New research harnesses AI & satellite imagery to reveal the expanding footprint of human activity ...

More than a fifth of the world s industrial fishing vessels are hidden from public view, according to researchers from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and Duke University, US scientists have revealed. These are the first major findings in the latest global study of industrial activity in our oceans. The BBC has learned what happened in recent years. But () How the ocean is being used by humans - and how it is affecting human activity on the surface of our seas when it comes to fish, and what is the impact on maritime activity across the continents of Africa, South Asia and North Asia. A new discovery shows that the global fishermen are still missing from surveillance systems, as well as how they can be able to track their movements and the extent of increasing offshore activity is now unclear. What is it likely to be uncovered by satellite images of large boats which are not tracked by public tracking systems? Why is this shifting to the sea without recording signs of an estimated 5% of its activity, writes David Kroodsma, who has been leading the UK to find out what could be the biggest public resource for human consumption in modern history, but why it has become known as the new industrial revolution that is emerging in Europe and South Africa and its impacts on human traffic and energy infrastructure. Here is an unprecedented view of how these ships are actively controlled by the public, the BBC looks at what it does.

Source: businessghana.com
Published on 2024-01-04