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Environmental benefits of leaving offshore infrastructure in the ocean

journal contribution
posted on 2018-12-01, 00:00 authored by A M Fowler, A M Jørgensen, J C Svendsen, Peter MacreadiePeter Macreadie, D O Jones, A R Boon, D J Booth, R Brabant, E Callahan, J T Claisse, T G Dahlgren, S Degraer, Q R Dokken, A B Gill, D G Johns, R J Leewis, H J Lindeboom, O Linden, R May, A J Murk, G Ottersen, D M Schroeder, S M Shastri, J Teilmann, V Todd, G Van Hoey, J Vanaverbeke, J W Coolen
The removal of thousands of structures associated with oil and gas development from the world's oceans is well underway, yet the environmental impacts of this decommissioning practice remain unknown. Similar impacts will be associated with the eventual removal of offshore wind turbines. We conducted a global survey of environmental experts to guide best decommissioning practices in the North Sea, a region with a substantial removal burden. In contrast to current regulations, 94.7% of experts (36 out of 38) agreed that a more flexible case-by-case approach to decommissioning could benefit the North Sea environment. Partial removal options were considered to deliver better environmental outcomes than complete removal for platforms, but both approaches were equally supported for wind turbines. Key considerations identified for decommissioning were biodiversity enhancement, provision of reef habitat, and protection from bottom trawling, all of which are negatively affected by complete removal. We provide recommendations to guide the revision of offshore decommissioning policy, including a temporary suspension of obligatory removal.

History

Journal

Frontiers in ecology and the environment

Volume

16

Issue

10

Pagination

571 - 578

Publisher

John Wiley & Sons

Location

Chichester, Eng.

ISSN

1540-9295

eISSN

1540-9309

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article; C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2018, The Ecological Society of America

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