This is Conservation and Science podcast, where we take a deep dive into topics of ecology, conservation and human wildlife interactions.
Speaker:I'm Tommy Serafinski, and I always strive to bring you diverse perspectives on every environmental story that I cover.
Speaker:And what that means is that sometimes I talk with people who might be on the opposing ends of environmental debate.
Speaker:And the reason I'm doing this is because we need more dialog and understanding and less division and fighting,
Speaker:not only in environmental stories, but in life in general.
Speaker:But, in this podcast, we're really concerned with environmental stories.
Speaker:So in other words, I try to make you to listen to people you might have not listened to otherwise.
Speaker:And today we are taking on the topic of offshore wind or offshore wind farms.
Speaker:And this topic, like a lot of, environmental topics, has, well, divides opinions.
Speaker:Some people say this is the best thing ever.
Speaker:We need wind farms in a transition to help us, in the transition, from fossil fuels to renewable energy.
Speaker:And what the better place than the open ocean?
Speaker:We have, a lot of wind there.
Speaker:That wind blows unobstructed by landscape features and by some buildings, maybe.
Speaker:And also, look at all that space.
Speaker:We can spare land for agriculture or for wildlife.
Speaker:So this is the best thing.
Speaker:But on the other hand, people who are opposing,
Speaker:those wind farms, offshore wind farms are saying, well, we shouldn't really be industrializing seas.
Speaker:And the arguments revolve mainly about the unknown impacts on the wildlife, on the marine wildlife.
Speaker:Once those wind farms operate, but also on much better known impacts on the marine wildlife, cetacean, specifically marine mammals,
Speaker:while those, constructions are being built, being the pylons being hammered, there's like a massive noise pollution that can,
Speaker:well, injured or killed sometimes, cetaceans, dull dolphins and whales and porpoises and so on.
Speaker:So today, we are taking head on on this topic, and our guest is marine biologist Doctor Stephen Comerford,
Speaker:who is already a marine biodiversity officer at the Irish Whales and Dolphins group.
Speaker:And Stephen worked, with oil and gas industry as well as offshore renewables
Speaker:as a person who was responsible for mitigating, the negative impacts.
Speaker:He has a vast experience and now works with charity Irish Whales and Dolphin Group, overseeing,
Speaker:development of those things and being responsible for the policy around offshore renewables.
Speaker:So he's seen the good, the bad, the ugly.
Speaker:And I'm going to dive today with Stephen. We're into the good, the bad, the ugly.
Speaker:So at the end of this episode, you will have a better understand
Speaker:of what is really going on, what are the mitigations that are possible or whether it is going to happen or not.
Speaker:And a lot of other information is around the development of those offshore wind farms around Ireland specifically.
Speaker:So at least you will be better informed of what's going on, and you will hear that information based on
Speaker:what is actually happening, not based on who screams the loudest on social media.
Speaker:So I hope that if you're interested in offshore renewables, or maybe you're concerned about development of offshore renewables, after
Speaker:listening to this episode, you will have better views and that episode will help you to, well, basically refine your views on this topic.
Speaker:That's it for this introduction.
Speaker:So, ladies and gentlemen, please welcome Stephen Comerford. Stephen, welcome to the show.
Speaker:Thank you very much to me. It's a pleasure to have you.
Speaker:And this is the second time someone from Irish, Wes in Dolphin Group is on the podcast.
Speaker:So I am delighted due to have you on.
Speaker:Very good.
Speaker:Yeah, we met at the, All Ireland Marine, Doyle Ireland Mammal Conference to do some Galway.
Speaker:Yes, exactly, exactly. And mammal includes marine mammal.
Speaker:That's why that's why we're here today.
Speaker:So I just want to start with, you know, a little bit of a, of a, of a background Europe where you would be
Speaker:whale watching you observing whales of the Irish gulls for many, many years.
Speaker:What was your most memorable encounter? Memorable encounter?
Speaker:Yeah, I
Speaker:was there was one stand out, encounter.
Speaker:We were out on the Celtic mist. More than I think is more than ten years ago.
Speaker:There were there were a bunch of us there, colleagues and friends and, some international students.
Speaker:And we were out on the shelf edge on the porcupine Bank.
Speaker:So we were some distance off shore.
Speaker:And, it was the middle of the day.
Speaker:We had a hugely successful trip so far with saw so many species, and we were relax, knocked out.
Speaker:The boat was drifting and there were fin willows all around us.
Speaker:And we were enjoying that and watching the whales and or dolphins everywhere.
Speaker:And next thing very big blows.
Speaker:And fin whales have very big blows. The, the second biggest mammal, second biggest whale.
Speaker:And so they are very big animals.
Speaker:And we were thinking, wouldn't it be great if we saw a blue whale?
Speaker:And then this, this whale came alongside the boat and it was a slightly different color.
Speaker:We all got and then big blow and then it's float and it showed its tail.
Speaker:And fin whales don't do that, but blue whales do. So positive identification.
Speaker:Two blue whales. We were absolutely blown away. I'd never seen one before.
Speaker:I haven't seen one since.
Speaker:Rare encounters in Irish waters because they're very far off shore.
Speaker:And also, it's easy to mix them up with fin whales or whales for that matter.
Speaker:So if you're just looking at blows, there's no way you could say, oh, that was a blooper.
Speaker:But the boat, the way it was right alongside the boat, we saw the fluke, we saw the color, we saw a second one.
Speaker:And then to add to us even more, an aircraft aircraft flew over us and it was the Air Corps on, on fisheries patrol.
Speaker:And they called us up on the radio and, they said, you know, who are you?
Speaker:What are you up to kind of thing.
Speaker:And, so we had a chat and I said, there are two blue whales in front of the boat.
Speaker:And they said, oh, great, we'll try and get photos.
Speaker:And they got an absolutely classic photograph of two blue whales, in line, one behind the other from the aircraft.
Speaker:Beautiful photograph. And they also got really good photograph of the Celtic mates and the skipper.
Speaker:And, McAllister was up on the top of the mast at the time splashing. And it was, it was just fabulous.
Speaker:It was perhaps the best trip ever.
Speaker:The of the sun tastic. Fantastic.
Speaker:Yes. The, I'm the you know, definitely
Speaker:that something that anyone remembers because those rare encounters is or something that tends to stick in our memory.
Speaker:Listen, Steven, we we going to talk about, serious stuff, though.
Speaker:It's all nice. But we going to talk about the offshore renewable energy.
Speaker:And, you know, you have an experience worldwide working, with the industry.
Speaker:And tell me whether any surprising way or ways, that you learn about marine
Speaker:mammals, how they're interact with these, offshore, offshore renewable infrastructure.
Speaker:Well, you know, that's very much part of of what do I do in fact, my
Speaker:my role is now specifically to deal with the interaction between whales and dolphins and offshore renewables.
Speaker:So, yeah, there are many ways in which renewables, offshore renewables, wind farms can interact with, with whales
Speaker:and dolphins, some of them negative, some of them neutral, perhaps some of them positive to the biggest issue for us.
Speaker:And the the biggest issue for everyone is underwater noise.
Speaker:And as you're probably aware, whales, dolphins, porpoises are extremely sensitive to noise.
Speaker:And underwater noise travels very far, propagates in a completely different way to the way it does in air.
Speaker:So a lot of the sort of characteristics of noise that we understand as humans, we,
Speaker:we, we're that doesn't represent what goes on water and whales and dolphins are, are acoustic animals.
Speaker:They live in an acoustic world. They live in a dark world.
Speaker:You know, a lot of the information they get is true, is true sound.
Speaker:So it's very important.
Speaker:It is as important, perhaps as sizes to us to.
Speaker:It's a very crude analogy, but,
Speaker:you know, they get a great deal of the information they need, you know, to communicate and to haunt and to forage.
Speaker:And, and so, you know, it's it's very important.
Speaker:It's it's central to their very, their very existence.
Speaker:And when the construction of wind farms can be done in a number of ways, but the most usual way to do is
Speaker:and the way that it is proposed to the first tranche of of wind farms in Irish waters is with piling.
Speaker:So piling is is where you get a steel pile, which is essentially just a steel tube
Speaker:and you knock us into the ground with a hammer, like a nail.
Speaker:It's a it's a simple a very understandable analogy, perhaps, but these these bubbles are absolutely huge.
Speaker:And they're proposing piles now that are ten meters diameter. You know, they're massive.
Speaker:So what happens is, is the pile is placed on the seabed by a piling vessel, which it's a heavy lift vessel.
Speaker:And then they they drop a big hydraulic hammer onto the top of the pile.
Speaker:And then they knock us in with this high hydraulic hammer.
Speaker:So it's incredibly noisy.
Speaker:The the motor is inside of just huge areas of, of the sea.
Speaker:And that is, that's, you know, that's the British point for us.
Speaker:That's the really that's the dangerous part.
Speaker:And if you think of the of the rollout of offshore renewables in Ireland
Speaker:specifically the first phase, what what are known as the phase one projects, there are six of them, five in the Irish Sea.
Speaker:One of the
Speaker:catamarans go to that really isn't so much concerned because they intend to gravity foundations.
Speaker:So there's no piling associated with that.
Speaker:So they have a whole new different set of problems for themselves and technical challenges.
Speaker:But underwater noise isn't going to be as big an issue.
Speaker:So if we sort of narrow or focus down onto the five projects in the Irish Sea,
Speaker:four of them have, sent in their planning applications to onboard Prunella.
Speaker:And as part of those planning applications, they submit environmental impact assessment reports, which are these absolutely mammoth documents
Speaker:that there's attempt to capture all elements of the marine environment and birds and, you know, the landfall, the interior,
Speaker:all of the interactions, and also some of the social interactions as well as with transport as well.
Speaker:But it's an it's an environmental assessment.
Speaker:So from, from these, you know, we learned that there are going to be x number of piles and x number of are they these are proposed jobs.
Speaker:So these are, these are applications they propose, you know, say for argument's say 50 on average, 50, turbines per sites.
Speaker:And that's five sites, you know, 250 turbines of these these are very rough numbers.
Speaker:And there are a lot of there are a lot of subtleties to that.
Speaker:But for the sake of the sake of outlining us, so each piling events can go on for hours.
Speaker:And each planning event has the ability to an absolute worst case scenario, actually injure whales and off some porpoises.
Speaker:You know, the can cause, cause can cause acoustic trauma. That's a very short ranges.
Speaker:And, you know, there's there's no need to overstate that, I think.
Speaker:But but more importantly, the the area of disturbance is huge.
Speaker:And with a more recent focus on porpoises, recently, the observed I'm going off on tangent there, but the, the observe reports has just been
Speaker:published, digital aerial surveys around Irish waters recently published and it's it paints a pretty grim picture for porpoises.
Speaker:Compared with the last observed reports,
Speaker:that they looked to be, essentially gone from the captaincy and what would have been a very healthy population
Speaker:of porpoises in the Irish Sea has reduced to quite a concentrated small population in the North.
Speaker:So the indications are bad for porpoises and I think to circle back they are particularly vulnerable to underwater noise.
Speaker:And they're also particularly vulnerable to displacement because porpoises, as you may know, that they're the smallest by cetaceans.
Speaker:They're very small and like all small organisms, they need to feed constantly.
Speaker:The analogy is that they are the marine equivalent of a of a shrew.
Speaker:So, you know, they need to feed all the time.
Speaker:So they're they're cryptic animals. They, they're, they have of high fidelity.
Speaker:So, you know, a porpoise has its patch or its group of vocalizes have their patch, they feed they're, they're they're, very secure.
Speaker:They're and if they're, if they're displaced from that,
Speaker:there are effects that there are effects perhaps that we up to now have underestimated.
Speaker:And that it's not a question of, well, if they, you know, if two noise a year that they can go there.
Speaker:It's not as simple as that.
Speaker:And you know, these, these decline in porpoise numbers and it's reflected in more than just the observed reports as well.
Speaker:But you know, reports on the seas, the rock able to talk, as they say,
Speaker:for instance, in the Irish Sea, as showed, the surveying by 12 has shown a decrease in Falklands numbers.
Speaker:A figure on the quarter is not just an Irish Sea problem.
Speaker:I live in. I live in West Kerry, so I actually overlooked the blasted sound.
Speaker:The blanket islands are there. There's it's designations in SSA for harbor, for places.
Speaker:And I haven't seen a porpoise for years, you know? So something's happening.
Speaker:They're under pressure. So?
Speaker:So our concern is the piling in the Irish Sea.
Speaker:It's a very specific concern, but fortunately, it's a problem that can be solved.
Speaker:The technology exists to greatly reduce the amount of noise that goes out into the into the water column from a piling
Speaker:that we can use, devices, bubble curtains or one and it's a very it's a very it's a very simple device to understand.
Speaker:It's a, it's a, it's a tube laid on the seabed and the tube goes up to, a vessel that has a compressor or multiple compressors on board,
Speaker:and it pumps high pressure air into this tube.
Speaker:And the tube is full of holes and bubbles rise up.
Speaker:And the bubbles had this almost magical property of preventing the sound from propagating out from the piling of it.
Speaker:Happy days.
Speaker:So you can push a bubble curtain around the pile.
Speaker:It will greatly reduce the motor sound that goes out of the environment.
Speaker:If you put another one outside that again, you further reduce, you know, it's this is proven technology.
Speaker:They use it in Europe. The is in the States. It works.
Speaker:But of course there's always a push.
Speaker:It doesn't work as well in deeper waters.
Speaker:And some of the Irish projects are going to be in deeper waters, deeper as in 40m.
Speaker:50m. I'm not talking about 150m, you know.
Speaker:So even within the depths that you can use multiple monopoles, the effectiveness of the bubble caulking reduces with that depth also.
Speaker:And this is intuitive to understand.
Speaker:If it's a high current regime, the bubbles get taken away by the currents.
Speaker:So instead of a bubble bubble curtain, you can imagine like putting a tube over the piling of it,
Speaker:suddenly it's all skewed to one side or skewed to the other, but curved, so they become less effective.
Speaker:So it's not.
Speaker:But there are other methods.
Speaker:There are also other methods with great promise.
Speaker:So a lot of the sort of source reduction methods actually reduce the noise the hammer makes or actually uses something other than a hammer.
Speaker:There's one there's one called blue piling, which is a hammer, and it's very clever.
Speaker:It uses hydraulic, but all hammers are hydraulic.
Speaker:But this eases a body of water to slow down the impacts and spread.
Speaker:It's that high rise time. It's problem with noise. So it spreads out the impact.
Speaker:It's actually increases the efficacy of the actual piling as well and is greatly reduces the noise.
Speaker:So you've got another technology which can be brought to bear, which is less depth.
Speaker:Our current regime are dependent as well. So that's all good.
Speaker:So there's great optimism about these technologies.
Speaker:There are others.
Speaker:You can use a system called vibro piling. So that vibrates the whole pile.
Speaker:It literally makes its way down into the substrate.
Speaker:So there's promise there.
Speaker:There's a jetting technology which that they've been using this year I think, or said push three piles and using a jet and technology
Speaker:this year.
Speaker:And the the noise it produced was barely above background noise.
Speaker:You know, the ships were nearly as noisy, you know, that were in the area were nearly as easy as the piling of it.
Speaker:So that's just hugely encouraging.
Speaker:And that, that this, this, this technology is being developed now obviously jetting or any of these are dependent on the substrates.
Speaker:You know, I think that obviously they chose the so the substrate was kind to them in the oyster case,
Speaker:I'm sure I'm not an engineer, but there are presumably are types of grounds.
Speaker:You wouldn't bet that wouldn't work.
Speaker:There's also, drilling.
Speaker:You can actually you can actually drill a hole in as well.
Speaker:So so these all exist and there and then to go back out to sort to devices that prevent the sounds
Speaker:that is generated from propagation for a cofferdam.
Speaker:So the resonators and sleeves that can be used so the technology exists.
Speaker:But of course there is another push. It's very expensive.
Speaker:So the developers are in the Irish case.
Speaker:So they're, they're they're putting in their environmental impact assessment reports.
Speaker:And they have to do something called a marine mammal mitigation plan as part of that.
Speaker:So they survey the mammals and they try and build a picture of what marine mammals are likely to be there and how many the densities.
Speaker:And, you know, that's very, very science. That's not easy. It's not easy to do.
Speaker:You need a lot of data.
Speaker:And even if you do have a lot of data and say, you know, this is the population density and we're very
Speaker:we're very confident that this is what it is. Pick a number. But, you know, maybe they're not going to be there in the day.
Speaker:Maybe there'll be twice as many on the day.
Speaker:They're mobile animals, you know.
Speaker:And and we you know, we know a bit about what they do or where they go, but not that much.
Speaker:So our focus has always been on mitigate for the sounds,
Speaker:you know, perhaps don't waste too much energy and trying to work out how many poor places there are per square kilometer.
Speaker:Is, is really that important? Yes.
Speaker:Of course.
Speaker:Support, but it's not as important as what you bring to bear to reduce the amount of noise that was made to.
Speaker:That was my question.
Speaker:You know, how how likely any of those technologies is going to be used because you and I understand this is all in the planning phase,
Speaker:but it's it's kind of like a repeat, a scenario that, yeah, we have all those wonderful technologies.
Speaker:But in the meantime, let's do it quick and let's do it cheap and let's just pile on those.
Speaker:So how, you know, how does that, side of it looks like, is there any lobbying going on
Speaker:to use those technologies or, you know, like what what are the chances that we actually see them being used in those projects?
Speaker:I think the chances are good.
Speaker:And and I think the, you know, the lobbying is very much is is part of my job.
Speaker:We have good working relationships with the developers.
Speaker:They are open to these conversations.
Speaker:You know, they're not I've worked in essentially two offshore industries.
Speaker:I've worked for oil and gas and seismic search, and I've worked for offshore renewables on the pilings.
Speaker:So it all to do with mitigation for noise and, you know, working at sea and trying to prevent that.
Speaker:There's interaction and contrary the offshore renewable energy industry is way ahead of the of the gas industry.
Speaker:They are far more concerned about the environment top down, bottom up.
Speaker:They have a completely different focus. I mean, I don't citizens disparage awake.
Speaker:They are still engineers.
Speaker:You know, they have a job to do and they take an engineering approach to us, which is correct.
Speaker:Of course it is.
Speaker:But they are far more concerned about the environment and far more, they seek solutions to these problems.
Speaker:And obviously they do.
Speaker:Are these, these technologies to reduce the sound, the noise abatement systems, they wouldn't even exist.
Speaker:So and the other thing is you've got a strong regulatory structure that originated in Germany
Speaker:and has spread across the European countries that's are are building out, offshore renewables.
Speaker:And they are a long way ahead of us both in terms of their approach to us and also to what they've actually built.
Speaker:I mean, we've got with us a few turbines on the Oracle Bank.
Speaker:Not all of them work from many years ago.
Speaker:But, you know, what we're looking at is a very ambitious up.
Speaker:And let me say, I go off on another tangent here.
Speaker:Let me just say we really do need to build offshore wind.
Speaker:You know, the biggest driver for marine biodiversity loss is ultimately climate change.
Speaker:And offshore wind is a is a really important tool in our fight against climate change.
Speaker:You know, we are of course, you know, we're getting into this very place.
Speaker:And there's a there's a certain sort of feeling in Ireland that we're taking a very haphazard approach to this.
Speaker:I don't believe that's true. I think we're taking quite a a pragmatic approach to us.
Speaker:You might be aware that there are two strands to the build out of that, the so-called phase ones, which are described
Speaker:and they're under the old developer led system under which the developer or multiple developers come and say, I want to put a wind farm there,
Speaker:and they start to do the work to the surveys, survey the grounds, survey, mammals, the birds, this one.
Speaker:Build a picture, look at the geology, look at access to shore. All of these.
Speaker:It's incredibly complex. These are huge projects.
Speaker:So they they do this and then they apply for planning permission for.
Speaker:So that's the old system, the developer led system that is gone.
Speaker:So these six projects, the phase ones will go through that.
Speaker:This process I imagine they won't all get permits.
Speaker:It's it's it's expected that there will be some, you know, attrition along the way.
Speaker:But you know that I'm not talk.
Speaker:I'm speaking in a broad sense, not not about specific by any means. But, you know, there's a process to be done.
Speaker:So it's a very difficult process and it's a process. It's brand new to all of us in this country.
Speaker:So it's difficult in every sense. It's difficult for the developers.
Speaker:It's a difficult for governments. It's difficult for the NGOs.
Speaker:It's difficult for all all the agencies there are there are there are difficulties around experience and expert
Speaker:having experienced personnel having enough of them, training people up, bringing what needs to be brought to bear.
Speaker:We've got tiny marine departments within our bigger departments.
Speaker:They're very small, they are growing and we're starting to react in response, but we're starting from a very, very low base.
Speaker:So this is very this is difficult. It's difficult process.
Speaker:So but as part of this process and we have these ambitions five gigawatts by 2030, which is never going to happen, 2033 maybe.
Speaker:You know, there are a lot of bottlenecks or we're, learning as we go.
Speaker:But so we have the phase ones, as I've said, under the developer led system.
Speaker:And then after that, we're switching to a map system, which is a plan that statelet system.
Speaker:And as you may be aware, they've they've designated the first Irish Sea map off the south coast,
Speaker:the south coast in and Department of Environment tech led that process.
Speaker:And they you know they they brought a lot to bear.
Speaker:And I think Decker very much leading this you know, they're they're they're everywhere.
Speaker:They're very positive for focus.
Speaker:They're moving forward, in a way perhaps that nobody else is will take so they're designated this new map.
Speaker:It's a very it's a complex process to to designated.
Speaker:But we're so pleased it's environment.
Speaker:First it's you know, it's it's a mapping exercise.
Speaker:And mapping is all about layers of information.
Speaker:And the first layers in are the environmentalists.
Speaker:So it's a process.
Speaker:You add all the layers and then you look at what you've got and you you rule out certain areas and go, we're not going to put anything here.
Speaker:We're not running er this good work.
Speaker:You know, we're not going to put a wind farm in the mouth of, you know, Cork Harbor.
Speaker:You know, there are lots of things with a lot of restrictions. So it's a process.
Speaker:It's a new year of process.
Speaker:And then they remove, remove, remove and see what's left and then say okay well where's the best place.
Speaker:So the designates a broad area which is the south coast.
Speaker:And then within that we have designated for specific areas within which then a developer may be
Speaker:to goes looking for it.
Speaker:So in some way the power has been taken out of the developer or away from the developer and moved back to the states.
Speaker:So and again it pleases us that the environment is comes in at the first at the first layer.
Speaker:So it's a much better process. It's a better process for the environment.
Speaker:It's a it's a better process in terms of certainty.
Speaker:I think for the developers, we had a ridiculous Klondike situation in Ireland
Speaker:under the old developer system, where every man in his job that could raise a couple of million
Speaker:was out there shooting surveys to to essentially to try and lay claim to a piece of ground that they could
Speaker:then say they could apply for, apply to build a wind farm on the basis that they'd worked on the track record and so on.
Speaker:So it was very speculative.
Speaker:So there were guys out there shooting surveys saying nice everywhere.
Speaker:And the foreshore license application that was on this was under the old formal license system.
Speaker:If you looked at the map, there were these surveys all around the country.
Speaker:It was a source of madness.
Speaker:And then, you know, the the Irish civilians are looking at these maps.
Speaker:They don't really understand the process. How could they? It's it's a complex process.
Speaker:And people ran off with the idea that each of these was going to be a win for that.
Speaker:The wind farms are going to be literally on top of each other,
Speaker:and the whole coast was going to be surrounded by turbines, and it was going to be an environmental and a social disaster.
Speaker:So clearly
Speaker:the had someone had lost control of the messaging.
Speaker:And it's unfortunately very difficult to turn that ship.
Speaker:So because a lot of communities on the coast and people are really concerned
Speaker:about offshore wind, and they are correct to be concerned because these are massive infrastructure projects.
Speaker:We are industrializing the sea.
Speaker:That's the truth. That is what we're doing.
Speaker:But its effect, I think, is overstated.
Speaker:People worry about perhaps too much. And also it's scale is overstated. I think there's a problem with scale.
Speaker:Some people think that they're just going to open the window in the morning, and there's going to be a wind farm on Thursday.
Speaker:That's, it's a, it's a it's a sort of an abstract thing if you like.
Speaker:And then on the other end of the scale,
Speaker:the other end of the misunderstanding scale, I think is people don't really realize how big these things are.
Speaker:You know, when you when you send on a, on a pilot vessel, I've been on a pilot vessel
Speaker:that had a 270 crew, 270 on that vessel that was in the German section of the North Sea.
Speaker:And we were surrounded by other vessels that were involved in barges. Bring the pilots.
Speaker:And this is a heavy lift vessel capable of lifting 10,000 tugs.
Speaker:And we're putting in what we what they call a jacket.
Speaker:So shut off and another one,
Speaker:there's multiple layers, but there are also jackets and a jacket is more suitable for deeper water.
Speaker:And you drop a steel frame to the bottom and then you finish with pilots and they are called thin pilots.
Speaker:Those tend to be of a smaller diameter than the big model pilots.
Speaker:So, you know, it's a different approach tends to be taken for substations and for for deeper water.
Speaker:More pilots, 3 or 4 per jacket but smaller diameter. So less noise.
Speaker:But anyway, that was that tangent.
Speaker:What is I talking about? Jackets.
Speaker:Since we were up in the North Sea and you look around and you go, just look at the scale of this,
Speaker:look at the number of vessels, look at the size of the machinery, look at these huge structures were pushing into the water.
Speaker:They are massive.
Speaker:And when they swing the hammer over and start to lower down, everyone's running for earplugs.
Speaker:They're earplugs inside your ear. Defenders.
Speaker:It's loud and that's in the air.
Speaker:And it's a lot louder underwater.
Speaker:An effectively louder underwater.
Speaker:So so just to say that people people don't really understand the scale,
Speaker:they, they, they,
Speaker:they tend to overestimate how many of them they're going to be, but they underestimate how big the individual ones are feeling.
Speaker:So yeah.
Speaker:So but you know this you know, it sounds it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a harsh term that we will industrialize our, our marine space.
Speaker:It's, it sounds not like something that, an NGO would support, but, but it is something that an NGO supports.
Speaker:This NGO certainly.
Speaker:And across the NGOs, you know, those people who are, who work with and are concerned for the environment, regardless
Speaker:whether it's a single species, are our, our, our species group or type or, you know,
Speaker:they're all aware of the pressures being at the.
Speaker:Com from climate change and the way that's going to increase and that we have to do something about this.
Speaker:We have to more something we have to do a lot of boats.
Speaker:This is a this is a question,
Speaker:that, that, I have in my mind, you know, like, like you said on the surface,
Speaker:you wouldn't imagine that the NGO would support inequality called industrialization of the sea.
Speaker:But then climate change and the effects of climate change are devastating to the environment as well.
Speaker:How do you how do you navigate those contradictions?
Speaker:Because I would imagine that your role is difficult in that way, that you have these, these, these two contradicting
Speaker:objectives, let's say, how you how you deal with that, you know, you personally or you as an organization.
Speaker:Yeah, it's something we think about when we talk about.
Speaker:And someone can come up with a phrase recently, and they were in our recording, somebody else
Speaker:saying that that's after renewables is where the climate crisis meets the biodiversity crisis.
Speaker:And I heard that and I was like, I have no idea why there was an existence of it's true.
Speaker:I'm going to talk about it a bit more afterwards. And I went, yes, it is true.
Speaker:There is an intersection there.
Speaker:But let's not get the wrong idea that it's a zero sum game, that it's one or the other, you know, and I think it's very important
Speaker:not to overstate the pressure is on when the biodiversity from the build out of offshore wind is, is also very important not to understate.
Speaker:We need to bring a knowledge based scientific approach to this.
Speaker:We need to always be looking to the published literature, to what work has been done in other jurisdictions, other approaches,
Speaker:and do the very best we can, because in the end of the day that we're going to build those wind farms because we have to.
Speaker:And there was huge energy and impetus that came from, you know, the Greens in the last government.
Speaker:They did massive work in the rain is going to be missed.
Speaker:You know, there was those huge energy brought to us and momentum,
Speaker:and I, I, you know, these are big projects and it will roll all that momentum will continue.
Speaker:But, you know, I think we can give and and run a great deal of credit for us.
Speaker:And for the, for what he brought to the Department of Environment and the work that those guys do.
Speaker:So the intersection between
Speaker:biodiversity and climate,
Speaker:not a zero sum game.
Speaker:And we have to be both cautious but pragmatic.
Speaker:And, you know, you say about how do you individually reconcile us, or how do it how do we do it as an organized organization,
Speaker:it's all about information.
Speaker:It's about understanding, and it's about science.
Speaker:You know, we we it's all about both the science, the data and the interpretation of that correct interpretation of that.
Speaker:And and doing the best we can and in terms of personally, I was talking about this recently
Speaker:when I broaden my view to a global view, you know, climates, you know, we're hearing these terrible, predictions now.
Speaker:It's wooly days and all the scientists admit that.
Speaker:But potential slow down or stopping of the, occurrence, you know, the gold streamers.
Speaker:And so, you know, this is absolutely devastating, not just to Ireland with all we'd have the same.
Speaker:We'd have the same climates as Newfoundland. It would be a disaster. That's.
Speaker:Yeah, that would be a disaster. Of course.
Speaker:I mean, we're talking about radically changing every ecosystem on the planet, like the the monsoons wouldn't come to India if that happened.
Speaker:There are all sorts of things.
Speaker:These are huge.
Speaker:So when I, when I spread my view out and I look at what we have done
Speaker:to the planet in a very short space of time, and I look at the just brutal biodiversity, nuts
Speaker:and all these of this constant rise in temperature, all these potential tipping points.
Speaker:Maybe we're already regional. And I look at that and I go, this is a disaster.
Speaker:And it is looming mean faces.
Speaker:It is and this is extremely depressing.
Speaker:Does the oil and gas industry, you know, continue to lobby, you know, even cop over in Baku,
Speaker:you know, that the dollar exacerbates their their intrinsic they're well-funded, the well-organized, the very plausible.
Speaker:It's all about money short term. And they, you know, they've got massive investment in this.
Speaker:And if they don't keep the thing going, they fall off a cliff financially.
Speaker:They're they are remarkably slow to move into renewables, with some exceptions, considering that they have.
Speaker:So they're so rich and they have so much technological expertise clearly in the marine in a way that's upsetting and depressing.
Speaker:That that continues. And they have the ear of governments of all around the world.
Speaker:So we know that that is so then I guess upset, depressed because it's upsetting and, and and then I tend to narrow my focus in again
Speaker:and I go, well, what are we doing here?
Speaker:What are we going to do? What am I going to do?
Speaker:And I mean, the, I would say fortune position because of my job to be perhaps able to make a difference directly.
Speaker:That's suggestive.
Speaker:I mean, I'm delighted with my job, you know, that, you know, that I, that I'm in a position where I can make submissions,
Speaker:which I do to a more panel on the planet applications and go, we must talk about noise abatement.
Speaker:We must build it into fuel. The approach to technology exists.
Speaker:The developer have to accept the expense and so on.
Speaker:And that's a very narrow focus.
Speaker:You know, people say, oh, you're doing a response to environmental impact assessments from a phase one projects.
Speaker:These the assessments are huge to come out of Paris.
Speaker:You know, the prince is out that they're massive thousands and thousands of villages.
Speaker:But I don't rig think so how do you define the tone through the words? I don't,
Speaker:I just go boom, boom, boom, insta remember stuff and then boom, boom, boom to the underwater noise.
Speaker:But and really, you know, if you consider that it takes teams of consultants,
Speaker:I mean, a lot of people in a consultancy, usually in the UK, it takes them years to produce this.
Speaker:And I suppose to reviewers and tables, I'm not good. I just kind of hone in.
Speaker:But that narrow focus that, that, that bringing your, your focus in from that very broad,
Speaker:oh God, this is very bad into a piece of work that you can do is sort of what gets me through.
Speaker:And the feeling does we are in some way affected people listen to us.
Speaker:We have a good relationship with wind energy at a very good relationship with wind out of that energy.
Speaker:And we did a webinar recently about underwater noise, which was brought about by Wind Energy Ireland's
Speaker:to start this conversation, and they represent the developers, and we're in an unfortunate position in Ireland at the moment.
Speaker:Whereas there's a there's a guidance document produced by National Works,
Speaker:this last 1 in 2014, which it's a guidance document for how to manage underwater noise.
Speaker:You know, they are they are guidelines. It's not law but they are guidelines.
Speaker:And people coming in to seismic survey or high risk survey are piling or blasting or, you know, removal.
Speaker:They refer to these guidelines and they make their plan.
Speaker:But unfortunately the guidelines are very out of date 2014.
Speaker:They don't do a piling in a in a very meaningful way.
Speaker:They mentioned noise abatement and things have moved on in the ten years since they were published,
Speaker:you know, and, and also the types of surveys that they
Speaker:the guidance document was very much based around, 3D seismic surveys, which are, which are oil and gas surveys.
Speaker:They're very loud.
Speaker:These these massive arrogance.
Speaker:That's how I started out in the industry, was mitigating for those. And,
Speaker:you know, all of the, the, the sort of thinking the mindset is based around
Speaker:these are going for 3D seismic and then that the sorts of similar stuff is applied.
Speaker:And we take the same approach that's very out of date and everyone's aware of that.
Speaker:So, so the National Parks and Wildlife have, committed to reviewing those guidelines
Speaker:and as far as I understand is what I've heard is that that process will begin in quarter two of next year.
Speaker:No, you know, it wouldn't it would have been great if it was done two years ago
Speaker:and that the developers would then have had the certainty of, of a proper framework
Speaker:in which to make their applications.
Speaker:So they've found themselves in a, in a, in a sort of a guidance vacuum.
Speaker:So they've been plucking stuff willy nilly from other jurisdictions, mostly UK jurisdictions.
Speaker:And I suppose that's also not surprising because the consultancies are from the UK and that's the system they're familiar with.
Speaker:And also I want to state this for the records.
Speaker:They they apply UK guidance thinking and methodology to these applications.
Speaker:Is is the cheapest.
Speaker:It is the least precautionary.
Speaker:It does not include noise abatement.
Speaker:Oh so you can see where they come from.
Speaker:You would have some sympathy.
Speaker:You can see there's a sort of a small opening to save 50 million.
Speaker:70 million per project.
Speaker:You know, it's a lot of money. You can see why they'd want to save us.
Speaker:I mean, I imagine their shareholders are somewhat on the saving this poor project.
Speaker:So there's a lot at stake here.
Speaker:But at the same time, the overwhelming evidence is coming, you know, and you cannot pile in the North Sea.
Speaker:In the a Dutch sector by sector.
Speaker:The German sector.
Speaker:Without applying noise abatement, there are strict limits on how much noise you can make.
Speaker:There's a hydrophone in the water at 750 meter from your event, and listening in real time
Speaker:and integrating the noise it comes, and measuring this and comparing it to a number of other parameters for colors of noise and and peak noise.
Speaker:But most importantly, I think for cumulative noise.
Speaker:And there are hard limits. And if you hit those limits, you start
Speaker:intense directed accuracy mitigation.
Speaker:And I worked in the German auto and I can tell you there's
Speaker:considerable tension in the room where you're sitting in front of the computer screens watching the cumulative noise go up.
Speaker:Just go hug it up.
Speaker:I don't I don't know that particular operation. I don't know how what it cost per day.
Speaker:Certainly more than half of
Speaker:I could.
Speaker:Yeah. Could have been €1 million a day sort of operation.
Speaker:Any delay is just bonkers.
Speaker:So there's a lot at stake, but it can be done.
Speaker:And what we need now is the National Parks wildlife to look at this,
Speaker:to open the books on us. If you'd like to. And and we will be involved in that process.
Speaker:We will be making submissions and perhaps will be a working group put together. I sincerely hope so.
Speaker:When did a to be evolved?
Speaker:The developers would be, as are academics would be involved.
Speaker:Underwater acoustics is really complex.
Speaker:It's physics. I'm not a physics physicist.
Speaker:Kind of is is not a physicist. I'm not an acoustician. I read about this stuff.
Speaker:I understand the broad concepts, but when you actually get down to us, it's very complex.
Speaker:So there's a very important role for academia in that.
Speaker:And and again, it's evidence based.
Speaker:We're looking at the actual science.
Speaker:We're looking at receive levels for animals.
Speaker:What that means is is is it importance our isn't it.
Speaker:You know, we need to to make realistic assessments. There's some criticism of the German system.
Speaker:It's too simplistic.
Speaker:It's as is implies a step change conceptually, which says any mammal presents that receives X noise level will suffer ex injury.
Speaker:And any animal outside that will knows clearly that's a massive simplification of the natural world is step.
Speaker:So there's move towards those response curves and an understanding that not all animals will respond in the same way.
Speaker:And some of that comes from industry.
Speaker:And for those of you who are interested in reducing conservatism, essentially
Speaker:in these assessments, to say it's not actually that that, you know, and maybe there's some truth in that,
Speaker:but when you use a dose response model rather than a step change model, what you find is
Speaker:there are a great more animals in the far fields that are subject to disturbance,
Speaker:than perhaps had been originally assessed.
Speaker:So and then if we circle back to the harbor porpoises and our increasing understanding of their vulnerability to disturbance.
Speaker:You know.
Speaker:So, yeah.
Speaker:So I think I think it becomes insupportable that you would not use noise abatement.
Speaker:And just finally, perhaps on the noise web based, the UK is now looking at noise abatement there.
Speaker:They eventually they became an outlier.
Speaker:They were the they were the only jurisdiction that didn't always apply it or didn't ever applies.
Speaker:So and they've built a lot of wind farms.
Speaker:They built a lot of wind farms that are safe and sound travels as we know.
Speaker:But they are now looking at it seriously.
Speaker:It's starting to appear in documents.
Speaker:And I heard
Speaker:I've heard that that they're they're going to start insisting on it for new applications.
Speaker:We wait and see.
Speaker:But really let's are the not then become the outlier.
Speaker:Yeah. Well that's a that's that's the point.
Speaker:That's the point Stephen, you mentioned response of the animals.
Speaker:And so I want to, switch gears a little bit and say like once those, structures are already built right?
Speaker:We, we passed the build phase.
Speaker:Once they're built, how do they respond and adapt to them?
Speaker:The the structures being there?
Speaker:It's hard to say because, you know, then you start to come down to to the, to the, to the species that we have in Ireland.
Speaker:I mean, it's not entirely unique and it is comparable with other places.
Speaker:But, you know, we have more baleen whales, perhaps, than they have been on the UK side over in the North Sea.
Speaker:They've porpoises and not much else, you know, whereas here we've got 26 species of, of cetaceans recorders.
Speaker:Now a lot of those are deepwater species. They're not animals you're going to find in the Irish Sea.
Speaker:So I think there are a number of different elements to how a dolphin or a whale or poor boys that swimming around
Speaker:our sea will respond to these structures
Speaker:from the noise so that they continue to make a noise.
Speaker:I mean, as they generate electricity, you know, there are a lot of moving parts, their care boxes and so on.
Speaker:And there is a low level noise.
Speaker:It's a low frequency, constant noise. And it gets noisier as it gets windier.
Speaker:Saint Joseph but at the same time, the sea gets noisier as it gets when you so does that.
Speaker:So we're not worried are concerned about the operational noise for fixed bottom turbines.
Speaker:You know it's not a concern for the wildlife.
Speaker:If some if some if it's very windy and the thing is very noisy, it is a there's no it's it's it's continuous noise.
Speaker:It's not impulsive noise. And that's important to both of noise.
Speaker:You know yourself you know. Yes isn't working.
Speaker:And some hilarious person comes up behind you and the
Speaker:you know, there's a startle response.
Speaker:And also that high rise type is more likely to damage your hearing than a continuous noise.
Speaker:So I suppose you give the animals have more agency with a continuous noise.
Speaker:There's bit along the border. Let's of them. Perhaps they could swim off somewhere else, somewhere else.
Speaker:But there are, of course other effects to having structures in the sea.
Speaker:So if you take the Irish Sea, you know it's in an area that's that's flat. It's
Speaker:been very heavily fished for generations.
Speaker:It's it's flat. It doesn't have any three dimensional structures
Speaker:and it doesn't have a lot of growth on it.
Speaker:And then you put a big steel tube into us.
Speaker:All these organisms settle down and start to grow your muscles would be a good example.
Speaker:Sponges also.
Speaker:So it kicks off a little ecosystem, a unique ecosystem on this three dimensional structure.
Speaker:And you know, this is stuff that's well understood throughout the gas industry. They've had subsea structures for generations.
Speaker:So there is this argument, you know, on the surface of that okay.
Speaker:You say, well, listen, tastic.
Speaker:You know, we've got a new surface for, for marine creatures to grow and thrive and, and people correctly make the point.
Speaker:Yeah, but they're not the same creatures that would be there on muddy grounds.
Speaker:You know, they're new worlds. No, they're not as it they're not invasive species.
Speaker:But there is a there is potential to that.
Speaker:But you know, but they're not the ones that would naturally be there.
Speaker:My answer to that, it's a not a natural environment out there.
Speaker:We have been modifying us, you know, heavily since man, first through a line in off the shore and realized we could catch a fish,
Speaker:you know, so it's either those are knocked a knocked a winkle off the rock and that we have been modified.
Speaker:There isn't a it's an exaggeration to say they're in the square inch of the planet that hasn't been modified.
Speaker:But you know what I'm saying? Yeah. Yeah, it's heavily muddy. It's like.
Speaker:Anyway, it's like, like these, these novel ecosystems.
Speaker:I think it was, episode two 184, and we were talking about the novel ecosystems.
Speaker:It's kind of like a in that vein, something new is is appearing there.
Speaker:And I heard, on one of the conferences that the Seals tend to be finding good feeding grounds
Speaker:between those, those structures, because the naturally fish tends to congregate around underwater structures.
Speaker:As I'm sure every angler listening to this podcast know, and and so and so seals tends to be tends to aggregate more around them as well. So
Speaker:this is
Speaker:tell me like is there a role for citizen science or citizen scientists to be engaged in in this sort of
Speaker:in monitoring marine mammal wildlife around those farms or in, you know, any way of influencing the decisions, like you said, for example, to,
Speaker:use the noise mitigation practices, anything like so in other words, you know, you
Speaker:you mentioned that when you know how you deal with that and what I'm taking very naturally from that
Speaker:is that you have a sense of agency over what's going on, and sense of agency always helps to deal with whatever that is.
Speaker:So that's my question about the citizen science.
Speaker:Is there any agency that that citizens who are concerned, can have and what they can do?
Speaker:Well, I mean, yes.
Speaker:Gets was yes.
Speaker:Join an NGO, get involved.
Speaker:It's an elbow to elbow thing for me to say,
Speaker:there's Irish whales and dolphins where you could, you could pick there as well in dolphin group
Speaker:as a, as a representative NGO in the marine in the marine space there until you get a description link in the description.
Speaker:So yeah. Yeah. Exactly.
Speaker:And you know that that the main, the main NGOs in the marine sector, the wildlife group Birdwatch, Irish Wildlife Trust and so on,
Speaker:and so and coastal with me.
Speaker:Sorry, can't you know, and we all do what we do.
Speaker:The asshole dolphin group is a primary data holder, and a great deal of that data comes from citizen science.
Speaker:It has power. Data has power information.
Speaker:Every game is a game of information.
Speaker:If you have information, what can you say? If you have no information, what can you say? You can't say anything.
Speaker:What's your. It's talking about your emotions and your opinions.
Speaker:But your opinions are based on that thing. So it's all about information.
Speaker:So there's one of the best as maintained as sightings database back to 2005.
Speaker:It's robust.
Speaker:It's good data.
Speaker:It's validated data.
Speaker:You know, you rig up.
Speaker:Well the other groups that I saw, I'm sure it's, it's a pilot. What?
Speaker:It's all boats with you know, and then hang up.
Speaker:We don't go. Oh, yeah, this guy is also pilot. Well, and that goes in as a pilot. Well, record.
Speaker:No, you will be quizzed and we'll get to the bottom of whether it was a pilot, whether or not I just,
Speaker:I just say that like, recorded an episode with the, with a gentleman who used to work as a forest ranger in the UK
Speaker:and he was talking about the recorders, like people were sending records.
Speaker:What did they see in the, in the forest and the monk are other, you know, lions, panthers, the usual stuff.
Speaker:There was a Jabberwocky also. And he's like, yeah.
Speaker:And that that is the record that we have that someone saw and they even drew a picture there.
Speaker:So you you don't do that.
Speaker:Hey, can you tell me exactly about this sea monster that just the Kraken?
Speaker:We saw the cracker. I think,
Speaker:so Burke really manages the the sightings and the sighting.
Speaker:Based on all that validation, I think you've had Burke on this show. Yes.
Speaker:Or if it's very, very effective.
Speaker:And he we. Those are, if necessary, downgrades.
Speaker:You know, you might go from. Oh, it was definitely winky whales.
Speaker:We just gotta put it in as well species because we're not sure now that of course biases,
Speaker:biases the data sets if you like to.
Speaker:It perhaps shrinks it to some extent, but it is important that the data is accurate.
Speaker:Otherwise what's it for?
Speaker:But then again, when you then when you step outside that and say, well, what is it for?
Speaker:It's a record of the presence of an animal or a group of animals in a place on a day.
Speaker:But if you extend that out to the Irish esthetics, which is huge, you know, you cannot generate a density estimates
Speaker:for the for anywhere on the basis of data that was collected without recorded effort.
Speaker:So if you stand on a headland or you're in an aircraft or you're in a boat and you are,
Speaker:recording whether dolphins license
Speaker:you do that as part of a very carefully designed process
Speaker:that will result in strong statistics and a measure of uncertainty so that you can generate this density estimates,
Speaker:you know, these distant samples, there's all these very statistical big bring to bear, but it's all based on your efforts.
Speaker:So what's your what was recorded is your effort.
Speaker:You were in a boat. You were traveling at 12 knots. You were an aircraft.
Speaker:You're traveling at all hundred and 50 yards. You were
Speaker:you were an hour on a headland.
Speaker:You were two hours ahead.
Speaker:So in so you you're you're at the units of time,
Speaker:becomes two units of effort and then you look at the area and you can generate statistics from that.
Speaker:So citizen science is very important but it is presence only.
Speaker:Data is still presence absence there.
Speaker:You can't say there was no well there the day before.
Speaker:No no you weren't there the day before.
Speaker:So so it's very that's very important to draw the distinction.
Speaker:But it must be said it still has considerable power because it has.
Speaker:Nobody else has. Is
Speaker:you know, we have a record for an animal there on that day.
Speaker:If we didn't have that records, nobody would know.
Speaker:So then when you map and then we, we look at thousands and thousands of records and you map them and you go, oh rock.
Speaker:Well, obviously you're going to have clusters where you've got clusters of volunteers and citizen scientists putting in, putting it in there.
Speaker:All you can do is you can deal statistically with that as well. You can. It's complex.
Speaker:Use this thing called ensemble modeling.
Speaker:There's a there's a tendency to use words like tools.
Speaker:This wonderful group, Miguel just finishing up his PhD, you know, and he use really good modeling techniques.
Speaker:So he took the database specifically robust. And then he did habitat modeling.
Speaker:And he was able to make inference from it is really impressive that you can do it
Speaker:because there's sort of an old fashioned notion that, oh, it's there's no I from the sources.
Speaker:We can't do anything with it. Turns out you can't. And statistics are more and more sophisticated.
Speaker:Modeling is more sophisticated then they can you can tease the information out because the information is in there.
Speaker:But it's just a cheese.
Speaker:Cheese rolls in a way that you can present. And it's plausible and you can send over it.
Speaker:So we well did that.
Speaker:So it has power that's there as well.
Speaker:Dorf group, which for the science, we also operate a stranding scheme.
Speaker:So we've got a data set of, of both live and dead stranded animals or rock culture.
Speaker:That's also important. Back to the pork was is in the Irish Sea.
Speaker:The trend is. Oh, okay. Good. That's good news. The trend is up.
Speaker:You know there there are more the you know there are more dead pork was is on the beach over time.
Speaker:It's it's you know, it's hard data. It's there we have it.
Speaker:So that's a good news.
Speaker:This is a good point of view.
Speaker:It's it's good news. We have a good news, folks. More purposes.
Speaker:You heard us here.
Speaker:Yeah, yeah. So.
Speaker:But it shows the power of the data, and it's citizen science.
Speaker:Summary.
Speaker:An Irish well driving group member, Arnott is walking on the beach with their dog or driving on a road, and they look out the goal.
Speaker:What's that? And they go over and have a look at that. Well, it's a day. It's dolphin. I don't know what it is.
Speaker:What do you do when you find a dead dolphin and then, you know, maybe make a call and they end up talking to
Speaker:to surf for somebody at the office, the strandings officer there have to take a photograph to send it in suddenly.
Speaker:Got that?
Speaker:I actually that's a good point to mention. Like I actually made a video a couple of years ago.
Speaker:Now it might be, you know, like the the website might change, might have changed.
Speaker:But I made a video, which is on my YouTube channel, how to record a stranding on, on
Speaker:on your website and, you know, and I don't donate as an example because I found the, dolphin.
Speaker:And so they get okay, so, folks, this is what you do.
Speaker:So anyone who is interested, you can go to my, my YouTube channel.
Speaker:That video is there.
Speaker:And yeah, I just recorded stranding. And you don't have to be a member of Irish Diving.
Speaker:Does anyone? There's no one. There's no no, no, it's there's an app. Like I said, that video is a couple of years old.
Speaker:So probably things changes are even easier than they used to be.
Speaker:Steven, if you could implement one policy change tomorrow for better protecting,
Speaker:marine mammals, marine life around those offshore wind farms, what other would be noise abatement
Speaker:sympathizers that you bring
Speaker:that you to find an acceptable level of noise, and then you bring the technology to bear
Speaker:to table or the club or I about
Speaker:this is so it's not so it's not so that policy like you said, it's it's we're still lagging and that's why we're not there yet.
Speaker:And I am confident there's momentum now, you know.
Speaker:And, and people are becoming more aware of it or whatever has a problem.
Speaker:There are also they are aware of the solutions to the
Speaker:you know and we we try to maintain our portfolio with the, with Google departments, which is some work with tech,
Speaker:which is work very practical as we try and keep those channels open and to to keep the message coming.
Speaker:And over time I'm built.
Speaker:Expertise is an exaggeration.
Speaker:I did say I'm neither a physicist nor an acoustician,
Speaker:but my understanding of of the old world noise based and the science behind us is improving over time.
Speaker:My ability to perhaps, to to both directly lobby because we're an NGO and we do lobby, but we're lobbying based on science.
Speaker:We're not lobbying based on emotion.
Speaker:Our opinion, it's sides, folks, if you enjoying this episode, remember to subscribe to my newsletter.
Speaker:The link is also in the description of the show, along with the other links.
Speaker:Go in there and you will get much more content, not only notification is about the new episodes of the podcast.
Speaker:Stephen, to wrap this up, if you look at your into your crystal ball, how do you see the future of oceans of seas and what role in this,
Speaker:the offshore wind and renewables are playing that the seas are there under pressure, you know, along with the rest of the planet.
Speaker:The seas are under pressure, and perhaps
Speaker:it's under pressure in ways that are more difficult to predict.
Speaker:Tipping points perhaps will have more profound effects as well.
Speaker:There is a a new focus to the marine, particularly in Ireland.
Speaker:I was at a ministry, a conference on ocean knowledge 2030 just yesterday and the day before, and I guess noble.
Speaker:And there is this not renewed.
Speaker:It's a new focus on the sea.
Speaker:And a lot of this is coming from
Speaker:the necessity to build offshore wind drones.
Speaker:You know, suddenly we have to look at this. We have to engage with this in a way we didn't have to before.
Speaker:It was sort of abstract, with the exception of the fisheries.
Speaker:So, you know that that that was a very live thing, a live issue managed by a common Fisheries Policy ministry for involved in that.
Speaker:Various agencies.
Speaker:But but but only for a week.
Speaker:But now we've got our very to examine, think about to work out how we're going to do it,
Speaker:but also the interaction that we know already and everything else.
Speaker:Fisheries blue.
Speaker:The prime example.
Speaker:So suddenly everyone's attention is on this now.
Speaker:And that can only be good.
Speaker:You know, this this concept of sea blindness people talk about in this country, we're an island nation, but we're sea blind.
Speaker:It's. So you're aware of this?
Speaker:Of course.
Speaker:Are, but things are changing because our focus is now is is being pulled offshore because we've this work to do.
Speaker:So we need to catch up.
Speaker:We need to catch up in terms of, of, students, you know, taking courses.
Speaker:You know, it's going to be a big industry.
Speaker:And, and not only the industrial side of it, but also the ecology that underpins the planning decisions.
Speaker:All this is the this, you know, we're going to need young people to move into that space to become experts.
Speaker:It's very important.
Speaker:So it starts there.
Speaker:It starts in secondary schools, primary schools, you know, getting kids interested in this stuff and it moves out or not.
Speaker:And then into the state agencies, the government departments, Covid itself, awareness, awareness, words and more resources.
Speaker:Doing blocks where you know, where, where as I said at the beginning, we're starting from quite a low base.
Speaker:In terms of, of of that engagements with the marine, with exceptions.
Speaker:Quotes from George Lopez.
Speaker:But that's turning around now.
Speaker:And more resources are going in, more people are being employed.
Speaker:New agents, Mara, brand new agency involved license and and say, you know, brand spanking new agency, very, very impressive.
Speaker:Impressive approach. Their approach, the breadth of their and are doing is nice.
Speaker:You know what I mean?
Speaker:Does not an of the old foreshore acts of the 30s slapped slapdash bits and pieces added on or a shrug.
Speaker:It's not my job. That's somebody else's job. Those days are over.
Speaker:We're taking it. Have taken it on head on, though, in a way we never had before.
Speaker:So I would take us, I take a positive message from that.
Speaker:But the overarching messages, we're under pressure.
Speaker:We have a lot to do.
Speaker:We're starting very loose.
Speaker:Stephen, thank you so much. Appreciate your time. Thank you very much. So lovely.
Speaker:Oh, it's, before you go, since you stick to the end of this show, then first and foremost, thank you so much for listening and for watching.
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