Outreach Archives - ECOWind https://ecowind.uk/category/outreach/ Connecting science and policy for the coexistence of offshore wind and thriving marine ecosystems Thu, 18 Dec 2025 12:49:21 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 https://ecowind.uk/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/cropped-favicon-32x32.png Outreach Archives - ECOWind https://ecowind.uk/category/outreach/ 32 32 ECOFlow & ECOWind Newsletter December 2025 https://ecowind.uk/ecoflow-ecowind-newsletter-december-2025/ Thu, 18 Dec 2025 12:18:48 +0000 https://ecowind.uk/?p=945 Welcome to the ECOFlow & ECOWind newsletter - which will cover...

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Climate Change & the Seabed – ECOWind ACCELERATE Webinar https://ecowind.uk/climate-change-the-seabed-ecowind-accelerate-webinar/ Thu, 11 Dec 2025 15:01:51 +0000 https://ecowind.uk/?p=924 Researchers from the ECOWind ACCELERATE project hosted a webinar on Tuesday 2 December 2025 presenting the latest UK climate change projections to 2100. The session formed part of ECOWind’s webinar series showcasing the science that supports sustainable offshore wind development.

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Researchers from the ECOWind ACCELERATE project hosted a webinar on Tuesday 2 December 2025 presenting the latest UK climate change projections to 2100. The session formed part of ECOWind’s webinar series showcasing the science that supports sustainable offshore wind development.

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Advice on effective and scalable assessment and monitoring of epibenthic communities  https://ecowind.uk/advice-on-effective-and-scalable-assessment-and-monitoring-of-epibenthic-communities/ Wed, 26 Nov 2025 11:06:01 +0000 https://ecowind.uk/?p=908 A blog by ACCELERATE – November 2025 Interim results on benthic communities across the Eastern Irish Sea, comparing habitat and benthic assemblages inside/outside OWF  Lisa Skein (National Oceanography Centre) is leading a report based on a study that characterised benthic biotopes across the Eastern Irish Sea. As future baseline and monitoring surveys will increasingly include […]

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A blog by ACCELERATE – November 2025

Interim results on benthic communities across the Eastern Irish Sea, comparing habitat and benthic assemblages inside/outside OWF 

Lisa Skein (National Oceanography Centre) is leading a report based on a study that characterised benthic biotopes across the Eastern Irish Sea. As future baseline and monitoring surveys will increasingly include autonomous approaches (e.g. Autonomous Underwater Vehicles (AUVs), camera work, AI-based data analysis), this study focused on epibenthic megafauna captured in seabed imagery. After analysing >1300 seabed images collected by the ACCELERATE project, the team found indications that benthic communities, on similar substrata, may be different inside and outside OWFs. Additional images, ideally from multiple OWFs, would help confirm these results. The data were classified into biotopes using the Marine Habitat Classification of Britian and Northern Ireland and combined with a larger biotope dataset, made possible through contributions from ACCELERATE’s industry partners, who similarly used imagery to classify benthic biotopes as part of pre-construction ecological characterisation. The unified datasetis now being used as part of the ACCELERATE work, to model changes in biotope (habitat) distributions following the development of offshore windfarms under a changing climate.  

The study highlights the importance of consistency in the collection and analysis of seabed imagery, and of data collected at the relevant spatial and temporal scales.  This leads to the following advice on effective and scalable assessment and monitoring of epibenthic communities to strengthen baselines and the ability to detect changes: 

  • Seabed imagery data from underwater cameras mounted on towed sledges, remotely operated vehicles (ROVs) or AUVs provide direct visual evidence of seafloor habitats, including information on substrata and resident biological communities. These images reflect some of the biotic and abiotic features that influence ecosystem processes, like sediment grain size and stabilisation, bioturbation and organic matter deposition. To understand how these features and the processes change inside windfarms, seabed images are best collected both within and outside of an operational windfarm at comparable substrata and depths, both before and after windfarm construction. We advocate for researchers to have access to such monitoring datasets to support more strategic, data-driven decisions on monitoring, impact assessment, and marine spatial planning. 
  • Consistency and comparability in seabed imagery between different studies, regions, and time periods will impact scalability of results that are needed for strategic and adaptive decision making. This depends on imagery acquisition, analysis, annotation, and data flows, including archiving and sharing in accessible standards. Data acquisitionplatforms and camera settings are best not too dissimilar, and analysis of seabed imagery will be more robust via collaboration across academia and industry, with stronger datasets as a result. This is also an important step towards Machine Learning algorithms trained on high-quality datasets that can significantly speed up analysis in the near future.  These recommendations are in line with the Benthic Imagery Action Plan from The Big Picture initiative led by the Joint Nature Conservation Committee. 
  • Marine benthic habitats and ecological communities in the Eastern Irish Sea are heterogeneous, where communities vary over multiple spatial scales linked to burrows over several centimetres to gradients in hydrodynamics over multiple kilometres, within or outside windfarms. The design of seabed imagery acquisition surveys must therefore explicitly account for the scale of ecological variability driven by physical environmental properties and processes, ensuring representation of communities from different environmental niches (e.g. substratum type and depth). Benthic communities and processes also vary over temporal scales, from diurnal to seasonal, to windfarm operational lifetime and climate change. Whilst not all temporal scales can be covered in a monitoring framework, the design must be tuned to the important drivers of expected ecological change. The temporal design of seabed imagery surveys can be adaptive as systems stabilise at different rates, but we can’t monitor the future seabed. The ACCELERATE team are therefore using imagery and biotope datasets alongside high-resolution environmental data to develop predictive models that can estimate future changes in the distribution of habitats, biodiversity and the ecosystem services under scenarios of offshore windfarm expansion and forecasted climate change. 

 

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ECOFlow & ECOWind Newsletter September 2025 https://ecowind.uk/ecoflow-ecowind-newsletter-september-2025/ Wed, 01 Oct 2025 11:35:59 +0000 https://ecowind.uk/?p=885 Welcome to the ECOFlow & ECOWind newsletter – which will cover the most recent outcomes from across the ECOFlow & ECOWind Programmes, alongside relevant news and opportunities that relate to the coexistence of offshore wind and thriving marine ecosystems.

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Welcome to the ECOFlow & ECOWind newsletter – which will cover the most recent outcomes from across the ECOFlow & ECOWind Programmes, alongside relevant news and opportunities that relate to the coexistence of offshore wind and thriving marine ecosystems.

The post ECOFlow & ECOWind Newsletter September 2025 appeared first on ECOWind.

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ECOWind & ECOFlow Newsletter June 2025 https://ecowind.uk/ecowind-ecoflow-newsletter-june-2025/ Mon, 11 Aug 2025 09:36:02 +0000 https://ecowind.uk/?p=836 Welcome to the ECOWind & ECOFlow newsletter – which will cover the most recent outcomes from across the ECOWind & ECOFlow Programmes, alongside relevant news and opportunities that relate to the coexistence of offshore wind and thriving marine ecosystems.

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Welcome to the ECOWind & ECOFlow newsletter – which will cover the most recent outcomes from across the ECOWind & ECOFlow Programmes, alongside relevant news and opportunities that relate to the coexistence of offshore wind and thriving marine ecosystems.

The post ECOWind & ECOFlow Newsletter June 2025 appeared first on ECOWind.

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ECOWind Newsletter April 2024 https://ecowind.uk/ecowind-newsletter-april-2024/ Thu, 07 Aug 2025 15:45:38 +0000 https://ecowind.uk/?p=828 Welcome to the ECOWind newsletter, which covers the most recent outcomes of all elements of the ECOWind Programme, alongside relevant news and opportunities that relate to the coexistence of offshore wind and thriving marine ecosystems.

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Welcome to the ECOWind newsletter, which covers the most recent outcomes of all elements of the ECOWind Programme, alongside relevant news and opportunities that relate to the coexistence of offshore wind and thriving marine ecosystems.

The post ECOWind Newsletter April 2024 appeared first on ECOWind.

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Annual Impact Meeting Report 2024 https://ecowind.uk/annual-impact-meeting-report-2024/ Thu, 20 Mar 2025 16:27:57 +0000 https://ecowind.uk/?p=647 The Annual Impact Meeting (AIM) serves as a platform uniting academia, policy and industry to overcome communication barriers, disseminate high-impact research, and foster collaboration. The meeting aims to translate cutting-edge research from ECOWind and ECOFlow into actionable solutions and identify opportunities for real-world applications. Find out what was discussed at the most recent meeting: AIM […]

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The Annual Impact Meeting (AIM) serves as a platform uniting academia, policy and industry to overcome communication barriers, disseminate high-impact research, and foster collaboration. The meeting aims to translate cutting-edge research from ECOWind and ECOFlow into actionable solutions and identify opportunities for real-world applications.

Find out what was discussed at the most recent meeting: AIM Summary Report 2024

   

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ECOWind Newsletter December 2023 https://ecowind.uk/ecowind-newsletter-december-2023/ Thu, 07 Aug 2025 15:41:17 +0000 https://ecowind.uk/?p=821 Welcome to the ECOWind newsletter, which covers the most recent outcomes of all elements of the ECOWind Programme, alongside relevant news and opportunities that relate to the coexistence of offshore wind and thriving marine ecosystems.

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Welcome to the ECOWind newsletter, which covers the most recent outcomes of all elements of the ECOWind Programme, alongside relevant news and opportunities that relate to the coexistence of offshore wind and thriving marine ecosystems.

The post ECOWind Newsletter December 2023 appeared first on ECOWind.

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ECOWind Policy Masterclass Tackles Fisheries Management https://ecowind.uk/latest-ecowind-policy-masterclass-tackles-fisheries-management/ Wed, 28 Aug 2024 13:09:35 +0000 https://ecowind.uk/?p=588 The latest ECOWind Policy Masterclass looked into the relationship between the renewable energy sector and fisheries management, equipping attendees with an in-depth knowledge of the policy surrounding this subject. Watch a recording of this masterclass here:

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The latest ECOWind Policy Masterclass looked into the relationship between the renewable energy sector and fisheries management, equipping attendees with an in-depth knowledge of the policy surrounding this subject.

Watch a recording of this masterclass here:

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ECOWind Policy Masterclass: Five Capitals Marine Management https://ecowind.uk/new-ecowind-policy-masterclass-five-capitals-marine-management/ Mon, 22 Jul 2024 15:48:08 +0000 https://ecowind.uk/?p=581 This ECOWind Policy Masterclass focuses on the five capitals model in the marine environment. Assessing and integrating natural, human, social, manufactured, and financial capital, as well as their interactions to inform decision-making. Catch up on the masterclass below:

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This ECOWind Policy Masterclass focuses on the five capitals model in the marine environment. Assessing and integrating natural, human, social, manufactured, and financial capital, as well as their interactions to inform decision-making.

Catch up on the masterclass below:

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