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International assessment of priority environmental issues for land-based and offshore wind energy development
Green, R.E.; Gill, E.; Hein, C.; Couturier, L.; Mascarenhas, M.; May, R.; Newell, D.; Rumes, B. (2022). International assessment of priority environmental issues for land-based and offshore wind energy development. Global Sustainability 5: e17. https://dx.doi.org/10.1017/sus.2022.14
In: Global Sustainability. Cambridge University Press: United Kingdom. e-ISSN 2059-4798, more
Peer reviewed article  

Available in  Authors 

Author keywords
    Environmental; turbines; wildlife; wind energy

Authors  Top 
  • Green, R.E.
  • Gill, E.
  • Hein, C.
  • Couturier, L.
  • Mascarenhas, M.
  • May, R.
  • Newell, D.
  • Rumes, B., more

Abstract
    A systematic assessment was performed using feedback from the international community to identify priority environmental issues for land-based and offshore wind energy development. Given the global nature of wind energy development, feedback was of interest from all countries where such development is underway or planned to help meet United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change targets. The assessment prioritized environmental issues over the next 5–10 years associated with wind energy development and received a total of 294 responses from 28 countries. For land-based wind, the highest-ranked issues included turbine collision risk for volant species (birds and bats), cumulative effects on species and ecosystems, and indirect effects such as avoidance and displacement. For offshore wind, the highest-ranked issues included cumulative effects, turbine collision risk, underwater noise (e.g. marine mammals and fish), and displacement. Emerging considerations for these priorities include potential application to future technologies (e.g. larger turbines and floating turbines), new stressors and species in frontier regions, and cumulative effects for multiple projects at a regional scale. For both land-based and offshore wind, effectiveness of minimization measures (e.g. detection and deterrence technologies) and costs for monitoring, minimization, and mitigation were identified as overarching challenges.

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