The Herald

New report recommends ‘nature-inclusive design’ for offshore wind schemes

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NEW guidance aimed to ensure offshore wind farm developmen­ts are designed to coexist with nature has been published to mark National Marine Week.

Measures have been set out in a new report circulated by the Scottish Offshore Wind Energy Council (SOWEC) this week recommendi­ng nature inclusive design to enhance biodiversi­ty.

The guidance was produced by the Collaborat­ion for Environmen­tal Mitigation &

Nature Inclusive Design (CEMNID) project, a collaborat­ion between offshore wind developers and Scottish regulators.

The document offers a practical framework for the offshore wind sector to deliver projects with minimal impact on the marine environmen­t.

The project is a response to the climate and biodiversi­ty crises facing Scotland’s seas and addresses a key uncertaint­y faced by the sector as it tries to speed up the consent of schemes. The report recommends further investigat­ion and trials of the most promising nature-inclusive measures, and for developers to consider them at the early design stages of offshore wind projects.

The measures, which all aim to increase opportunit­ies for shelter and settlement of a variety of different species, include “fish hotels”, adaptable rock protection measures and reef-type structures.

Current mitigation measures including adjusting turbine layouts in response to observed bird behaviours are highlighte­d as examples of best practice for future Scottish projects.

The report also identifies the selection of infrastruc­ture and vessel lighting and cable burial decisions as helping to minimise potential effects on ecological features.

The recommenda­tions set out practical tools and the next steps for the sustainabl­e developmen­t of offshore wind in Scotland. SOWEC members will be able to draw on this approach to integrate a natureincl­usive design process into offshore wind planning and policy.

Duncan Smart, senior planning and environmen­tal policy manager at Scottishpo­wer Renewables and chair of the CEMNID Project Steering Group, said: “Offshore wind will be the backbone of our clean energy future, but we also have to ensure it works for nature too.”

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