Renewable energy respecting nature. A synthesis of knowledge on environmental impacts of renewable energy financed by the Research Council of Norway.

May, R., Bevanger, K., van Dijk, J., Petrin, Z., & Brende, H. 2012. Renewable energy respecting nature. A synthesis of knowledge on environmental impacts of renewable energy financed by the Research Council of Norway. – NINA Report 874. 53 pp. Renewable energy production is seen as a key factor...

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Main Authors: May, Roelof Frans, Bevanger, Kjetil Modolv, Dijk, Jiska Joanneke van, Petrin, Zlatko, Brende, Hege
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: Norsk institutt for naturforskning 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2396128
id ftninstnf:oai:brage.nina.no:11250/2396128
record_format openpolar
spelling ftninstnf:oai:brage.nina.no:11250/2396128 2024-06-23T07:51:25+00:00 Renewable energy respecting nature. A synthesis of knowledge on environmental impacts of renewable energy financed by the Research Council of Norway. May, Roelof Frans Bevanger, Kjetil Modolv Dijk, Jiska Joanneke van Petrin, Zlatko Brende, Hege 2012 application/octet-stream http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2396128 eng eng Norsk institutt for naturforskning NINA Rapport;874 http://www.nina.no/archive/nina/PppBasePdf/rapport/2012/874.pdf May, R., Bevanger, K., van Dijk, J., Petrin, Z. & Brende, H. 2012. Renewable energy respecting nature. A synthesis of knowledge on environmental impacts of renewable energy financed by the Research Council of Norway. – NINA Report 874. 53 pp urn:isbn:978-82-426-2469-7 urn:issn:1504-3312 http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2396128 cristin:1215558 53 s. renewable energy NINA Rapport wind power hydropower power transmission biodiversity mitigation fornybar energi vindkraft vannkraft kraftoverføring biologisk mangfold tiltak Research report 2012 ftninstnf 2024-06-07T03:57:56Z May, R., Bevanger, K., van Dijk, J., Petrin, Z., & Brende, H. 2012. Renewable energy respecting nature. A synthesis of knowledge on environmental impacts of renewable energy financed by the Research Council of Norway. – NINA Report 874. 53 pp. Renewable energy production is seen as a key factor for reduction of climate emissions; however further development of landscapes and seascapes may impact the environment on top of existing pressures. Norway has committed to reduce emissions, and major efforts are put into technological and environmental research to provide knowledge and solutions to meet these challenges. This report synthesizes the knowledge on environmental impacts of renewable energy acquired through the EFFEN, EFFEKT and RENERGI programmes run by the Research Council of Norway; especially from the Centre for Environmental Design of Renewable Energy (CEDREN), as one of the centres for environmental-friendly energy research (CEER). Due to extensive water resources Norway was among the first countries to base its energy system on hydropower; already from the late 19th century. Today, approximately 62% of Norway’s energy supply comes from hydropower. Norway has ratified EU’s Renewables Directive and committed to a target of generating 67.5% from renewable sources. Because the majority of the large river systems were already regulated in the 1960s, wind power is expected to grow extensively to reach this target. With the current development of onshore and offshore wind power and the extension of associated power transmission, environmental considerations will evolve rapidly. Research on environmental impacts of hydropower production prioritized the Atlantic salmon for many years, also due to its value for recreation and tourism. Currently Norway is at the very front of generating knowledge on salmon, empirical studies and development of mitigation measures. Research on hydropower production in regulated rivers has revealed major bottlenecks for salmon production and survival, with varying impacts at ... Report Atlantic salmon Norwegian Institute for Nature Research: Brage NINA Norway
institution Open Polar
collection Norwegian Institute for Nature Research: Brage NINA
op_collection_id ftninstnf
language English
topic renewable energy
NINA Rapport
wind power
hydropower
power transmission
biodiversity
mitigation
fornybar energi
vindkraft
vannkraft
kraftoverføring
biologisk mangfold
tiltak
spellingShingle renewable energy
NINA Rapport
wind power
hydropower
power transmission
biodiversity
mitigation
fornybar energi
vindkraft
vannkraft
kraftoverføring
biologisk mangfold
tiltak
May, Roelof Frans
Bevanger, Kjetil Modolv
Dijk, Jiska Joanneke van
Petrin, Zlatko
Brende, Hege
Renewable energy respecting nature. A synthesis of knowledge on environmental impacts of renewable energy financed by the Research Council of Norway.
topic_facet renewable energy
NINA Rapport
wind power
hydropower
power transmission
biodiversity
mitigation
fornybar energi
vindkraft
vannkraft
kraftoverføring
biologisk mangfold
tiltak
description May, R., Bevanger, K., van Dijk, J., Petrin, Z., & Brende, H. 2012. Renewable energy respecting nature. A synthesis of knowledge on environmental impacts of renewable energy financed by the Research Council of Norway. – NINA Report 874. 53 pp. Renewable energy production is seen as a key factor for reduction of climate emissions; however further development of landscapes and seascapes may impact the environment on top of existing pressures. Norway has committed to reduce emissions, and major efforts are put into technological and environmental research to provide knowledge and solutions to meet these challenges. This report synthesizes the knowledge on environmental impacts of renewable energy acquired through the EFFEN, EFFEKT and RENERGI programmes run by the Research Council of Norway; especially from the Centre for Environmental Design of Renewable Energy (CEDREN), as one of the centres for environmental-friendly energy research (CEER). Due to extensive water resources Norway was among the first countries to base its energy system on hydropower; already from the late 19th century. Today, approximately 62% of Norway’s energy supply comes from hydropower. Norway has ratified EU’s Renewables Directive and committed to a target of generating 67.5% from renewable sources. Because the majority of the large river systems were already regulated in the 1960s, wind power is expected to grow extensively to reach this target. With the current development of onshore and offshore wind power and the extension of associated power transmission, environmental considerations will evolve rapidly. Research on environmental impacts of hydropower production prioritized the Atlantic salmon for many years, also due to its value for recreation and tourism. Currently Norway is at the very front of generating knowledge on salmon, empirical studies and development of mitigation measures. Research on hydropower production in regulated rivers has revealed major bottlenecks for salmon production and survival, with varying impacts at ...
format Report
author May, Roelof Frans
Bevanger, Kjetil Modolv
Dijk, Jiska Joanneke van
Petrin, Zlatko
Brende, Hege
author_facet May, Roelof Frans
Bevanger, Kjetil Modolv
Dijk, Jiska Joanneke van
Petrin, Zlatko
Brende, Hege
author_sort May, Roelof Frans
title Renewable energy respecting nature. A synthesis of knowledge on environmental impacts of renewable energy financed by the Research Council of Norway.
title_short Renewable energy respecting nature. A synthesis of knowledge on environmental impacts of renewable energy financed by the Research Council of Norway.
title_full Renewable energy respecting nature. A synthesis of knowledge on environmental impacts of renewable energy financed by the Research Council of Norway.
title_fullStr Renewable energy respecting nature. A synthesis of knowledge on environmental impacts of renewable energy financed by the Research Council of Norway.
title_full_unstemmed Renewable energy respecting nature. A synthesis of knowledge on environmental impacts of renewable energy financed by the Research Council of Norway.
title_sort renewable energy respecting nature. a synthesis of knowledge on environmental impacts of renewable energy financed by the research council of norway.
publisher Norsk institutt for naturforskning
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2396128
geographic Norway
geographic_facet Norway
genre Atlantic salmon
genre_facet Atlantic salmon
op_source 53 s.
op_relation NINA Rapport;874
http://www.nina.no/archive/nina/PppBasePdf/rapport/2012/874.pdf
May, R., Bevanger, K., van Dijk, J., Petrin, Z. & Brende, H. 2012. Renewable energy respecting nature. A synthesis of knowledge on environmental impacts of renewable energy financed by the Research Council of Norway. – NINA Report 874. 53 pp
urn:isbn:978-82-426-2469-7
urn:issn:1504-3312
http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2396128
cristin:1215558
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