to plastic-associated chemicals may interfere with hormones that regulate many processes in our bodies, cause developmental problems in children, or alter human metabolic processes in ways that promote obesity 
Scientists estimate that if plastics continue to enter the ocean at current rates they will outweigh fish by 2050.
 
Current estimates show that at least 8 million pieces of plastic are entering the oceans every single day, and if left unchecked plastic will outweigh fish by 2050. Here are some shocking figures on how plastic pollution is affecting our oceans and our underwater wildlife.

A need for a national strategy

The new report is a sweeping overview of marine plastic pollution, grounded in science.
However, many of its conclusions and recommendations have been proposed in various forms for years, and in our view the report could have done more to advance those discussions.

For example, it strongly recommends developing a national marine debris monitoring program, led by the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration’s Marine Debris Program.
We agree with this proposal, but the report does not address what to monitor, how to do it or what the specific goals of monitoring should be.

Ideally, we believe the federal government should create a coalition of relevant agencies, such as NOAA, the Environmental Protection Agency and the National Institutes of Health, to tackle plastic pollution.
Agencies have done this in the past in response to acute pollution events, such as the 2010 BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill, but not for chronic problems like marine debris.
The report proposes a cross-government effort as well but does not provide specifics.

 
In 2019 volunteers for the nonprofit Surfrider Foundation removed nearly 300,000 pounds of trash from U.S. beaches, nearly all of it plastic.
Surfrider Foundation, CC BY-ND
 

An underfunded problem

Actions to detect, track and remove plastic waste from the ocean will require substantial financial support.
But there’s little federal funding for marine debris research and cleanup.
In 2020, for example, NOAA’s Marine Debris Program budget request was $US7 million, which represents 0.1% of NOAA’s $5.65B 2020 budget.
Proposed funding for the Marine Debris Program increased by $9 million for fiscal 2022, which is a step in the right direction.

Even so, making progress on ocean plastic waste will require considerably more funding for academic research, nongovernmental organizations and NOAA’s marine debris activities.
Increased support for these programs will help close knowledge gaps, increase public awareness and spur effective action across the entire life cycle of plastics.One way to address marine plastic waste is to capture it before it enters the ocean.
Mr.
Trash Wheel, a solar-powered semi-autonomous trash interceptor, removes floating debris from Baltimore’s Inner Harbor.
 
There has been a great renaissance in garbage collection technology in the past 10 years and Mr. Trash Wheel is one of the pioneers, collecting over 3 million pounds of trash in Baltimore, Maryland. 
An old technology becomes new again and is changing the landscape of the beautiful inner harbor.
 
Corporate responsibility and equity

The private sector also has a crucial role to play in reducing plastic use and waste.
We would have liked to see more discussion in the report of how businesses and industries contribute to the accumulation of ocean plastic waste and their role in solutions.

The report correctly notes that plastic pollution is an environmental justice issue.
Minority and low-income communities are disproportionately affected by many activities that produce plastic waste, from oil drilling emissions to toxic chemicals released during the production or incineration of plastics.
Some proposals in the report, such as better waste management and increased recycling, may benefit these communities – but only if they are directly involved in planning and carrying them out.

The study also highlights the need to produce less plastic and scale up effective plastic recycling.
More public and private funding for solutions like reusable and refillable containers, reduced packaging and standardized plastic recycling processes would increase opportunities for consumers to shift away from single-use disposable products.

Plastic pollution threatens the world’s oceans.
It also poses direct and indirect risks to human health.
We hope the bipartisan support this study has received is a sign that U.S. leaders are ready to take far-reaching action on this critical environmental problem.
 

Sunday, December 5, 2021

A kitesurfing session in over 50 knots of wind

 

Here it is, my jump from the cap frehel!
For those who dont know it, this is one of the most beautiful and mystic places close to my home in Britanny, France.
I ve been dreaming about jumping from this cliff for years & after analyzing how the weather is at this spot and how this jump could be done the perfect conditions were finally aligned!

Saturday, December 4, 2021

France & misc. (SHOM) layer update in the GeoGarage platform

170 nautical raster charts updated (26 new editions)

Björn Dunkerbeck & Lüderitz Speed Challenge


Back home on the island of Gran Canaria in the Canary Islands for just a few days, Björn Dunkerbeck is savoring the return to his family with a sense of accomplishment, as he has been one of the most prominent competitors on the Lüderitz Speed Challenge, which ended on November 28.
Indeed, 2 consecutive days, on November 16 and 18, the multiple world champion has warmed up the clock on the famous channel, beating for the first time his 2 personal records, 51.29 knots over 500 meters (against 51.09 in the past) and 53.82 knots in Vmax or 99.67 km/h to push the nail 48 hours later with a speed this time of 51.88 knots over 500 meters and a Vmax at 55.98 knots (103.67 km/h)!