#MarineProtection

EPOREXeporex
2026-01-19

Introducing EPOREX AFS 222 – a high-performance Antifouling & Osmotic-Resistant Epoxy System, engineered for extreme marine and submerged environments.














#EPOREX
#Epoxy
#AntifoulingCoating
#MarineEpoxy
#OsmosisResistant
#TwoPackEpoxy
#MarineProtection
#BoatMaintenance
#IndustrialEpoxy
#MarineEngineering
#EpoxyCoatings
#CorrosionProtection
#Namakkal
#Tamilnadu
Christian Schwägerlchristianschwaegerl
2026-01-14

Am Samstag tritt das neue UN-Abkommen über den Schutz der Hochsee in Kraft. Erstmals soll es dann Meeresschutzgebiete in internationalen Gewässern geben. Doch wie wird der Schutz umgesetzt? In einem Szenario haben @AnRinke und ich schon vor einigen Jahren erkundet, welche Konflikte um den Meeresschutz drohen, wenn die Staaten nicht zusammenarbeiten. 2022 aktualisiert bei @riffreporter erschienen. riffreporter.de/de/umwelt/meer

2025-12-19

AI Vision for Ocean Monitoring: Seeing Spills and Waste Before They Spread
The ocean doesn’t come with alarm systems.
know more:zurl.co/YFJpb
#Smidmart #AIVision #ComputerVision #OceanMonitoring #MarineProtection #EnvironmentalTech #Sustainability #DroneTech

schneckenhauszofe@pixelfed.de
2025-11-07
Der Anblick dieses alten Fischerboots, gefüllt mit Abfall und Autoreifen, zeigt die alltägliche Müllproblematik in Süditalien. Kein Denkmal, sondern ein fotogener Moment aus dem Alltag, der sonst oft an Straßenrändern oder Stränden zu sehen ist. Ein stiller Appell für mehr Umweltbewusstsein.
27.10.2025, #Italy #Puglia #EnvironmentalAwareness #MarineProtection #boat #waste #litter #pollution [1]
2025-10-28

Russia’s interest in Antarctic oil exposed after Ukrainian scientist’s arrest

The Antarctic Treaty’s environmental protocol is clear — mining is prohibited indefinitely. But a Russian document linked to…
#NewsBeep #News #Headlines #Antarctica #AU #Australia #hydrocarbon #LeonidPshenichnov #MadridProtocol #marineprotection #mining #Oil #scientist #tas #tasmania #vasylmyroshnychenko
newsbeep.com/214239/

2025-10-02

#News: Conservation win for 🦈 Australia's gentle grey nurse sharks, laboradors of the sea who are making a comeback, with numbers rising 5% yearly. Be #Vegan and DO NOT EAT SHARK or other fish #Boycott4Wildlife @palmoildetect #MarineProtection
abc.net.au/news/2025-09-13/cri

abra4471 at KillBaitabra4471@killbait.com
2025-09-21

UK’s failure to ban bottom trawling in protected marine areas threatens biodiversity

The UK government’s decision not to ban bottom trawling in marine protected areas (MPAs) has drawn widespread criticism from environmental groups, scientists, and MPs. As highlighted by David Attenborough, the destructive practice of dragging weighted nets across sensitive seabeds is likened to bull... [More info]

Very happy seeing that already 60 countries have ratified the #HighSeasTreaty. It could be enter into force next year! Nice to see my country among them! #MarineEcology #marineprotection highseasalliance.org/treaty-ratif...

High Seas Treaty Progress Tabl...

abra4471 at KillBaitabra4471@killbait.com
2025-09-20

Global High Seas Treaty to Protect Oceans Set to Take Effect in January

A global treaty aimed at protecting the oceans and reversing the damage to marine life is set to become international law. The High Seas Treaty, which received its 60th ratification by Morocco, will take effect in January. The treaty, 20 years in the making, will enable the establishment of marine p... [More info]

Environmental Protection, Regulatory Frameworks, and Sustainable Growth

Author(s): Scott Douglas Jacobsen

Publication (Outlet/Website): The Good Men Project

Publication Date (yyyy/mm/dd): 2025/04/17

Natural Resources Canada is committed to improving the quality of life of Canadians by ensuring the country’s abundant natural resources are developed sustainably, competitively and inclusively. The Canadian government is advancing offshore wind energy through strategic planning and regulatory frameworks. Natural Resources Canada discusses focusing on environmental protection, project timelines, and regulatory challenges. The Regional Assessment Committees for Nova Scotia and Newfoundland and Labrador have submitted final reports outlining recommendations for responsible offshore wind development. Legislative amendments and regulatory updates under the Accord Acts are establishing frameworks for offshore renewable energy. Canada’s membership in the Global Offshore Wind Alliance highlights its commitment to clean energy. Drawing from offshore oil and gas expertise, Canada is streamlining offshore wind projects. Collaboration with industry stakeholders, Indigenous groups, and investors is key to expanding this sector. The government continues to engage industry to ensure sustainable development.

Scott Douglas Jacobsen: What measures are considered to monitor and protect sensitive marine ecosystems?   

Natural Resources Canada: In March 2023, the Minister of Environment and Climate Change announced the creation of a Regional Assessment Committee for Offshore Wind Development for Nova Scotia, and Newfoundland and Labrador, respectively.  The purpose of the Regional Assessments was to provide information, knowledge and analysis regarding future offshore wind development activities in the study areas and their potential effects. This was to inform and improve future planning, licencing and impact assessment processes for these activities in a way that helps protect the environmental health, social and economic conditions while also creating opportunities for sustainable economic development.    

In January 2025, the Committees submitted their Final Reports to governments, which have been published on the Impact Assessment Registry and are available through the following links:   

Within these reports, the Committees have included recommendations to governments to inform the responsible development of the offshore wind energy industry. A number of recommendations address planning, considerations for co-existence, measures for mitigation and monitoring, and protection of the marine ecosystem.        

As part of their mandate, the Committees also identified areas where offshore wind development may be suitable based upon technical feasibility, environmental considerations (e.g. marine protected areas, species at risk), and socio-economic considerations (e.g., commercial fishers and other ocean users). Proposed development areas also took into consideration feedback shared by participants during the extensive engagement programs. The Government will undertake further review and leverage other planning and decision-making tools, including Impact Assessments that will assess prospective economic, social, and environmental effects and mitigation measures of any proposed project(s).    

For more information on the Regional Assessment Committees, please contact Impact Assessment Agency of Canadadirectly.   

Jacobsen: What is the deployment timeline for offshore wind capacity and their financing structure?   

Natural Resources Canada: According to current publicly available data, the global average timeline to build an offshore wind farm is around 7-9 years from the initial site assessment to full operation, with most of the time spent on permitting, environmental studies, and grid connection processes, rather than the construction itself. However, this can vary significantly depending on the location, regulatory environment, project size and complexity, and infrastructure requirements.     

Jacobsen: Do these offshore wind projects represent significant regulatory challenges, or can these be streamlined if extant?   

Natural Resources Canada: Offshore wind projects are complex to build and operate. The Government of Canada (GOC) has undertaken significant work to establish an effective, efficient and predictable legislative and regulatory framework to enable responsible development. In addition, the GOC has worked closely with the Governments of Nova Scotia and Newfoundland and Labrador to establish a legislative framework to support offshore wind development in the Canada-Nova Scotia and Canada-Newfoundland and Labrador offshore areas.    

On January 31, 2025, amendments to the federal and provincial Canada-Nova Scotia Accord Acts were brought into force and the Canada Nova Scotia Offshore Energy Regulator became the lifecycle regulator for offshore petroleum and offshore renewable energy development. Amendments to the Canada-Newfoundland and Labrador Atlantic Accord Acts are expected to come into force later in 2025, which will expand the mandate of current Canada-Newfoundland and Labrador Offshore Petroleum Board (to be renamed the Canada Newfoundland and Labrador Offshore Energy Regulator) to become the lifecycle regulator for both offshore petroleum and offshore renewable energy development.   

Regulations under the amended Accord Acts are in development and are based on the Federal Canada Offshore Renewable Energy Regulations that became law on December 16, 2024. These regulations will establish safety and environmental protection requirements for project developers.   

Jacobsen: How will improved turbine designs or grid integration accelerate offshore wind energy generation efficiency?   

Natural Resources Canada: This question is best directed to Marine Renewables Canada and offshore wind developers, as it falls outside the purview of NRCan.   

Jacobsen: What is Canada’s part in the Global Offshore Wind Alliance?   

Natural Resources Canada: Canada recently became a member of the Global Offshore Wind Alliance, a forum that supports collaboration with international partners on efforts to advance offshore wind as a source of clean and reliable energy.   

Jacobsen: What are the lessons from offshore oil and gas, which could facilitate the transition to offshore wind energy? 

Natural Resources Canada: Canada has a long history of offshore oil and gas development in the Atlantic Offshore, pursuant to comprehensive joint management frameworks established under the Canada–Newfoundland and Labrador Atlantic Accord Implementation Act and the Canada-Nova Scotia Offshore Petroleum Resources Accord Implementation Act, also known as the Accord Acts. There are strong joint management relationships and depth of experience from the regulatory and policy perspective in the offshore oil and gas sector that can be applied to offshore renewable energy. This includes expertise in practices such as running Call for Bids processes and issuing regulatory authorizations for project activities. That is why Governments opted to expand the existing regulatory regimes to include offshore renewable energy, by amending the Accord Acts.  

Jacobsen: How will federal and subnational governments collaborate with industry stakeholders in this rapidly evolving market?  

Natural Resources Canada: We already know that investors are interested in offshore wind projects in Canada, and many global offshore wind developers have stated that they see Canada as a promising market for future development, particularly on the east coast. The GOC recognizes the importance of regular dialogue and collaboration with different parties – from industry and commercial fishers to Indigenous groups as well as the general public – in moving forward with expanding offshore wind in Canada. Engagement with industry stakeholders is a key part of our work and has been taking place through fora such as Marine Renewables Canada. Insights from industry are significant to informing how governments will move forward with offshore wind planning and development in the future, and governments intend to continue outreach with interested and impacted stakeholders, including industry, to seek their feedback and input in support of building a strong and prosperous offshore wind industry in Canada. 

Jacobsen: Thank you for the opportunity and your time.

 

Last updated May 3, 2025. These terms govern all In Sight Publishing content—past, present, and future—and supersede any prior notices.In Sight Publishing by Scott Douglas Jacobsen is licensed under a Creative Commons BY‑NC‑ND 4.0; © In Sight Publishing by Scott Douglas Jacobsen 2012–Present. All trademarksperformancesdatabases & branding are owned by their rights holders; no use without permission. Unauthorized copying, modification, framing or public communication is prohibited. External links are not endorsed. Cookies & tracking require consent, and data processing complies with PIPEDA & GDPR; no data from children < 13 (COPPA). Content meets WCAG 2.1 AA under the Accessible Canada Act & is preserved in open archival formats with backups. Excerpts & links require full credit & hyperlink; limited quoting under fair-dealing & fair-use. All content is informational; no liability for errors or omissions: Feedback welcome, and verified errors corrected promptly. For permissions or DMCA notices, email: scott.jacobsen2025@gmail.com. Site use is governed by BC laws; content is “as‑is,” liability limited, users indemnify us; moral, performers’ & database sui generis rights reserved.

#CleanEnergy #marineProtection #offshoreWind #regulatoryFramework #renewableEnergy

Headlines Africaafrica@journa.host
2025-06-11

Africa: Pacific States, Territories Gift the World Its 'Largest Conservation Project': [IPS] Nice, France -- While the island states in the Pacific may be modest, the ocean that surrounds them represents a huge oceanic state--an area equivalent to the entire European Continent. newsfeed.facilit8.network/TLHn #Conservation #MarineProtection #PacificIslands #Biodiversity #OceanConservation

This week, The New York Times reported that Donald Trump has opened a massive marine protected area to commercial fishing — aiming to make the U.S. the world’s “dominant seafood leader.” Link to article

If I wanted to interpret the essence of the new American politics with the least political lens possible, maybe this would be it.

Only the short-term business of big corporations matters. Any regulation that restrains it — whether social, environmentally conscious, or based on sustainable economics — must be dismantled. Not revised — eliminated.

Marine protected areas aren’t just for soft-hearted environmentalists. Without them, even fishing itself becomes unsustainable. It may be profitable for a while, then it collapses. These zones help replenish fish stocks in the surrounding fishable waters.

Featured image: Global map of Marine Protected Areas. Source: Marine Conservation Institute / Marine Protection Atlas (via Wikipedia).

Follow me on Mastodon:
TechTonicShift (@TechTonicShift@vivaldi.net) – Vivaldi Social
Gabor Hrasko (@ghrasko@mastodon.social) – Mastodon

#Environment #MarineProtection #USPolitics #ClimatePolicy

https://techtonicshift.vivaldi.net/2025/04/18/not-just-about-fish-a-deeper-change-in-us-priorities/

#ClimatePolicy #Environment #MarineProtection #USPolitics

This week, The New York Times reported that Donald Trump has opened a massive marine protected area to commercial fishing — aiming to make the U.S. the world’s “dominant seafood leader.” Link to article

If I wanted to interpret the essence of the new American politics with the least political lens possible, maybe this would be it.

Only the short-term business of big corporations matters. Any regulation that restrains it — whether social, environmentally conscious, or based on sustainable economics — must be dismantled. Not revised — eliminated.

Marine protected areas aren’t just for soft-hearted environmentalists. Without them, even fishing itself becomes unsustainable. It may be profitable for a while, then it collapses. These zones help replenish fish stocks in the surrounding fishable waters.

Global map of Marine Protected Areas. Source: Marine Conservation Institute / Marine Protection Atlas (via Wikipedia).

Also on Mastodon: @ghrasko

Environment #MarineProtection #USPolitics #ClimatePolicy #Fediverse

https://ghrasko.vivaldi.net/2025/04/18/not-just-about-fish-a-deeper-change-in-u-s-priorities/

#ClimatePolicy #Fediverse #MarineProtection #USPolitics

2025-04-03

🇬🇧 The race to underwater mining is “humanity's last act of collective irresponsibility”

🇵🇹 A corrida à mineração submarina é “o último acto de irresponsabilidade colectiva da humanidade”

@greenpeace @mongabay
publico.pt/2024/06/08/azul/not

#DeepSeaMining #oceans #OceanConservation #EnvironmentalImpact #SeabedMining
#MarineProtection #MineralExtraction

2025-04-02

History made: 🇵🇹 takes lead in effort to stop deep-sea mining

While countries like Spain and France have adopted parliamentary resolutions in opposition to deep-sea mining, #Portugal is - so far - the only European country to have translated these concerns into a binding law to adopt a deep-sea mining moratorium.

@greenpeace @mongabay

oceanographicmagazine.com/news

#DeepSeaMining #oceans #OceanConservation #EnvironmentalImpact #SeabedMining #MarineProtection #MineralExtraction #BiodiversityLoss

LM Littlemiki_lou
2024-10-05

"What is needed are clear, mandatory measures that will reduce underwater noise now, so that we can act on the knowledge we already have." wcel.org/blog/public-consultat

2024-07-30

The Very Hungry Urchins

Researchers are restoring the Caribbean’s surprising, spiky custodians, which gobble up the algae smothering coral reefs.

hakaimagazine.com/features/the

#ocean #climatecrisis #climatechange #MarineProtection

Undersea photo of coral, centered on a number of black long-spined sea urchins. Photo courtesy University of Florida

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