Great to see progress in action through Cefas’s Floating Offshore Wind Environmental Response to Stressors (FLOWERS) project which is funded through our Offshore Wind Evidence and Change programme. FLOWERS is gathering critical data to help stakeholders involved in offshore wind developments better assess the impacts of electromagnetic fields (EMFs) from subsea cables on the marine environment. As Tim Pick, the UK’s offshore wind champion, has previously emphasised, data gaps are a major factor in consenting delays. That’s why OWEC’s work is so essential. Through projects like FLOWERS and our other Cefas-led OWEC projects, we’re building a robust evidence base to ensure sectors aren’t planned in isolation and in way that supports a thriving marine environment alongside vital industries such as fishing and offshore wind. Two additional Cefas-led projects that are driving progress are the Nature Inclusive Cable Enhancement (NICE) project, which aims to better understand the ecological impact of 'standard' subsea cable protection technologies versus newer, more nature-friendly alternatives. We’re also advancing Fisheries Sensitivity Mapping and Displacement Modelling (FiSMaDiM), a project with key industry partners to map fishing activity and understand how offshore wind farms might impact fisheries. Learn more about our investment in OWEC here: https://lnkd.in/euG-mpBk
💨 Windy beach days were required this summer as our project team carried out electromagnetic field (EMF) measurements on offshore wind farm export cable sites around the UK. 🔊 Within the Floating Offshore Wind Environmental Response to Stressors (FLOWERS) project, funded by The Crown Estate through its Offshore Wind Evidence and Change programme (OWEC), we aim to build a better understanding of the EMF environment associated with existing offshore wind (OSW) power cables by generating new data, analysis and evidence to support the sustainable development of offshore wind in the UK. Sites visited by the team this summer include OSW power cables along the coasts of Liverpool Bay, Morecambe Bay, Thames Estuary and North Norfolk - with sites in Scotland earmarked for November 2024. Many thanks to the offshore transmission and offshore wind operators, for their excellent collaboration during these field studies. 🌻 The FLOWERS project has three elements: 💻 The first uses modelling software to increase understanding of how floating offshore wind moorings affect the seabed; 📑 The second, delivered in collaboration with the Scottish Government’s Marine Directorate, builds on an OWEC-funded EMF technical workshop delivered by Cefas in July 2023, which helps stakeholders involved in offshore wind developments better assess the impacts of EMFs from subsea power cables on the marine environment; 📋 Finally, an initial framework for assessing multiple stressors together will be developed to help move away from single stressor-single receptor assessments. For more information and to access the EMF technical report, visit: https://lnkd.in/ecmpDDhy