EARTH 154 Final
What are the advantages of wind energy
- Renewable - No production of polluting gases (CLEAN ENERGY) - Free energy resource -provide/jobs and other economic activity -new habitat for wildlife -set far apart so they can still sail around them -tourism
What are disadvantages of wind energy
-bird and bat death -bird migration affected -ruin yachting and fishing areas -disrupt view and decrease property values -noise & lights
What are the advantages of tidal energy
-clean -inexpensive once set up -renewable -keeps CO2 out of atmosphere -when cost of fuel gets high, we won't need it
point absorber
-floats on surface -connected to seafloor with cables -converts rise and fall of waves into electricity
Disadvantages of Wave Energy
-marine life (organism killed) -leakage of hydraulic fluid -unsightly (NIMBY) -Noisy (above and below) -Shipping routes affected
Problems associated with utilizing tidal power
-marine life killed (fish, mammals caught in blades) -acoustic outputs affect marine organisms (underwater noise) -NIMBY -Corrosion -cause turbidity -problems for trade routes -changes in sediment
Advantages of Wave Energy
-renewable -cheap once installed -desalinate seawater(combat drought) -close to consumers
How can gas hydrates affect the seafloor environment
-where gas hydrates are exposed on the seafloor, they support life on the seafloor by providing energy to chemosynthetic bacteria -if hydrates are destabilized, they could form a landslide which could then form a tsunami
What are three regions where upwelling occurs
1. Equator 2. Western Edges of Continents (Coastal) 3. Antarctic
How much has sea level risen since the last ice age
130 meters
How many tides are there in a day?
2 high and 2 low, one on the side of Earth closest to moon and one furthest from moon
How much has sea level risen over the past 150 years
20 cm, large spike in temp caused this
How much energy for electricity is potentially available from offshore wind in the US compared to current electricity consumption?
4 times more electricity from offshore wind
How much is sea level predicted to rise by 2100
40cm
Convection Cell
A circular pattern of air rising, air sinking, and wind. The air heats, the density decreased and it rises, and then the air cools at high latitude and the density increases and the air sinks again
What is BSR?
A reflection that roughly parallels the seafloor reflection, presumably caused by the contrast between an overlying clathrate (gas hydrate) and underlying gas-saturated sediments or occasionally by opal transition
Caught most in oceans
Anchovy
Salmon Fisheries in Atlantic v Pacific
Atlantic: significantly reduced population, most not wild due to stocking of rivers, Weak population, needs to continue to be restocked Pacific: Alaskan: viable population, fishing controlled, California and Oregon: Reduced population near collapse, very restricted fishing
what technologies have made wind power more economical
Better and lighter materials, lighter weight, stronger, more efficient (corrosion resistance) There are also computer controlled turbines that can regulate pitch and direction.
Coral and Coral Reefs with temperatures rising
Bleached due to symbiotic algae leaving, become stressed and will most likely die
What is going on in Rhode Island with offshore wind
Block Island -first offshore wind farm in the US -very small 5 turbines -17,000 homes (30MW)
Neg affects by humans on reefs
Breakage due to direct contact, overfishing, pollution, changes in behavior from feeding/harassment
Two countries that catch the most fish
CHINA, second could be: Peru, India/ Indonesia
What is the acid that is causing the acidification of the oceans
CO2, as it increases in atmosphere it also increases in water and causes acid
With the release of methane what could happen in the seafloor when pressure is decreased (destabilization)
Can cause slope destabilization and could form a landslide. A large landslide could trigger a tsunami
Coriolis Effect
Causes moving air and water to turn left in the southern hemisphere and turn right in the northern hemisphere due to Earth's surface velocity to decrease towards poles.
Where do gas hydrates occur
Continental Margins (passive and active) (shelf and slope) and Arctic Permafrost
CITES
Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species, they are trying to add shark species to the endangered list
Coral Polyp, how is algae important, what are coral skeletons, and how do these relate to the reef
Coral polyp are tiny soft bodied organisms that have symbiotic algae inside of them. They secrete a skeleton on their base and they live and reproduce on the outside of the skeleton. These make up a coral reef
What projects are underway involving gas hydrate extraction and production
Different countries are investigating extraction techniques, countries include Japanese, Canadians, Germans, India, and US Projects in the Gulf and the Arctic trying to extract the gas hydrates and figure out how to commercially extract
How can pollution and disease be problems with aquaculture
Diseases will begin in a pen and be contained and spread to all of the fish in the unit
Why is there so much plastic in the oceans
Doesn't biodegrade just continues to break down into smaller pieces
Overtopping Devices
Elevate a reservoir and as water enters the reservoir there are turbines that harness the waves potential energy
Four things we can do to stop overfishing
End Gov Subsidies, farm herbivorous fish, register vessels, create rules and regulations and enforce them, establish no take zones
Europe vs US in wave and tidal Energy
Europe has much more already and planned than US, for they are committed to reducing CO2 outputs.
European countries with significant offshore wind projects
Germany, UK, Denmark, Netherlands
Where do coral grow what type of water do they need
Grow in tropics, clear, shallow water, with a constant warm temperature, for they are very sensitive
What is overfishing?
Harvesting so many fish of a species, especially immature fish, that not enough breeding stock is left to replenish the species and it becomes unprofitable to harvest them. -commercial depletion-extinction
Where does the US have a wave energy test site
Hawaii
What techniques are used to catch bluefin tuna
Helicopters find fish, small boats come off main boat and catch with purse sienes
Air goes from high pressure to low pressure... i.e
High latitude to low latitude
Sustainable fishing
Hook and line, harpooning, traps
Dead Zone
In a body of water, an area with extremely low oxygen concentration and very little life
Tidal Energy Projects in South Korea
Incheon Bay and Sihwa Lake
ICCAT
International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas, has no authority
Antarctic Upwelling
Intersection of polar easterlies, westerlies (coriolis effect and Ekman Transport) Surface currents diverge and upwelling caused by wind-driven ocean circulation
arctic ice melting affect sea level
It doesnt affect sea level, like ice cubes in a glass
Whats the net direction of water movement relative to the wind direction?
It moves at 90 degrees to the wind movement to the right in North, to the left in South
What are trends in energy from wind over the last 20 years
It slowly began to increase and then rose dramatically, exponential increase
oceanic gyre
Large system of circular ocean currents formed by global wind patterns and forces created by Earth's rotation
Ocean acidification affect on resources
Less dense skeletons, coral bleaching, shellfish and coral more fragile and smaller, oyster reproduction harmed, some organisms dissolving
How are gas hydrates formed?
Methane forms by the breakdown of organic matter in sediment, biogenic reactions break this down
Tidal energy
More advanced than Wave energy Some proven existing technology and installations: Korea:Lake Sihwa, Tidal barrage, lagoon, biggest in the world More under construction, Incheon Bay Tidal barrages: Canada, France Underwater Turbines, Pentland Firth Scotland, project expanding Technology still developing
Status of Reefs
Most are in danger
Bluefin Tuna population status
Mostly overfished in Japan and used for sushi, only 15-20 % left
NIMBY
Not In My Backyard attitude. People don't want things like landfills to be put where they live.
What is a problem with moving to deeper water
Not as much nutrients available due to lack of light
What are planned US offshore wind projects? Why here?
On the East Coast, there is a lot of wind here and a lot of consumers very close to the production site. Northeast US -Vineyard Wind Project (South Cape Cod) -Deepwater Wind built Block Island (Rhode Island)
Palau
Opened the first shark sanctuary and generate income from shark tourism
What three factors are needed to form gas hydrates
Organic carbon rich sediment, high pressure, low temperature
What is bycatch
Organisms unintentionally killed during the harvesting of a different, desirable species
5 ways salmon are under threat
Overfishing, require clean rivers, dams obstruct rivers, population modified by stocking, global warming
Types of devices needed for generating wave energy
Point Absorber (heave buoy, submerged pressure differential, oscillating wind surge), Attenuator, Overtopping Device, Terminator
trade winds
Prevailing winds that blow from 30 degrees north latitude to the equator and that blow from 30 degrees south latitude to the equator and curve to the west
Severn Estuary Tidal Barrage
Proposed barrage in the UK, it would have 1,026 turbines, it would produce 6.5 GW and give 5% of UK's electricity needs -did not happen bc it would affect marine life, shipping, but it was eventually rejected by UK Gov
Unsustainable Fishing Techniques
Purse sienes, gillnets, longline, trawling, dredging
Tuna Farming
Removes young fish from the water before they can reproduce and fattens up wild tuna before eating
Equatorial Upwelling
SE trades cross equator, the coriolis effect and Ekman transport cause divergence and water can upwell at the equator
What needs to be done to save the Tuna population
Set quotas and enforce them, and have international agreements
What are sharks mainly caught for
Shark fin soup, fins are cut off the rest is thrown back into water
Largest tidal power installation
Sihwa Lake in Korea
Sharks and overfishing by humans
Some are at risk of extinction but not all
Wave energy
Still in testing and development stage A few active projects exist (e.g., Australia)
wind energy
Technology well developed on land and offshore Many large offshore installations online Expanding industry Just starting offshore in the US: Block Island = first Planned:Vineyard Wind, Long Island
greenhouse effect
The Earth's surface warms up, and the long wavelength radiation emitted from the Earth's surface is absorbed by green house gases and the Earth's atmosphere heats up
What water is rich in nutrients
The cold deep water
Trend in climate change
The earth has cooled over the last 50-60 years, there has been a decrease in CO2 and temp decreased
Upwelling
The movement of deep, cold, and nutrient-rich water to the surface
Fishing down the food web
The process whereby fisheries in a given ecosystem, having depleted the large predatory fish on top of the food web, turn to increasingly smaller species, finally ending up with previously spurned small fish and invertebrates, everything is out of balance
How much carbon is stored in gas hydrates
There is more carbon stored in these than in oil, gas, and coal combined
What is the status as gas hydrates as an energy source
They are comparable to fossil fuels, but we do not have the technology to extract it on a commercial scale -Methane is the most abundant -also a lot of carbon in these
Decreasing ph affect animals that make a shell/skeleton
They have less carbonate ions available to make their skeletons, so they form weaker CaCO3 shells
What is problem with salmon on fish farms escaping into rivers
Threaten gene pool, genetic hybrids with interbreeding and different genetic makeup of salmon
Ways of generating electricity from tides
Tidal Barrage Tidal Lagoon Underwater Turbines (Tidal Stream Generator)
Coral as a resource
Tourism, fishing, biodiversity, protect shorelines
where is the biggest dead zone
US Gulf Coast
Where does US rank globally off-shore wind energy, who are world leaders
US is not ranked for offshore wind energy, leaders include Denmark and Germany
Incheon Bay
Under construction tidal barrages in South Korea
What characterizes the Earths climate over the last 2 million years? What causes these cycles?
Variations in the Earth's orbit causes these cycles, they affect the amount of sun energy that reaches earth. Glacial-Interglacial period, we are currently in an interglacial period
What is storm surge and how is it related to a hurricane
Water is piled up on coast by the storm and winds, destructive to coast
Relative status of electricity generation of wave vs tidal vs wind
Wave energy is very experimental, not many developments. Tidal energy has more development than waves, but not as much as offshore wind. Tidal energy is also local. Wind Energy is developed and is already planned.
How do gas hydrates support chemosynthetic bacteria
When exposed on the seafloor, The oxidation of methane provides energy to chemosynthetic bacteria which is the base of the food chain at these areas.
What is the Cape Wind project and what happened to it?
Wind farm off Nantucket's coast, bogged down by Gov regulations
How might gas hydrates affect climate change
With the destabilization of gas hydrates, methane can be released into the atmosphere, methane is a greenhouse gas, and the release of it into the environment could increase warming (affect climate)
What is el nino
a breakdown in trade wind driven upwelling, occurs every 3-8 years
Tidal Barrage
a dam across the mouth of estuaries, it has channels with turbines so when the tide comes in, the generator turns one way, then as the tide goes down, the generator turns the other way. The tide moves the turbine and generator to make electricity.
how much energy can we get from tidal power on a global scale? What does this say about tidal power?
a few percent of global power consumption, this is important on a local or regional scale, it will not fix all of the world's energy problems
How much fish in the US comes from aquaculture
about half
How much of sea level rise is due to warming rather than melting
about half
Tidal Lagoon
an artificial enclosure with a small opening that focuses the tide in one spot, here there are turbines that collect energy
Plastic problems in the ocean
animals consume, can poison animals, invasive species attached to plastic, toxins passed up the food chain
How does el nino affect ocean resources
bad fishing off the coast of Peru, anchovey's are important and they are unable to fish because of this
Salmon lifecycle different than other fish
born in rivers, go to sea, go back to rivers to reproduce
BSR
bottom simulating reflector
What makes a hurricane die out
cold water or land
Life at gas hydrates
crabs, clams, mussels, chemosynthetic bacteria, shrimp, tubeworms
Farmed fish escaping
create competition for food, shelter, and spouses
What are gas hydrates?
crystalline solid ice-like compounds. Within these structures are small gas molecules trapped inside of a cage of water molecules
What is the main organic matter to form gas hydrates
dead phytoplankton
How much energy could we get from waves globally?
double the current world electricity production
How much energy could we get from tides globally
few percent of global electricity potentially
Underwater Turbines
fields of turbines that are underwater that
How do Dead Zones affect ocean resources?
food base reduced, habitat lost or damaged, migratory patterns disrupted, biodiversity reduced
What led to overfishing
freezing fish increase in demand and could sell overseas, larger trawlers were invented and they would stay at sea longer due to being able to freeze the fish
What causes dead zone
freshwater discharge cut off salt water from air, eutrophication begins, decomposition of biomass on the ocean floor begins, depletion of O2
What and where is the pacific garbage patch, why does the trash accumulate here
gyre of trash located in the Central North Pacific between CA and HA, the ocean gyre here keeps the trash in circulation
Where are gas hydrates stable
high pressure and low temperature
Sihwa Lake Tidal Power
in South Korea, Tidal Lagoon/Barrage, world's largest tidal power installation
How are hurricanes affected by global warming
increase intensity due to warmer waters creating stronger storms
Attenuator
long floating unit that uses wave oscillation to pressurize fluids to make energy, large fields of these
What drives a hurricane? How do hurricanes work? (What are wind patterns)?
low pressure storm that blows towards the center, curve and spiral due to correollis affect bending winds to the right, driven by evaporation of warm water
aquaculture affecting coasts
mangroves destroyed, pollute habitats due to waste and chemicals dumping
How are temp histories of the ocean determined
measurement of the oxygen isotope ratio in composition of marine limestone
What gas is there a lot of in gas hydrates
methane
Estuaries
mouths of rivers at the ocean, mixing zone between fresh and salt water; influenced by tides
Dynamic Tidal Power, why will it not happen?
not yet attempted - Long dams built from coasts straight out into the sea, it will harness oscillating coastal tidal currents -on such a large scale, it is just a concept
How did Gov contribute to overfishing
offered subsidies to continue exploring fishing and create larger ships
Climate change rate and affect on organisms
organisms can adjust gradually, but if this rate increases too much they will not be able to adapt quick enough
COD in the US and Canada
populations collapsed and so did the fishing industry, in 1992, first to collapse
Tidal Lagoon in Swansea
proposed, but this was also rejected by UK Gov
trends in global temp and sea level last 20,000 years
sea levels risen and global temp rise, this happened due to transition from glacial to interglacial period
Inland dams affect on rivers and the coast
sediment is stuck at dams and doesn't contribute to coast, so the sediment at the coast begins to compact and sink down.
Scottland Tidal Project in Pentland Firth
started as a test, but now in Northern Scotland (Pentland Firth) there are plans to have a field of underwater turbines. This project is proceeding -269 Turbines -398 Megawatts -Power 175,000 homes
tradgedy of the commons
the notion that any resource thats open to everyone, like air, or part of the ocean will eventually be destroyed because everyone can use it, but no one is held responsible for preserving it (shared resource that could benefit everyone is destroyed)
US goals for alternate energy in the next 20 years
there could be 20% from offshore energy in the next 20 years. there will be a growth in offshore wind
How does ocean warming affect sealevel
thermal expansion contributes to sea level rise
Wild fish role in fish farming
they serve as food for farmed fish
Organisms that cant move and ocean warming
they will likely die
Why is upwelling important?
to ocean life, brings much nutrients to the surface, areas are often habitats for enormous schools of fish
With the oceans warming, where do organisms go in terms of Latitude and water depth
towards the poles and to deeper water (both are colder)
Coastal Upwelling
trade winds blow the surface water offshore at relatively low latitude
What type of fishing damage seafloor
trawling and dredging
What drives the circulation of the atmosphere
variable heating by the sun drives the circulation of the atmosphere
How can gas hydrates be destabilized
warming of the oceans/ global warming (temperature increases) sea-level lowering (pressure decreases)
Terminators
waves flow into a chamber, the waves move the water level inside the chamber up and down which moves air pressure back and fourth to drive a turbine to generate energy.
What affects surface currents?
wind
What is needed for wind energy
wind, turbines, connection to electricity grid, wind farm close to consumers (energy storage)