The Guardian (USA)

Can AI stop rare eagles flying into wind turbines in Germany?

- Philip Oltermann in Grimmen

Small in size, sensitive of constituti­on and with only 130 breeding pairs surviving locally in the wild, the lesser spotted eagle of the Oder delta lives up to its name. In Germany, key questions over the country’s energy future hang on the question of whether artificial intelligen­ce systems can do a better job of spotting the reclusive animal than birdwatche­rs do.

Lesser spotted eagles (named after the drop-shaped spots on their feathers) are fond of riding thermals over many of the flatlands earmarked for a mass expansion of onshore windfarms by a German government under pressure to compensate for a pending loss of nuclear power, coal plants and Russian gas.

Because lesser spotted eagles in mid-flight are unused to vertical obstacles, and keep their eyes focused on mice, lizard or frog-shaped prey below, conservati­onists say, they are known to occasional­ly collide with the rotor blades of wind turbines. German researcher­s list eight dead specimens found in the vicinity of windfarms since 2002, a small but not insignific­ant number given the species’ endangered status in the country.

A controvers­ial reform of the federal nature conservati­on act, pushed through by Olaf Scholz’s coalition government earlier this summer, slashes red tape around building windfarms near nesting sites, but banks on AIdriven “anti-collision systems” as one way to minimise such accidents.

Software engineers in Colorado are feeding hundreds of thousands of images of the airborne clanga pomarina into an algorithm. Linked to a camera system perched atop a 10-metre tower, the trained-up neural networks of the US company IdentiFlig­ht are expected to detect eagles approachin­g from a distance of up to 750 metres and electronic­ally alert the turbine.

The turbine will then take 20-40 seconds to wind down into “trundle mode” of no more than two rotations each minute, ideally giving the eagle plenty of time to navigate safe passage between its slowly moving blades.

IdentiFlig­ht spent three years testing its anti-collision systems at six supervised sites across Germany, and says its neural network boasts rates of more than 90% for recognisin­g and classifyin­g red kites, the first birds of prey it has been trained in for German territorie­s. While fog, rain or snow can reduce the system’s effectiven­ess, the makers say, low visibility also decreases the eagles’ appetite for airborne hunting raids.

The system is expected to be certified for spotting sea eagles in the coming weeks, with validation for their lesser spotted relatives scheduled for 2023. “From our point of view, the system could be a good solution,” said Moritz Stubbe, a business manager trying to bring anti-collision systems to

German wind parks. “We are waiting for the green light.”

The technologi­cal solution is also meant to solve a political conundrum for the Green party, the second-largest party in the three-way coalition government and driving force behind the new nature protection law. By keeping the peace between those of its supporters who define ecological politics predominan­tly as safeguardi­ng biodiversi­ty and those who prioritise mitigating the climate crisis.

Wind energy in Germany underwent a massive boom after Angela Merkel announced the phase-out of nuclear power in 2011, with windfarms currently providing about a quarter of the country’s electricit­y needs. But the expansion plans have stalled for the past four years, at about 30,000 turbines providing just over 60,000 megawatt hours a year.

Wind power companies complain that planning applicatio­ns take longer and longer, with not only environmen­talists but locals opposed to turbines having learned to use natural protection laws to stymie their plans.

Even before Russia’s invasion of

Ukraine upended decades of German energy policy, Scholz’s government had announced its intention to reverse the trend: it has plans to increase electricit­y from renewables by 80% over the next eight years, and to commit Germany’s 16 federal states to provide 2% of their landmass for wind energy over the next ten. Experts say this would amount to an additional 16,000 turbines by 2030, or 38 a week.

To reach these targets, Germany’s Green-run environmen­tal ministry has for the first time drawn up a conclusive list of 15 birds it deems at risk of colliding with turbines. Those animals that did not make the list, such as the black stork, cannot be cited to stop a planning applicatio­n. But even those that did make the grade are now protected to a lesser degree.

Windfarms can in the future be built outside a 1.5km radius around the nest of the lesser spotted eagle, for example, down from 3km. In the northeaste­rn state of Mecklenbur­g-Vorpommern, conservati­on officers said this is likely to affect 10 nesting pairs.

Wind park developers may still be obliged to take additional measures to protect the at-risk birds, such as by switching off turbines while fields in the vicinity are being harvested, thus attracting birds of prey on the lookout for newly exposed field mice.

Switching off turbines for an entire breeding season, however, will no longer be allowed, and rotor blades are not allowed to be kept at standstill if the farm’s energy production is diminished by 4-8% as a result, depending on the location.

“It’s a catastroph­e”, said one nature protection officer who did not want to be named, suggesting the legislatio­n was likely to be disputed and thus bog down planning applicatio­ns rather than unleash turbine builders. Some lawyers argue the new act violates European environmen­tal law; the German Wind Energy Associatio­n (BWE) vehemently disagrees. Court action looks predestine­d.

“As a society, we have to start asking ourselves some basic questions,” said Wolfram Axthelm, BWE’s chief executive. “Do we want to build windfarms because we want to mitigate climate change and protect the environmen­t as a whole? Or do we want to save every individual bird?”

The number of birds killed by wind turbines, he said, was dwarfed by those that perished after flying into windows, being run over by cars or being caught by domestic cats. “We have to concentrat­e on the population as a whole.”

Clanga pomarina is named after Pomerania, the historical region on the southern shore of the Baltic Sea. In Germany, the lesser spotted eagle’s population has declined by a quarter since the 1990s, not mainly due to wind turbines, but to a gradual disappeara­nce of the woodland-meets-wetland habitats where the birds like to nest.

Further to the east, in Estonia, Lithuania and Slovakia, the species is still thriving. The Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature red list of threatened species lists the lesser spotted eagle’s global population as stable, with an estimated 40,000-60,000 mature individual­s remaining in the wild.

 ?? Photograph: Vasily Fedosenko/Reuters ?? Lesser spotted eagles in mid-flight are unused to vertical obstacles, and keep their eyes focused on mice, lizard or frog-shaped prey below.
Photograph: Vasily Fedosenko/Reuters Lesser spotted eagles in mid-flight are unused to vertical obstacles, and keep their eyes focused on mice, lizard or frog-shaped prey below.
 ?? Metres. Photograph: IdentiFlig­ht ?? The system is expected to detect eagles approachin­g from a distance of up to 750
Metres. Photograph: IdentiFlig­ht The system is expected to detect eagles approachin­g from a distance of up to 750

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