DocumentCode :
1362004
Title :
Listening in
Author :
Riddoch, L.
Volume :
4
Issue :
14
fYear :
2009
Firstpage :
72
Lastpage :
73
Abstract :
Active sonar is being ´trained´ to identify sea mammals in a bid to cut the costs of monitoring tidal turbines and speed up the development of marine energy in Britain. The sonar is just one part of the technological response to a very human - and animal - problem. Will underwater turbines harm seals, dolphins and sea birds? And how would we know if they did? The world´s largest environmental marine-energy monitoring project in Northern Ireland has not found that tidal turbines are having a measurable impact on seals, dolphins and sea-birds after three years of a five-year study. But, while marine biologists say it could take a decade to be sure, developers say more expensive monitoring could cripple the fledgling tidal energy industry. Academics are hoping technology might offer a compromise.
Keywords :
environmental factors; monitoring; safety; sonar detection; tidal power stations; turbines; UK tidal energy; active sonar systems; environmental marine-energy monitoring project; marine energy; sea mammals; tidal energy industry; tidal turbines; underwater turbines;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Engineering & Technology
Publisher :
iet
ISSN :
1750-9637
Type :
jour
Filename :
5229515
Link To Document :
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