https://www.nature.com/news/iron-dumping-ocean-experiment-sparks-controversy-1.22031

Iron-dumping ocean experiment sparks controversy

Canadian foundation says its field research could boost fisheries in Chile,
but researchers doubt its motives.

   - Jeff Tollefson
   
<https://www.nature.com/news/iron-dumping-ocean-experiment-sparks-controversy-1.22031#auth-1>

23 May 2017
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Blickwinkel/Alamy

Phytoplankton need iron to make energy by photosynthesis.

Marine scientists are raising the alarm about a proposal to drop tonnes of
iron into the Pacific Ocean to stimulate the growth of phytoplankton, the
base of the food web. The non-profit group behind the plan says that it
wants to revive Chilean fisheries. It also has ties to a controversial 2012
project in Canada that was accused of violating an international moratorium
on commercial ocean fertilization.

The Oceaneos Marine Research Foundation of Vancouver, Canada, says that it
is seeking permits from the Chilean government to release up to 10 tonnes
of iron particles 130 kilometres off the coast of Coquimbo as early as
2018. But Chilean scientists are worried because the organization grew out
of a for-profit company, Oceaneos Environmental Solutions of Vancouver,
that has sought to patent iron-fertilization technologies. Some researchers
suspect that the foundation is ultimately seeking to profit from an
unproven and potentially harmful activity.

“They claim that by producing more phytoplankton, they could help the
recovery of the fisheries,” says Osvaldo Ulloa, director of the Millennium
Institute of Oceanography in Concepción, Chile. “We don’t see any evidence
to support that claim.”
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Tensions flared in April, when researchers at the institute went public
with their concerns in response to Chilean media reports on the project.
The government has since requested input from the Chilean Academy of
Science, and the institute is organizing a forum on the project and related
research on 25 May, at a marine-sciences meeting in Valparaíso, Chile. The
Oceaneos foundation, which declined an invitation, has accused the
scientists of improperly classifying its work as geoengineering, rather
than ocean restoration. Oceaneos president Michael Riedijk says that his
team wants to work with Chilean scientists and will make all the data from
its experiment public. The foundation plans to hold its own forum later,
but if scientists aren’t willing to engage, he says, “we’ll just move on
without them”.

Researchers worldwide have conducted 13 major iron-fertilization
experiments in the open ocean since 1990. All have sought to test
whether stimulating
phytoplankton growth
<http://www.nature.com/news/dumping-iron-at-sea-does-sink-carbon-1.11028> can
increase the amount of carbon dioxide that the organisms pull out of the
atmosphere and deposit in the deep ocean when they die. Determining how
much carbon is sequestered during such experiments has proved difficult,
however, and scientists have raised concerns about potential adverse
effects, such as toxic algal blooms. In 2008, the United Nations Convention
on Biological Diversity put in place a moratorium on all
ocean-fertilization projects
<https://www.nature.com/news/2008/080603/full/453704b.html> apart from
small ones in coastal waters. Five years later, the London Convention on
ocean pollution adopted rules for evaluating such studies.

Because Oceaneos’s planned experiment would take place in Chilean waters,
it is allowed under those rules. Riedijk says that the foundation will
voluntarily follow international protocols for such studies; it is unclear
whether that will allay fears that the group is promoting an unproven
technology, rather than conducting basic research.

“If they want to partner with academics, then surely transparency is their
best foot forward.”

Philip Boyd, a marine ecologist at the University of Tasmania in Hobart,
Australia, wants to see the foundation publish research based on lab
experiments before heading out into the field. “If they are a
not-for-profit scientific venture that wants to partner with academics,
then surely transparency is their best foot forward,” he says.

Oceaneos’s links to a 2012 iron-fertilization project off the coast of
British Columbia, Canada, have made some researchers wary. In that project,
US entrepreneur Russ George convinced a Haida Nation village to pursue iron
fertilization to boost salmon populations, with the potential to sell
carbon credits based on the amount of CO2 that would be sequestered in the
ocean. News of the plan broke after project organizers had dumped around
100 tonnes of iron sulfate into the open ocean. In the years since,
scientists have seen no evidence that the experiment worked.

Riedijk says he was intrigued when he read about the Haida experiment in
2013, and contacted one of its organizers, Jason McNamee. McNamee later
served as chief operating officer of Oceaneos Environmental Solutions —
which Riedijk co-founded — before leaving the company last year.

Despite the Haida project’s problems, Riedijk says that ocean fertilization
merits further research: “If this actually does work, it does have global
implications.” Oceaneos Environ-mental Solutions has developed an iron
compound that can be consumed efficiently by phytoplankton, he adds, but he
declined to release details. Riedijk also says that the foundation is
working on a method to trace the movement of iron up the food chain and
into fish populations.

In the meantime, scientists say that it will be difficult to get solid data
from the Oceaneos foundation’s planned experiment. The geology off the
Chilean coast, and the patterns of currents there, create a mosaic of low-
and high-iron waters. Anchovies, horse mackerel and other fish move freely
between these areas.

And adding iron could shift the location and timing of phytoplankton blooms
to favour fast-growing species, says Adrian Marchetti, a biological
oceanographer at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. One of
those, the diatom *Pseudo-nitzschia*, produces domoic acid, a neurotoxin
that can kill mammals and birds. Oceaneos’s experiment will probably
increase plankton growth in low-iron waters, Marchetti says, “but it’s not
to say that that is actually good for the higher levels of the food chain”.
Nature 545, 393–394 (25 May 2017)doi:10.1038/545393a

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