By Robert Bradley Jr
“In areas where wind farms are being developed, invasive species can harm … industries by reducing fish populations, damaging habitats, and deterring tourists who seek intact and diverse marine environments.” – Kieran Kelly, Ocean Integrity (below)
‘It is hard being green, particularly when “green” means being one-dimensional against carbon dioxide (CO2) at the expense of virtually every other metric. Consider wind power, the onshore problems of which (failed past, government dependency, intermittency, site depletion, local warming, noise, avian mortality, health effects) are only magnified offshore (cost premium, wake effect, blade failure, industrialization, hurricanes, pile driving, political bribes).
Kieran Kelly, CEO of Ocean Integrity, “a global organization that aims to reduce ocean plastic pollution and create positive social impact,” recently reported on social media about a particular ecological issue: invasive filter feeders.
The growth of invasive filter feeders in areas where wind farms are being placed provides a compelling argument against proceeding with offshore wind farms. [Ed. Note: see picture below]
Invasive filter feeders can disrupt the delicate balance of ecosystems in which they establish themselves. These organisms often outcompete native species for resources, leading to a decline in biodiversity and altering the natural composition of communities. The introduction of invasive filter feeders can result in the displacement or extinction of native species, disrupting the intricate web of interactions that have evolved over time.
The proliferation of invasive filter feeders can have profound effects on food chains within affected ecosystems. By consuming vast amounts of plankton and other small organisms, they can deplete the food sources that native species rely on. This can lead to population declines and cascading effects throughout the food web, affecting the abundance and distribution of other species, including commercially important fish stocks.
Invasive filter feeders often modify their surroundings to suit their needs, which can have detrimental effects on native habitats. They may alter water flow patterns, disturb sediment layers, or create physical structures that disrupt the natural habitats of other species. These modifications can result in the loss of critical habitats, such as seagrass beds or coral reefs, which provide shelter, breeding grounds, and nursery areas for numerous marine organisms.
The negative impacts of invasive filter feeders extend beyond ecological consequences. In areas where wind farms are being developed, there are often economic interests tied to fisheries, tourism, and recreational activities. The proliferation of invasive species can harm these industries by reducing fish populations, damaging habitats, and deterring tourists who seek intact and diverse marine environments. The economic losses resulting from these impacts can be significant and long-lasting.
Once invasive filter feeders become established in an area, their eradication or control becomes challenging, time-consuming, and costly. Prevention should be a primary focus to avoid introducing these species in the first place. The potential risks associated with the growth of invasive filter feeders should be thoroughly evaluated through comprehensive risk assessments and environmental impact studies prior to the construction of offshore wind farms.
It is crucial to assess the potential for the establishment and spread of invasive filter feeders in areas where wind farms are proposed. Adequate safeguards and strict monitoring protocols should be implemented to prevent the introduction and proliferation of these species.
He added in a comment:
The waters around Denmark have witnessed a complete collapse of fish stocks, a situation mirrored in Sweden. While some may choose to turn a blind eye, it’s crucial to note that no independent environmental impact studies have been conducted.
Ørsted has announced a $4 million initiative to support environmental research at Connecticut universities, raising concerns that offshore wind companies are effectively silencing academic institutions.
Later today, I’ll be sharing new evidence regarding pollution from these offshore structures. We’re gearing up for a lawsuit against these companies, and our attorneys believe we have a strong case to shut them down. As an environmentalist, my sole focus is the protection of our oceans—let’s make that clear.
Final Comment
The much needed civil war within the mainstream environmental movement (Big Green, Inc.) has been corrupted by green-as-in-money. Big Wind, Big Solar, and Big Batteries control the narrative that no ecological tradeoff is too great in the war against carbon dioxide (CO2), thus fossil fuels, thus modern industrial living.
Expect the Green Divide to increase, however, as the surface area, the living space, is increasingly taken over by politically correct, economically incorrect energies.
————–
Illustration: Filter Feeders
Discover more from Watts Up With That?
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

This sounds important but it desperately needs specificity as to what filter feeders we are talking about. The term filter feeders is very broad, including tiny krill up to the baleen whales we are trying to protect.
See https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filter_feeder
This is clearly something to add to offshore wind EIS. Collapse of fisheries!
Fisheries mostly collapse due to either overfishing or spawning failure due to disease.
Just sayin’….blaming collapse on wind farm barnacles is probably a stretch…
None of that matters, because the super expensive, dysfunctional wind, solar, EV, heat pump and electric stove agendas will save the world, but the long suffering US people have had enough, they cannot make ends meet due to big government woke agendas and endless military-industrial complex wars
Trump needs to be voted in by a landslide to get Democrats out of office, otherwise the US will rapidly become like dysfunctional Greece and Italy, or worse, like the impoverished UK.
Things certainly need to change
David bodies of water where these structures exist more than ten years we have seen a complete collapse. Waters less than 50 NM from these farms we see no biodiversity collapse.
Zebra mussels, oysters, and native mussels. All of these are totally invasive to these offshore waters.
Just wait until there are floating wind farms with far more dynamic cabling and mooring systems, and more regular need for significant repairs and/or reinstallation.
Just wait until the floating farms are drowned by the wind ( climate clown Mann who now turned storm experts predicted a massive increase in storm while his accomplicies from the hardware AGW side are building more snd more off shore windfarms which is as crazy as predicting sea level rise and buying front beach properties ).
But Offshore Windmills won’t be a problem.
No matter how much destruction they cause (just as any other left policy),
it will either be ignored and called conspiracy theory
or blamed on AGW and racism.
It’ll be blamed on Trump.
Putin
Yes the floating structures with the thousands of meters of chain will be even more destructive
“invasive filter feeders”
such as? like, as in species? that would have been informative
I’ve always wanted to see the list of the species that has invaded the earth.
Perhaps relocated would be a better description?
It’s ironic that globalists are worried at all, isn’t it.
Some UFOologists suggest its several dozen- speaking here of NHI (non human intelligence). Though I saw a UFO back in ’83, I’m still a skeptic- I consider myself the ultimate skeptic- of religion, government, UFOs, Covid, relationships, etc.
Some scientists think the first life on Earth came from space. I don’t believe it.
Anyone remotely interested in the UFO story must read a new book by Lou Elizondo, “Imminent”. He’s the most important dude in the UFO world at this time.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0063235560/ref=ox_sc_act_image_1?smid=ATVPDKIKX0DER&psc=1
That topic is one of my 3 top topics I spend much of my retirement following. The other 2 are the Ukraine war and of course the AGW scam.
What they are saying is the offshore wind attracts bottom-feeders. 😉
Off the coast of Wokeachusetts, there are some rather shallow areas- the best fishing grounds- which will likely be the place the state will want to install wind “farms”. Since nobody wants wind turbines on land- and now there’s a movement against large solar “farms” – the state will have to promote vast numbers of wind turbines at sea. Gonna be a problem.
The four of us rented a boat with crew.
We fished off the end of Long Island with umbrella rigs, 4 hooks each.
Bringing 4 fighting blues was super hard work for us office folks
We took in 350 lb of blues and 60 lb of docile sea bass, in about two hours
There were no other boats, because it was blowing like stink with 8- ft high waves, two of us near death seasick.
Sport fishing is great!
Clearly you don’t understand, large adult fish hanging around structure, doesn’t equate to a healthy, marine ecosystem.
We will meet us over the next 10 years to complete collapse of them really ecosystem because of these offshore wind structures. The number of structures being proposed is 10 times greater than all the oil and gas platforms we’ve ever seen. No environmental impact studies have taken place and of course, under normal circumstances this would be illegal.
“What they are saying is the offshore wind attracts bottom-feeders.”
Not all of whom are certificated lawyers, I understand!
Auto
Primarily molluscs but include:
Refer also to Bruschetti et al 2015.
Read previous comments
«The waters around Denmark https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/15.0.3/svg/1f1e9-1f1f0.svg have witnessed a complete collapse of fish stocks, a situation mirrored in Sweden.»
Nothing to do with the industrial sand eel fisheries, then?
The sand eel fishery has been taken place for over 60 years, it’s well regulated, I wish it didn’t exist, but that’s certainly not causing the problem. Only areas where the collapse in a marine ecosystem, is areas adjacent to the offshore wind farms
Question – do offshore oil rigs create a similar situation and have oil companies found a solution? Don’t take my question as somehow being supportive of off-shore, or any wind project for that matter, or as being critical of off-shore oil platforms. It may simply be an issue of magnitude given that you need a lot of wind turbines to produce the same amount of energy that can be derived from a single oil rig.
A wind farm might cover 100 sq miles with 100 towers while an oil rig is just a speck.
following up on DW’s comment
As noted in Jacobsons 100% renewable advocacy papers,
He claims oil and gas wells use considerably more land area than windmills per energy produced.
He reaches that false claim via 1) land use for wind farms only cover the actual footprint of the windmill, while ignoring the lost productivity of the surrounding acreage. 2) he includes all the surface land above the leased mineral interest even though the surface footprint of the oil and gas well is the only part of the lease that there is a loss of productivity.
Dishonesty of jacobson exposed.
Jacobson is one of the guys that need to have their location known to all, at all times, so that the masses will have target for their anger, upon harmful failure of his touted policies. Kinda like the way the French mobs were pacified for a short time.
Jacobson’s studies are replete with distortions, dishonesty etc
For example
1) Plenty of storage in hydro in the reseviors behind the dams – ignoring that the water is needed for irrigation and basic human drinking water.
or
2) only need 4 hour battery back up because if you need more, you can just hook up the the 4 hour battery back up in series. ie need 80 hours of back up, then just use the 4 hour battery back up in a series 20 times. Glad we thought that through!
“an oil rig is just a speck.”
Unfortunately for filter feeders and fish , the speck christened “Deepwater Horizon: was surrounded by a 150,000 square kilometer oil slick, larger than all the world’s offshore wind farms combined .
Can Mr. Wojick tell us how many wind turbine failures have resulted in uncontrolled blowouts ?
It’s a numbers game Barnes, the numbers of offshore structures that’s been built within the offshore wind industry dwarfs the oil & gas industry.
Some good news re offshore wind.
“Equinor Axes Offshore Wind Plans in Spain and Portugal, Weighs Further Market Exits”
“Equinor decided to discontinue its offshore wind projects in Spain and Portugal following the company’s earlier decision to exit Vietnam. Equinor may also scale back operations in other countries in an effort to cut costs.”
Speaking to Reuters, Equinor’s head of renewables, Paal Eitsheim noted
“It’s getting more and more expensive and we think things are going to take more time in quite a few markets around the world”
Offshore Wind Biz 29th August 2024
https://offshore.wind.biz/2024/08/29/equinor-axes-offshore-wind-plans-in-spain-and-portugal-weighs-further-market-exits/
I would like to see data on the health of cattle, ect grazing around wind farms on land. There have been many claims that infrasound affects human health. Seems to me agricultural productivity investigation would answer the questions about this.
And, of course proper surveys of sea life around off shore wind rather than just fishermen complaining are urgently needed
While there is a significant quantity of published literature via a via prolonged infrasound exposure and specific damage to human and animal tissues, it comes from a very small minority. Even the majority of anti wind energy groups seems determined to pretend it does not exist and instead focus on the touchy feely aspects of complaints about difficulty sleeping, etc. that can’t be tied down to actual physical evidence.
Clicked article only to see whether anyone defined what “ocean integrity” means. Oh okay, it’s a company name. Not bad. I wish they were more specific with words than “positive social impact” but at least they tried.
I never suspected that Robert Bradley was a marine biologist and a systems ecologist as well as an Enron spokesman.
After reading this, I understand why.
Poor ad hominem. On “Enron Spokesman,” see here: Enron Corp: Political Capitalism in Action – Political Capitalism
Are there, anywhere, decent evaluations of the effect, downwind, of taking energy from the wind.
We’re carrying out a large experiment, taking energy from the wind.
I am not clear if there is any study, anywhere, of what the consequent effects.
Even in type, let alone numerical estimates.
Do we have the greedy blundering ahead, with no thought, egged on by wonderfully ignorant politicians?
Auto