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1 | Program Name or Ancillary Texteere.energy.gov Water Power Peer Review Acoustic Effects of Hydrokinetic Tidal Turbines Dr. Brian Polagye University of Washington, NNMREC bpolagye@uw.edu November 1, 2011
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2 | Wind and Water Power Programeere.energy.gov Purpose, Objectives, & Integration Determine the likely acoustic effects from a tidal energy project – understand potential harm to marine life — Ambient noise (context for turbine noise) — Sound from turbines (at various device scales) — Marine species presence (space and time variation) — Effect of sound on marine species (injury and behavioral changes) All data collected over course of project in public domain (NNMREC website) Industry, university, and laboratory involvement — Snohomish PUD: Craig Collar and Jessica Spahr — University of Washington: Brian Polagye, Jim Thomson, Chris Bassett (NSF graduate research fellow), Joe Graber — SMRU, Ltd: Dom Tollit and Jason Wood — PNNL: Andrea Copping and Tom Carlson
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3 | Wind and Water Power Programeere.energy.gov Technical Approach Monitoring Biological and Physical Characteristcs Infrared detection (land-based) AIS Tracking (land-based) Sea Spider (bottom-mounted) Marine mammal echolocation detectors Ambient noise recorder Fish tag receiver Doppler profiler
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4 | Wind and Water Power Programeere.energy.gov Technical Approach Sound from Tidal Turbines Limited measurements from OpenHydro turbine at EMEC Apply first-order scaling rules for arrays of larger turbines Focus on post-installation characterization of turbine noise —Omnidirectional sound propagation test —Demonstrate characterization methodology for TRL 7/8 projects Necessary to place turbine noise in context of ambient noise OpenHydro turbine noise measurements (Scottish Association of Marine Sciences )
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5 | Wind and Water Power Programeere.energy.gov Technical Approach Effects of Turbine Noise Literature review of effects on marine species from percussive and continuous noise Laboratory experiments expanding knowledge base (juvenile salmon) —Exposure to simulated turbine noise in anechoic tank —Measured hearing response to identify onset of threshold shift —Necropsies to identify tissue damage Proxy study: effect of ferry noise on harbor porpoise —Ferry noise frequency distribution similar to turbine Top: Fish undergoing an Auditory Evoked Potential (AEP) Hearing test. Bottom: Electrophysiological response
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6 | Wind and Water Power Programeere.energy.gov Plan, Schedule, & Budget Schedule Initiation date: September 30, 2009 (under contract March 26, 2010) Planned completion date: December 31, 2011 Fabrication and deployment of Sea Spiders (August 2010) Sound propagation field study (August 2011) Laboratory hearing/exposure experiment (March – June 2011) Presentation of results (e.g., webinars, conferences) (2010-2011) Budget Two additional Sea Spider deployments (increased supplies) 85% of DOE funds costed (September 2011) Budget History FY2009FY2010FY2011 DOECost-shareDOECost-shareDOECost-share $0 $213k$26k$291k$26k
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7 | Wind and Water Power Programeere.energy.gov Accomplishments and Results Context is Crucial for Interpreting Acoustic Effects Ambient noise will also complicate post-installation measurements Estimated effect of turbine operation on ambient noise
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8 | Wind and Water Power Programeere.energy.gov Accomplishments and Results Maximum Ambient Noise is Vessel Dominated Vessel density (vessel-minutes) in project area Cumulative probability distributions of broadband received levels
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9 | Wind and Water Power Programeere.energy.gov Accomplishments and Results Marine Mammal Response is Site-Specific No apparent avoidance to exposure at 140 dB (broadband) Indicator of noise habituation N = 16 R 2 = 0.1, F = 5.5, p = 0.02
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10 | Wind and Water Power Programeere.energy.gov Challenges to Date OpenHydro turbine noise measurements (Scottish Association of Marine Sciences ) Acoustic Source Limited measurements – difficult to quantify “turbine noise” Focus on testing methods to characterize turbine noise post-install Measurements Flow noise and self noise affect measurements when currents > 1 m/s Development of compact flow shield for stationary measurements and drifting hydrophone approach Species effects Cannot experiment directly on marine mammals Opportunistic proxy studies Surrogate laboratory experiments
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11 | Wind and Water Power Programeere.energy.gov Next Steps Project Completion —Summary report describing techniques and lessons learned —Analysis of source propagation data —Publications: vessel noise, harbor porpoise presence, proxy study of noise effects Future Work —Better analytical tools for scaling noise estimates from measurements —Simple tools for pre-installation estimates – emphasize measuring noise at pilot-scale —Scale-up – design trade-offs for quieter turbines
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