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MAINE: The Intense, Lobster-Fueled Fight Over Americaโ€™s First Floating Wind Farm

March 25, 2021 โ€” Thereโ€™s a rumble brewing out in the ocean, and it could forecast some troubles ahead for renewable energy. It involves some of Maineโ€™s small fishermen, a high-profile wind project in the state, and an aggressive showdown with a research vessel earlier this week.

Erik Waterman is a fourth-generation fisherman in South Thomaston, Maine who has been fishing in the area for more than 30 years. (His daughter also fishes, he said in a Facebook direct message, and his grandmother was an independent lobsterwoman. โ€œIโ€™m pretty proud,โ€ he said). He said that word of Sundayโ€™s protest, which he joined on his fishing boat and emphasized was โ€œpeaceful,โ€ spread by word-of-mouth through local fishing communities. By his count, between 80 and 90 boats participated.

The boat that the lobstermen surrounded on Monday was actually conducting a seabed survey for the cable, completing some of the research needed to determine the impacts of the Aqua Ventus project. For his part, Watermanโ€”who sent over a picture of him and his daughter with a 460-pound (209-kilogram) bluefin tuna he said they caught in the area where the wind turbine would be installedโ€”said he is afraid of what the installation of this one turbine could mean for the rest of the ocean where he fishes.

โ€œWe fear for our livelihood because if this single turbine gets a foothold, it will most definitely snowball up and down our pristine coast,โ€ Waterman said. โ€œOur way of life providing seafood for the world will be forever altered.โ€

While a lobstermanโ€™s salary is on the modest end, itโ€™s still a coveted profession in Maine, where some wait decades for a chance to get a commercial lobster fishing license with the state. Maine lobstermen have enjoyed a healthy harvest over the past decade, with record-high sales and demand for their product accompanied with high levels of catch, which some scientists say is attributable to warming waters in the Gulf of Maine. But as the waters keep warming, some studies project that lobster populations could decline as much as 60% by 2050.

But even a huge deployment of offshore wind all along the East Coast would only take up a tiny portion of the ocean, NREL noted, meaning โ€œfishing would continue normally in most ocean areas.โ€ Experts have said that it appears that offshore wind turbines in Europe may actually have beneficial effects on some species of fish (fish may like the artificial reefs that moored turbines provide). Thereโ€™s still comparatively little research, however, on the specific impacts offshore wind could have on fisheries. Thatโ€™s particularly true around U.S. shores, which is simply because there are so few offshore wind farms, said Miriam Goldstein, the director of ocean policy at the Center for American Progress.

โ€œA lot of [the research] comes from Europe, so itโ€™s not completely analogous,โ€ she said. โ€œAnd the reason for that is that Europe has a lot of wind farms, and the U.S. has two.โ€

However, Goldstein pointed out that there is a large body of research how fish and other ocean life have responded to another type of structure thatโ€™s been in US waters for decades: oil rigs. And from that research, it appears that the impact is mixed.

โ€œPutting a bunch of hard structures in the ocean is good for things that like it and not good for things that donโ€™t,โ€ Goldstein said, noting that some oil rigs have become coveted spots to fish red snapper.

Read the full story at Gizmodo

New report calls for balanced approach in growing US aquaculture industry

May 24, 2019 โ€” A new report by an American think tank on the state of the U.S. aquaculture industry highlights the challenges and opportunities facing domestic seafood farming in state and federal waters.

The Washington, D.C., U.S.A.-based Center for American Progress found that aquaculture offers major economic benefits, but it must be balanced with regulations to ensure the proper location, farm management practices, and species selection.

The authors, Alexandra Carter and Miriam Goldstein, addressed the debate over the regular framework necessary to expand mariculture in federal waters, offering analysis on where the industry is today and how agencies and industry stakeholders can move forward.

Carter and Goldstein primarily saw a lack of information on the industry and they wanted to create an educational non-biased product, Carter told SeafoodSource.

โ€œWe wanted to provide a briefing of the sector,โ€ Carter said. โ€œWe wanted to frame the project around the question on whether we should expand aquaculture into federal waters or not.โ€

Right now, Carter is encouraged to see the positive response from the industry and policymakers and hopes the report will provide a โ€œbaseboardโ€ for other NGOs (non-governmental organizations) and think tanks to follow up and do their own ocean aquaculture analysis projects.

โ€œWhile there has been congressional interest in regulating offshore aquaculture for a least a decade, it can best be characterized as intermittent,โ€ the authors wrote in the report.

Read the full story at Seafood Source

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