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October 2024

Spotlight: Triton’s Future Work 

Newsletter & Social Graphics  (13)

The Triton Initiative mission is to comprehensively assess the potential environmental effects of marine energy, reduce uncertainties regarding regulatory concerns, and facilitate confident decision-making based on empirical observations and data driven science that supports the responsible and sustainable deployment of marine energy systems. 


Over the next few years, the Triton team will continue supporting its mission with its many projects, including new efforts! 


Triton will continue its work understanding and mitigating collision risk through the Probability of Encounter Model and Integrated Collision Detection and Mitigation Projects. Triton will also begin new research in the collision risk space, including imaging sonar tests with a tank-scale model turbine and animal models in controlled tanks experiments. Additionally, the team will annotate datasets from different marine monitoring technologies to support the development of machine learning algorithms.  

 

To further address knowledge gaps in underwater noise effects research, the team will continue the Acoustic Particle Motion Project. This research includes exploring behavioral and physiological effects from controlled exposures using calibrated underwater sounds and vibration stimuli during tank tests at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL)-Sequim and PNNL-Richland. 

 

Lastly, Triton’s Communications team works to inform and engage industry stakeholders, regulators, researchers, and the public around environmental monitoring for marine energy. The team plans to conduct an end-user engagement study to better understand how regulators and other marine energy decision-makers access and use environmental monitoring information. This study aims to improve the transfer of information from Triton research projects to audiences who can use the information to help remove barriers to permitting and to support the advancement of the marine energy industry. 

 

Stay tuned to learn more! 

    Story: Why You Might Love a Career in Marine Energy

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    Molly Grear joined four other marine energy career panelists to share how she found marine energy and why she loves her job. (Photo from Mark Stone | University of Washington.) 

    Last winter, PNNL, the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), and Sandia National Laboratories co-hosted a Marine Energy Career Panel. This panel featured a diversity of scientists, engineers, and technicians in marine energy from the national laboratories, including Triton ocean engineer Molly Grear. NREL published some highlights from the webinar, including: 

    • Careers in marine energy are varied; whether working in the field, developing models, conducting community-engaged research, or designing technologies for deployment, often every day looks different when working in marine energy.
    • As a new industry, marine energy brings a lot of opportunities for creativity!
    • There are a number of opportunities for students or individuals in similar industries to transition to marine energy, including the Marine Energy Collegiate Competition, the Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education Marine Energy Graduate Student Research Program, and the National GEM Consortium.

    Interested in learning more about what a career in marine energy looks like? Read the story: “Why You Might Love a Career in Marine Energy.”

    News


    OES-Environmental Releases the 2024 State of the Science Report  

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      OES-Environmental has officially released the “2024 State of the Science Report: Environmental Effects of Marine Renewable Energy Development Around the World.” The 2024 State of the Science Report brings together the most up-to-date information on potential environmental effects of marine renewable energy; shares helpful resources, such as education and outreach tools, strategies to aid consenting, and data information systems; and identifies a path forward. 
       
      To celebrate the release of the report, OES-Environmental hosted a public webinar, "The State of the Science on Environmental Effects of Marine Renewable Energy," on October 2 to present findings from the 2024 State of the Science Report. Watch the recorded webinar.

        Triton at American Fisheries Society Meeting 

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          Quantitative ecologist Kate Buenau, gave a talk about Triton’s Probability of Encounter Model project at the 2024 American Fisheries Society Meeting (AFS) in Honolulu, Hawaii, in September. The talk, titled “Modeling Salmon Smolt Turbine Encounter Risk in the Kvichak River, Igiugig, Alaska” was part of a symposium about Partnering for Innovation and Fish Protection in the Clean Energy Transition. This session included a series of presentations on various efforts to understand renewable energy system impacts on aquatic ecosystems. Kate shared the model’s capabilities and the project’s collaboration with local communities, developers, and academic partners. 

          Got questions? Ask Triton!

           

          Send your questions, comments, and suggestions to our team.

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            Triton is designed to support the development and testing of more precise and cost-effective environmental monitoring technologies for marine energy. Pacific Northwest National Laboratory leads Triton on behalf of the Department of Energy’s Water Power Technologies Office.

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