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Environmental impacts of the deep-water oil and gas industry: a review to guide management strategies
- Source :
- Cordes, EE, Jones, DOB, Schlacher, TA, Amon, DJ, Bernadino, AF, Brooke, S, Carney, R, DeLeo, DM, Dunlop, KM, Escobar-Briones, EG, Gates, AR, Genio, L, Gobin, J, Henry, L-A, Herrera, S, Hoyt, S, Joye, M, Kark, S, Mestre, NC, Metaxas, A, Pfeifer, S, Sink, K, Sweetman, AK & Witte, U 2016, ' Environmental impacts of the deep-water oil and gas industry: a review to guide management strategies ', Frontiers in Environmental Science, vol. 4, no. 58 . https://doi.org/10.3389/fenvs.2016.00058, Frontiers in Environmental Science, Vol 4 (2016)
- Publication Year :
- 2016
-
Abstract
- The industrialization of the deep sea is expanding world wide. Increasing oil and gas exploration activities in the absence of sufficient baseline data in deep-sea ecosystems has made environmental management challenging. Here, we review the types of activities that are associated with global offshore oil and gas development in water depths over 200 m, the typical impacts of these activities, some of the more extreme impacts of accidental oil and gas releases, and the current state of management in the major regions of offshore industrial activity including 18 exclusive economic zones. Direct impacts of infrastructure installation, including sediment resuspension and burial by seafloor anchors and pipelines, are typically restricted to a radius of ∼100 m on from the installation on the seafloor. Discharges of water-based and low toxicity oil based drilling muds and produced water can extend over 2 km, while the ecological impacts at the population and community levels on the sea floor are most commonly on the order of 200–300 m from their source. These impacts may persist in the deep sea for many years and likely longer for its more fragile ecosystems, such as cold-water corals. This synthesis of information provides the basis for a series of recommendations for the management of offshore oil and gas development. An effective management strategy, aimed at minimizing risk of significant environmental harm, will typically encompass regulations of the activity itself (e.g., discharge practices, materials used), combined with spatial (e.g., avoidance rules and marine protected areas), and temporal measures (e.g., restricted activities during peak reproductive periods). Spatial management measures that encompass representatives of all of the regional deep-sea community types is important in this context. Implementation of these management strategies should consider minimum buffer zones to displace industrial activity beyond the range of typical impacts: at least 2 km from any discharge points and surface infrastructure and 200 m from seafloor infrastructure with no expected discharges. Although managing natural resources is, arguably, more challenging in deep-water environments, inclusion of these proven conservation tools contributes to robust environmental management strategies for oil and gas extraction in the deep sea.
- Subjects :
- 0106 biological sciences
Population
cold-water corals
010501 environmental sciences
01 natural sciences
environmental policy
14. Life underwater
education
Offshore drilling
lcsh:Environmental sciences
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
General Environmental Science
lcsh:GE1-350
chemosynthetic ecosystems
education.field_of_study
business.industry
010604 marine biology & hydrobiology
Environmental resource management
Fossil fuel
benthic communities
Marine spatial planning
environmental impacts
Natural resource
Produced water
offshore drilling
Petroleum industry
13. Climate action
deep sea
Environmental Science
Environmental science
Marine protected area
marine spatial planning
business
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Cordes, EE, Jones, DOB, Schlacher, TA, Amon, DJ, Bernadino, AF, Brooke, S, Carney, R, DeLeo, DM, Dunlop, KM, Escobar-Briones, EG, Gates, AR, Genio, L, Gobin, J, Henry, L-A, Herrera, S, Hoyt, S, Joye, M, Kark, S, Mestre, NC, Metaxas, A, Pfeifer, S, Sink, K, Sweetman, AK & Witte, U 2016, ' Environmental impacts of the deep-water oil and gas industry: a review to guide management strategies ', Frontiers in Environmental Science, vol. 4, no. 58 . https://doi.org/10.3389/fenvs.2016.00058, Frontiers in Environmental Science, Vol 4 (2016)
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....711880eddd5d063d93301c03540bd17b
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.3389/fenvs.2016.00058