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2020 State of the Science Workshop

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The 2020 State of the Science Workshop, hosted by the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA) was held virtually from November 16-20, 2020. This workshop brought together over 430 stakeholders engaged with environmental and wildlife research relevant to offshore wind energy development. Workshop sessions focused on assessing the state of the knowledge regarding offshore wind development's cumulative effects on populations and ecosystems. 

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Following plenary presentations in November, seven workgroups formed to identify research priorities for understanding offshore wind's cumulative impacts on sea turtles, marine mammals, fishes and aquatic invertebrates, benthos, birds, bats, and oceanographic processes in the eastern United States. A final webinar in May 2021 brought together the leads from the seven workgroups to present the groups' recommendations and discuss common themes.

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Workshop Proceedings

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Plenary Sessions

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Workgroup Reports

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Culmination Webinar

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Plenary Sessions

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Highlights

With over 430 attendees from 21 states and 20 countries, the workshop brought together a diverse group to share knowledge on cumulative impacts to wildlife from offshore wind development.  Workshop presentations included 23 plenary speakers and 20 lightning talks, with discussions focused around cumulative impact frameworks, current knowledge on different wildlife taxa, known and hypothesized cumulative effects to wildlife from offshore wind energy development, and opportunities for regional coordination and collaboration to continue improving our understanding of offshore wind and marine ecosystems.

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Thank you to everyone who participated! The State of the Science 2020 Workshop Proceedings can be found here.

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Workshop Goals

This workshop brought together scientists to present and discuss their research. Workshop goals included:

  •  Assessing the state of the knowledge regarding offshore wind development's cumulative effects on populations and ecosystems, and

  • Working to identify key studies that could be conducted in the next 3-5 years to improve our understanding of cumulative biological impacts as the offshore wind industry develops in the U.S.

Scientific Program

Terms of Use for Presentation PDFs

Links to presentations from the workshop are provided below where available, courtesy of the presentation authors. These presentation files are provided for personal edification only, and should not be cited without contacting the author(s) directly. Users should not reuse or redistribute slides, or images on these slides, without express permission from the presentation author(s).

Monday, November 16

Session 1: Framework for Understanding Cumulative Impacts from Offshore Wind

Moderator:
Howard Rosenbaum, Wildlife Conservation Society

Opening remarks from NYSERDA

Doreen Harris, Acting president and CEO of the New York State Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA)

 

Welcome and Setting the Stage

Gregory Lampman, NYSERDA

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Cumulative anthropogenic impacts on the world's oceans

Sara Maxwell, University of Washington

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Framework for defining the scope of cumulative adverse effects assessments for offshore wind

Wing Goodale, Biodiversity Research Institute

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An ecosystem functioning approach for thinking about cumulative impacts

Steven Degraer, Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences

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Metapopulation PVA: Developing methods for reducing uncertainty in impact assessments

Julie Miller, Marine Scotland Science

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Q & A / Panel discussion

Tuesday, November 17

Session 2: European Efforts to Understand Cumulative Impacts from Offshore Wind

Moderator: Sophie Hartfield Lewis, Ørsted

Session 3: Lightning Talks Round 1

Moderator: Matt Robertson, Vineyard Wind

5-minute submitted talks on offshore wind and wildlife topics, followed by Q&A.

Abstracts | Presentations

Wednesday, November 18

Session 4: Current Knowledge on Cumulative Impacts I

Moderator:

Jillian Liner, Audubon

New York

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The Vineyard Wind SEIS: Assumptions made in the cumulative impact scenario

Ian Slayton, Bureau of Ocean Energy Management

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Cumulative impacts of displacement on seabirds

Stefan Garthe, Kiel University

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Cumulative impacts to birds from collisions with offshore wind farms

Aonghais Cook, British Trust for Ornithology

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Q & A / Panel discussion

Session 5: Current Knowledge on Cumulative Impacts II

Moderator:

Ruth Perry, Shell

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Cumulative physical effects of offshore wind energy development on oceanographic processes

Jeff Carpenter, Institute of Coastal Research, Helmholtz-Zentrum Geesthacht

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Cumulative effects of offshore wind on benthic habitats

Drew Carey, INSPIRE Environmental

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Cumulative noise impacts upon fishes (and turtles) from offshore wind construction and operation

Arthur Popper, University of Maryland & Anthony Hawkins, Loughine Ltd.

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Designing studies to detect the ecological impacts of offshore wind development

Elizabeth Methratta, contractor to NOAA Northeast Fisheries Science Center

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Q & A / Panel discussion

Thursday, November 19

Session 6: Current Knowledge on Cumulative Impacts III

Moderator:

Francine Kershaw, Natural Resources Defense Council

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Decision framework to identify populations that are vulnerable to population-level effects of disturbance

Cormac Booth, SMRU Consulting

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Cumulative noise impacts to marine mammals from offshore wind development and operations

Brandon Southall, Southall Environmental Associates Inc. & Howard Rosenbaum, Wildlife Conservation Society

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Vessel encounter risk model tool

Mary Jo Barkaszi, CSA Ocean Sciences Inc.

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Population impacts to bats from wind energy development

Cris Hein, National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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Q & A / Panel discussion

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Session 7: Lightning Talks Round 2

Moderator: Jenny Briot, Avangrid Renewables

5-minute submitted talks on offshore wind and wildlife topics, followed by Q&A.

Abstracts | Presentations

Friday, November 20

Session 8: Designing Studies to Assess Cumulative Impacts

Moderator:

Louis Brzuzy, Shell New Energies

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Synthesis of the science: interactions between offshore wind development and fisheries

Andrew Lipsky, NOAA Fisheries, Brian Hooker, Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Annie Hawkins, Responsible Offshore Development Alliance & Lyndie Hice-Dunton, Responsible Offshore Science Alliance

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Approaches to understanding cumulative effects of stressors on marine mammals

Peter Tyack, University of St. Andrews

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Designing monitoring to detect cumulative impacts and address the confounding variable of climate change

Jon Hare, NOAA Northeast Fisheries Science Center

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Q & A / Panel discussion

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Charge and process for working groups

Kate Williams, Biodiversity Research Institute

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Closing remarks

Kate McClellan Press, NYSERDA

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Session 9: Informal Breakout Groups

Group leads for the seven work groups hosted informal discussions to obtain initial input from workshop attendees. Learn more about work groups here.

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Culmination Webinar

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May 21, 2021

The culmination webinar brought together the leads from the seven workgroups to share each group's research recommendations and discuss common themes.

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View Recording

View Presentation Slides

Photo credits: Loggerhead sea turtle © Kate Sutherland; Offshore wind farm © Nicholas Doherty; Whale and birds © Humberto Braojos; Benthic habitat © Arhnue Tan; Offshore wind farm © Chuyuss

The Environmental Technical Working Group (E-TWG) is a New York State outreach and collaboration effort with environmental stakeholders and offshore wind energy developers from Maine to North Carolina.

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