The editor of a prominent scientific journal has described online claims about a study linking whale deaths to offshore wind farms as a "classic example" of misinformation as concerns grow about fake news distorting the debate.
It was the contents of a social media post in a community group that had Professor Quentin Hanich, editor-in-chief of respected scientific journal Marine Policy, trawling through hundreds of academic papers.
Content linking whale deaths off the United States east coast with site surveys for offshore wind turbines regularly appears.
Member for Cunningham in Wollongong, Alison Byrnes, last week echoed concerns about misinformation at a panel hosted by the Urban Development Institute of Australia (UDIA).
The federal government said it was aware of financial incentives being offered for negative submissions on the proposed Illawarra zone, as well as reports of people sending multiple responses under fake email addresses.
Professor Brander said swells were formed thousands of kilometres off the coast and, as they travelled across the ocean, through the process of refraction, the waves would simply pass through the turbines en route to shallow water.
Visualisations of a proposed offshore Illawarra wind zone in New South Wales were released by the federal government last month following intense community scrutiny of the project.
The original article contains 680 words, the summary contains 165 words. Saved 76%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
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It was the contents of a social media post in a community group that had Professor Quentin Hanich, editor-in-chief of respected scientific journal Marine Policy, trawling through hundreds of academic papers.
Content linking whale deaths off the United States east coast with site surveys for offshore wind turbines regularly appears.
Member for Cunningham in Wollongong, Alison Byrnes, last week echoed concerns about misinformation at a panel hosted by the Urban Development Institute of Australia (UDIA).
The federal government said it was aware of financial incentives being offered for negative submissions on the proposed Illawarra zone, as well as reports of people sending multiple responses under fake email addresses.
Professor Brander said swells were formed thousands of kilometres off the coast and, as they travelled across the ocean, through the process of refraction, the waves would simply pass through the turbines en route to shallow water.
Visualisations of a proposed offshore Illawarra wind zone in New South Wales were released by the federal government last month following intense community scrutiny of the project.
The original article contains 680 words, the summary contains 165 words. Saved 76%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!