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Growing Demand for Marine Environmental and Habitat Services

Date:May 09, 2017    |  【 A  A  A 】

Passive Acoustic Monitoring (PAM) refers to the use of underwater microphones (hydrophones) in order to detect and locate biological noise. When PAM is operated during an offshore survey the aim is usually to detect vocalising marine mammals in order to mitigate disturbances from survey equipment on marine mammals and their environment.

The Marine Mammal Observer (MMO) onboard MMTs survey vessels is monitoring marine mammals in the vicinity of the survey vessel and equipment and ensures that the survey is conducted in compliance with regulations and guidelines concerning marine mammals.

All MMO working in the UK Continental Shelf requires education recognised by the JNCC (Joint Nature Conservation Committee). MMT offer in-house licensed MMO’s and professionally trained PAM operators on its vessels.

As the offshore renewable industry has grown in Europe so has the need of MMO and PAM operators. The fact that any detonation and piling work requires marine mammal mitigations is easy to grasp, but as the scientific communities understanding of the ecology and behavior of marine mammals are growing so are the awareness of how other sound produced during surveys are affecting the marine environment.

To have this competence in-house ensures that the MMO/PAM requirements can be taken into account early in the project, highlighting any needs or challenges for the client.

Andrea Johansson, one of MMT′s senior marine biologist who recently finished a MMO and PAM course, comments:

”To evaluate the impacts of surveys and take relatively small actions to mitigate negative impacts on marine mammals is a simple way for the industry to take responsibility for the environment, and ensure that the sea that we depend upon stay as wild and fascinating as we’re used to, also in the future”

MMT′s in-house MMO and PAM operators are experienced in the type of surveys MMT are conducting and the equipment used on the different vessels, which will ensure that during mitigations the survey operations will run as smoothly as possible.

Helena Str?mberg, Head of MMTs environmental department, comments:

“We are aiming to maintain the high level of competence within the field of marine mammal mitigation in order to comply with nation’s legislation concerning the protection of marine mammals and its environment.”

To learn more about MMT′s environmental services and more, visit us at stand S-P10 at Offshore Wind Energy 2017 at London ExCel, June 6-8. They will also give a presentation on Wednesday the 7th of June, 16:15-17:30 on the topic Environmental survey - an industrial symbiosis. For more information, click here.


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