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Displaying items by tag: Water Degradation

“Urgent” research into water degradation, climate change and biodiversity loss on the islands of Ireland and Britain will be led by a new 41.3 million euro climate research centre based at Trinity College, Dublin (TCD).

The Climate+ Co-Centre will initially be funded over six years by Science Foundation Ireland, the Northern Ireland Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs and UK Research and Innovation.

It will also receive more than 30% co-funding from 29 industry partners, and will begin work on January 1st 2024.

The funding was officially announced by several ministers on both sides of the border at the British and Irish Intergovernmental conference at Farmleigh House,Dublin.

They included Minister for Further and Higher Education Simon Harris, Michelle Donelan, Secretary of State for Science, Innovation and Technology, and Katrina Godfrey, Permanent Secretary at Northern Ireland’s Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs.

The centre will bring together over 60 leading researchers from 14 academic partner institutions in Ireland, Northern Ireland and Britain.

Yvonne Buckley, Professor of Zoology at Trinity, and Co-Director of Climate+, said that “we need transformative changes to all sectors of society and the economy to tackle the climate, biodiversity and water crises”.

“Climate+ includes a team of outstanding researchers across 14 different universities and research institutes,and we will combine our diverse research skills and knowledge to develop solutions for these important challenges,”she said.

“It is clear from the scientific evidence that business as usual is no longer an option, and we are delighted to be working with forward thinking and progressive industry partners who will collaborate with us on research to provide sustainable solutions for their services and products,”she said.

TCD Provost Dr Linda Doyle said the university is “committed to pursuing research across traditional disciplinary boundaries to tackle climate change, biodiversity loss and water degradation, and to develop actions and solutions for a more fair, equitable, and liveable future”.

“It is clear we need new visions and evidence, nationally and internationally, to provide for truly sustainable alternative futures and spark change across society and the economy, and this new approach can make a major impact in that most important and pressing endeavour,”she said.

Professor Mark Emmerson, Queen’s University Belfast, and Co-Director of Climate+ said that the centre would “provide a mix of integrated solutions drawing on expertise from across the natural, social and physical sciences to help mitigate, and adapt to, the impacts of climate change, biodiversity loss and water quality declines”.

The Climate+ academic partner institutions are: Trinity College Dublin; Maynooth University; University of Galway; University College Cork; Dublin City University; University College Dublin; Atlantic Technological University; University of Limerick; Queen’s University Belfast; Ulster University; Agri-Food and Biosciences Institute; University of Reading; Newcastle University; UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology.

TCD said that industry partners include SECAD (renewable energy); Ørsted (renewable energy); FarmEye (agriculture); Natural World Products (agriculture); Anglian Water (utility).

Published in Marine Science
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Beneteau 211 sailing in Ireland

A small, fast cruiser/racer – in style very much a miniature Open 60 or early Figaro, the Beneteau First 211 offers high sailing performance for her size, plus simple accommodation for up to four people.
The boat is very dinghy-style to sail, although the keel makes her self-righting, and foam buoyancy renders her unsinkable, according to the French manufacturer.

Designed by Groupe Finot and introduced in 1998 as a replacement model for the 1992 model First 210, the Beneteau First 211 is a small high-performance yacht designed to be simple to sail and take the ground or be trailed. The words' pocket rockets' tend to be used to describe these boats!
The design was revised to become the Beneteau First 21.7 in 2005. All three models, 210, 211 and 21.7, are very similar in style and concept and share many actual components.

The hull of the Beneteau First 211 is solid GRP, with sandwich construction for the deck moulding. There is foam buoyancy at the bow and stern, guaranteeing unsinkability. The ballasted drop keel is raised by a manual jack and allows easy transport of the boat and drying out if required, supported level by the twin rudders.
The sailplan has a non-overlapping jib to keep sheet loads down and a large spinnaker to achieve high speeds downwind. With almost six foot of draught with keel down and twin rudders for control, upwind performance is also excellent.

The design is popular in Ireland's boating capital at Dun Laoghaire Harbour, where up to a dozen race as part of a one-design class in regular Dublin Bay Sailing Club racing. The boats also race for national championship honours annually. The boats are kept on Dun Laoghaire Marina and look all the more impressive as the fleet of pocket rocket racers are all moored together on one pontoon.

At A Glance – Beneteau First 211 Specifications

LOA: 6.2m (20ft 4in)

Draught: 1.8m to 0.65m (5ft 11in to 2ft 2in)

Displacement: 1,100kg (2,200lb)

LWL: 6m (19ft 7in)

ARCHITECT
• Finot Conq et Associés

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