A 30-year probability map for oil spill trajectories in the barents sea to assess potential environmental and socio-economic threats
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/26525Date
2021-12-24Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Increasing exploration and exploitation activity in the Arctic Ocean has intensified maritime
traffic in the Barents Sea. Due to the sparse population and insufficient oil spill response infrastructure
on the extensive Barents Sea shoreline, it is necessary to address the possibility of offshore accidents
and study hazards to the local environment and its resources. Simulations of surface oil spills were
conducted in south-east of the Barents Sea to identify oil pollution trajectories. The objective of
this research was to focus on one geographical location, which lies along popular maritime routes
and also borders with sensitive ecological marine and terrestrial areas. As a sample of traditional
heavy bunker oil, IFO-180LS (2014) was selected for the study of oil spills and used for the 30-year
simulations. The second oil case was medium oil type: Volve (2006)—to give a broader picture
for oil spill accident scenarios. Simulations for four annual seasons were run with the open source
OpenDrift modelling tool using oceanographic and atmospheric data from the period of 1988–2018.
The modelling produced a 30-year probability map, which was overlapped with environmental
data of the area to discuss likely impacts to local marine ecosystems, applicable oil spill response
tools and favourable shipping seasons. Based on available data regarding the environmental and
socio-economic baselines of the studied region, we recommend to address potential threats to marine
resources and local communities in more detail in a separate study.
Publisher
MDPICitation
Pavlov, Martins de Aguiar, Hole, Pongrácz. A 30-year probability map for oil spill trajectories in the barents sea to assess potential environmental and socio-economic threats. Resources. 2022;11(1)Metadata
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