Friday, May 3, 2024

Renewable energy company prepares to let the grass grow under our feet

Renewable energy company Ørsted and marine charity Ocean Conservation Trust have joined forces on an innovative scheme to help people avoid damaging precious seagrass meadows.

The Blue Meadows marker buoy initiative aims to address a principal problem of seagrass conservation – identifying the location of seagrass beds to swimmers, fishers and others using the water.  By clearly signalling where seagrass beds are found, Blue Meadows is helping swimmers, divers and fishers and boat enthusiasts to avoid them and prevent damage from anchoring. The scheme will also raise awareness with as many people as possible about the existence and importance of seagrass.

Seagrass is a valuable solution to climate change, due to its huge capacity for carbon absorption. Similar to the way trees take carbon from the air, seagrass takes carbon from water – and can do this as least as efficiently as tropical rainforests. It also provides a biodiversity-rich habitat for several species – including commercially important fish species and charismatic, endangered seahorses – helps protect against tidal erosion and improves water quality.

This work builds on Ørsted’s long term commitment to environmentally responsible wind farm development and aligns with The Crown Estate’s accountability for enhancing marine biodiversity. Importantly to Ørsted, the Blue Meadows initiative presents an opportunity to deliver benefits to biodiversity at a sea-scape level and is another step towards achieving the company’s promise to deliver a net-positive biodiversity impact for all projects commissioned from 2030 onwards.

A message from the Editor:

Thank you for reading this story on our news site - please take a moment to read this important message:

As you know, our aim is to bring you, the reader, an editorially led news site and magazine but journalism costs money and we rely on advertising, print and digital revenues to help to support them.

With the Covid-19 pandemichaving a major impact on our industry as a whole, the advertising revenues we normally receive, which helps us cover the cost of our journalists and this website, have been drastically affected.

As such we need your help. If you can support our news sites/magazines with either a small donation of even £1, or a subscription to our magazine, which costs just £31.50 per year, (inc p&P and mailed direct to your door) your generosity will help us weather the storm and continue in our quest to deliver quality journalism.

As a subscriber, you will have unlimited access to our web site and magazine. You'll also be offered VIP invitations to our events, preferential rates to all our awards and get access to exclusive newsletters and content.

Just click here to subscribe and in the meantime may I wish you the very best.








Latest news

Related news