Monitoring fish communities in offshore renewable energy: the SafeWAVE case study

Authors

  • Pedro A. Vinagre WavEC Offshore Renewables https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1150-8355
  • Inês Machado WavEC Offshore Renewables
  • Luana Clementino WavEC Offshore Renewables
  • Miguel Amado WavEC Offshore Renewables
  • Guillermo Boyra AZTI
  • Ainhize Uriarte AZTI
  • Beatriz Sobradillo AZTI
  • Juan Bald AZTI

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.36688/ewtec-2025-758

Keywords:

environmental impact assessment, fish monitoring, offshore renewable energy

Abstract

The SafeWAVE project addressed non-technological barriers in the offshore renewable energy (ORE) sector, focusing on environmental impact assessment, consenting processes, marine spatial planning, and public engagement. A priority topic of environmental research was the assessment of fish communities around ORE installations. This study compares two approaches: (i) traditional trawling at Aguçadoura (Portugal) to establish baseline fish community data, and (ii) innovative techniques using autonomous unmanned systems (WBAT and ITSASDRONE) at BiMEP (Spain) to monitor the fish communities and assess ORE impacts. Trawling provided robust species composition and abundance data but lacked behavioural insights. It also had high costs, labour intensity, and potential ecosystem disturbance. Innovative techniques, in contrast, offered scalable, minimally invasive alternatives with high-resolution spatial and temporal data but were limited in describing species composition. The findings highlight the need for an integrated monitoring approach that combines traditional and emerging technologies. Recommendations include technology standardization, improved stakeholder collaboration, and multi-method strategies for comprehensive fish community assessments. These advancements will strengthen environmental monitoring protocols and support the sustainable expansion of ORE.

Author Biography

  • Pedro A. Vinagre, WavEC Offshore Renewables

    I have expertise in marine communities focusing on the ecology of benthic communities. During my MSc and PhD degrees, I addressed gaps in the Water Framework Directive implementation, for example, defining estuarine reference conditions and developing a rocky shore assessment tool. I work actively in Environmental Impact Assessment and environmental monitoring of onshore/nearshore/offshore installations. I participate in expert groups (ICES WGORE, ICES WGMBRED, GESAMP WG44) aiming to increase understanding and develop guidelines for more sustainable management of industries working in the maritime space. 

Published

2025-09-08

Issue

Track

Marine spatial planning, environmental impact and appraisal

Categories

How to Cite

[1]
“Monitoring fish communities in offshore renewable energy: the SafeWAVE case study”, Proc. EWTEC, vol. 16, Sep. 2025, doi: 10.36688/ewtec-2025-758.

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