10 billion people and farmed fish
We produce, eat and waste food like a drunken sailor. Can farmed fish help us tackle global warming? Why bother? If the Earth’s food production … Read more
I am not an oceanographer. Nor a marine biologist or meteorologist. I don’t have any degrees in natural science whatsoever.
Yet, I am concerned about the state of the ocean.
My connection to the ocean is windsurfing, so this blog will have a bit of that too.
The idea of the ocean as an inexhaustible resource is long gone. Well, at least it should be. We went too far; took most of its fish, dumped our garbage and polluted and heated it.
Now we need to strike the balance between the urgent need for renewable energy, minerals, food and carbon storage against the equally urgent need to preserve marine ecosystems.
Good news are easy to find too. Like the convention on biological diversity (the natural world’s "Paris agreement”) reached in December 2022 which included preservation of 30 per cent of the world’s oceans by 2030.
The accelerating development of offshore wind is another example of good news.
Some techno-optimists, companies and governments would firmly say yes. Offshore wind could provide 420,000 TWh electricity per year, which is almost ten times global electricity demand.
Others would ask; how will giant, noisy construction sites and rotors of 220 meters in diameter affect life below and above the sea surface? It’s complicated. No doubt.
I want to know how much we can take from the ocean to tackle the climate crisis with as little damage to the marine environment as possible.
We produce, eat and waste food like a drunken sailor. Can farmed fish help us tackle global warming? Why bother? If the Earth’s food production … Read more
The position as asset manager overseeing the frozen world is now open. Application deadline: ASAP. If someone told me our family would run out of … Read more
Whenever I am in a big city, one of the first things I do is to orient myself and figure out in which direction the … Read more
Combined with the Montreal agreement, the High Seas Treaty can make life harder for ocean burglars
Who are the criminals, what do they steal and how much damage do they cause? Ocean criminals can be either of the three categories: The … Read more