Energy audit and carbon footprint in trawl fisheries

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作者
Antonello Sala
Dimitrios Damalas
Lucio Labanchi
Jann Martinsohn
Fabrizio Moro
Rosaria Sabatella
Emilio Notti
机构
[1] Institute of Marine Biological Resources and Biotechnologies (CNR-IRBIM),National Research Council
[2] Hellenic Centre for Marine Research,Institute of Marine Biological Resources and Inland Waters
[3] MARBLY scarl,European Commission
[4] Joint Research Centre (JRC),NISEA
[5] Fisheries and Aquaculture Economic Research,undefined
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The combustion of fossil fuels is considered a major cause of climate change, which is why the reduction of emissions has become a key goal of the Paris climate agreement. Coherent monitoring of the energy profile of fishing vessels through an energy audit can effectively identify sources of inefficiency, allowing for the deployment of well-informed and cost-efficient remedial interventions. We applied energy audits to a test fleet of ten vessels, representing three typical Mediterranean trawl fisheries: midwater pair trawl, bottom otter trawl, and Rapido beam trawl. Overall, these fisheries use approximately 2.9 litres of fuel per kilogram of landed fish, but the fuel consumption rate varies widely according to gear type and vessel size. This amount of fuel burned from capture to landing generates approximately 7.6 kg∙CO2/kg fish on average. Minimising impacts and energy consumption throughout the product chain may be another essential element needed to reduce the environmental costs of fishing. Our results provided a set of recognised benchmarks that can be used for monitoring progress in this field.
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