Following on from last year’s Ocean’s Future to 2050 report, the Ocean’s Future to 2050: Spatial Competition Forecast is an in-depth look at the critical issue of spatial competition and co-existence in the ocean with reference to the rapid upscaling of offshore wind developments.
Much attention is currently focussed on the ‘Blue Economy’ as being vital for the future. However, several industries, such as marine aquaculture, fisheries, shipping, offshore oil and gas, and the rapidly upscaling offshore wind sector, are all competing for the same space. One of the main challenges is the area requirements for offshore wind as governments and companies work for the transition to renewable energy. With this comes the potential for spatial competition between industries using the ocean space, and integrated planning approaches like Marine Spatial Planning (MSP) will be required to handle this.
One of the questions the project seeks to answer is, ‘Based on a global and regional outlook, can we effectively forecast spatial competition on a level of granularity that provides novel insights for MSP?’
Exploring service concepts
The project considers the potential of new MSP solutions by combining forecasts with maps, using spatial competition as a key indicator. The novelty in the concept lies in the combination of DNV’s forecasting capabilities, building on the Ocean’s Future to 2050 system dynamics model, combined with vast GIS-based data sources on industrial activity in the ocean, marine ecosystems, and ocean bathymetry.
Collaboration between DNV Group Research & Development and BA Energy Systems is central to the project. The project activities are closely connected with a BA Energy Systems project that gathers ocean stakeholders in a series of workshops to understand the needs for co-existence and stakeholder engagement processes in offshore wind developments.
A position paper forecasting spatial competition in key ocean basins, the Ocean’s Future to 2050: Spatial Competition Forecast, is to be published in late 2022.