PELAgIO: Physics-to-Ecosystem Level Assessment of Impacts of Offshore Windfarms

Lead Research Organisation: University of Aberdeen
Department Name: Inst of Biological and Environmental Sci

Abstract

By 2050 it's estimated >400 GW of energy will be gathered by offshore wind across the whole North Sea. For scale, Hinkley Point C nuclear reactor is projected to produce 3.2 GW. How will this increased anthropogenic use of our coastal seas impact already stressed marine ecosystems? And how will that same production of renewable energy offset risks of extreme climate change that, left unchecked, will increase the risk of biodiversity declines. There are many complex changes to ecosystems linked to Offshore Wind Farms (OWFs) that we need to understand now, so that the extent of increasing wind energy extraction further offshore is managed in the most sustainable way. An important effect of large wind energy extraction will be to reduce the amount of energy that would normally go into local ocean currents via surface stress, altering sea state and mixing. Conversely, there will be local increases in turbulence around turbine structures and seabed scouring near fixed foundations.

Any change in ocean mixing may change the timing, distribution and diversity of phytoplankton primary production, the base of the food chain for marine ecosystems, to some degree. This has knock-on-effects on the diversity, health and locations of pelagic fish that are critical prey species of commercial fish, seabirds and marine mammals. Observed changes caused by operational OWFs in the southern North Sea include local surface temperature rise and the displacement of seabirds and fishing fleets from the OWF footprint, whereas seals often appear to be feeding near turbines. All of these changes have a linked component - important prey fish species - which are likely to aggregate near structures (as seen at other offshore platforms). Seabirds and fishing fleets subsequently have less space to hunt, with potentially increased competition for fish. However, if OWFs are also de facto marine protected areas and so positively affect local primary production, they may provide good habitat for fish population growth.

So, what are the cumulative effects of current OWF developments and the thousands of additional planned structures? Do the physical, biogeochemical and ecosystem changes exacerbate or mitigate those resulting from climate change? As OWFs migrate further offshore as floating structures, how can current knowledge based on shallow, coastal fixed turbines be suitably extrapolated to understand the impacts on ecosystems dependent on seasonal cycles that are typical of deeper waters?

PELAgIO will address all of these questions through an interdisciplinary, multi-scale observation and modelling framework that spans physical mixing through to plankton production, on to the response of fish and whole ecosystems. We will collect fine-scale data using the latest multi-instrumented acoustic platforms set beside and away from OWFs, complemented by autonomous surface and submarine robots to capture continuous and coincident data from physics to fish, over multiple scales and seasons to fully understand what is 'different' inside an OWF and how big its footprint is. These new data will test the effects on seabirds and marine mammals to build an OWF ecosystem parameterization that accounts for changes to mixing and wind deficit impacts, and is scalable to next-generation OWFs. This bottom-up, comprehensive approach will enable true calibration and validation of 3D ocean-biogeochemical-sediment modelling systems, from the scale of turbine foundations up to the regional and even cross-shelf scales. Identified changes will be integrated into Bayesian ecosystem models that enable the cumulative effects of ecological, social and economic trade-offs of different policy approaches for OWFs to be quantifiably assessed for present day conditions, during extreme events and under climate change.

Publications

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Description Presentation of PELAgIO to MASTS Annual Conference 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Presented the overview of the PELAgIO Project to the wider marine academic community at the MASTS Annual Science Meeting
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://masts.ac.uk/annual-science-meeting/
 
Description Presentation of PELAgIO to the PrePARED (OWEC) Project 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Study participants or study members
Results and Impact Presentation of PELAgIO to aid in collaboration actives between the Projects
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2023
URL https://owecprepared.org/
 
Description Research Impacts Workshop for Stakeholders 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Policymakers/politicians
Results and Impact A stakeholder workshop was convened by the ECOWind Programme on 18th November 2022. Representatives from the ECOWind Programme and the three projects within it were joined by key stakeholders from industry, the policy and regulatory environment, non-government organisations (NGOs), academia, and other marine users. The meeting took place online and consisted of several structured plenary and breakout sessions.

The aims of the workshop were to:
? Provide an overview of the ECOWind programme and an opportunity for the projects to broadly share their activities and outputs with wider stakeholders.
? Introduce government, NGOs, and developers to the ECOWind projects' key activities and outputs, and to align and validate these against stakeholder priorities.
? Identify opportunities for partnership working, including:
? Data sharing
? Site access
? Integration with ongoing / existing research
? Contribution to policy outcomes
? Contribution to expert working groups

Throughout the course of the workshop, four key themes emerged as priorities to address:
? Data collection and sharing
? Research collaboration
? Policy areas for impact
? Communication and engagement on outputs

Through conversations on these themes and surrounding issues, the aims of the workshop were met. Stakeholders were informed about the ECOWind programme, the projects within it, intended activities and outputs, and opportunities for collaboration. Detailed discussions led to a variety of outcomes ranging from specific - for instance, recommendations for two certain organisations to work together - to broader points such as ways to ensure that outputs are as useful for policy and other stakeholders as possible.

The ECOWind Champions, who are responsible for coordinating the ECOWind programme, will use the outcomes of the workshop to develop a Programme Impact and Engagement Strategic Action Plan, which will be available in Spring 2023. This action plan will account for the opportunities identified in the workshop, as well as those identified in the wider space of offshore wind research and policy, with the aim of maximising the impact and usefulness of the ECOWind programme's outputs. Furthermore, ECOWind's three projects will be developing the connections established during the workshop and pursuing relationships and collaborations with key stakeholders.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
 
Description Workshop (hybrid) investigating Fishing Industry perspectives of future challenges from the Offshore Renewable Industries 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Industry/Business
Results and Impact On December 16, 2022, at the University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen Scotland, UK, a hybrid workshop, as part of the funded EcoNex and PELAgIO projects, was conducted with a range of members of the fishing industry (demersal, pelagic, inshore and producers, e.g., Scottish Fishermen's Federation, The Scottish White Fish Producers Association Ltd) to identify key issues to the industry with respects to their interactions with the offshore renewables industries, in particular offshore wind.
The purpose was to identified the important challenges to the fishing industry and identified ways of better collaborating with the industry from the academic projects. Selection of data and spatial scales were discussed and ways of working better together to improve inputs to policy. We are now in a position where we have identified the key challenges from the fishing industries point of view along with the key data to use. We are now setting up the ecosystem models to be run in both PELAgIO for biomass changes and EcoNex for GVA changes in combination with the "what-if?" scenario framework to identify the potential issues of fisheries displacement on the environment but also on a socio-economic aspect. We will have a follow-up meeting with the fishing industry representatives in March or April 2023 where they will ground truth our proposed scenarios.
The list of organizations that attended are:
• Scottish Fishermen's Federation
• Scottish Pelagic Fishermen's Association
• Shetland's Fishermen Association
• Scottish Fishermen's Organization
• Scottish Pelagic Fishermen's Association
• The Scottish Whitefish Producers Association
• Moray Firth Coastal Partnership
• North and East Coast Regional Inshore Fisheries Group
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022