Installation and operational effects of a HVDC submarine cable in a continental shelf setting: Bass Strait, Australia
journal contribution
posted on 2016-12-01, 00:00authored byJohn SherwoodJohn Sherwood, S Chidgey, P Crockett, D Gwyther, P Ho, S Stewart, D Strong, B Whitely, A Williams
Despite the many submarine telecommunications and power cables laid world-wide there are fewer than ten published studies of their
environmental effects in the refereed literature. This paper describes an investigation into the effects of laying and operating the Basslink
High Voltage Direct Current (HVDC) cable and its associated metallic return cable across Bass Strait in South East Australia. Over more
than 95% of its length the cable was directly laid into a wet jetted trench given the predominantly soft sediments encountered. Underwater
remote video investigations found that within two years all visible evidence of the cable and trench was gone at over a third of the transects
at six deep water sites (32–72 m deep). At other deep water transects the residual trench trapped drift material providing habitat for the
generally sparsely distributed benthic community. Diver surveys at both of the near shore sites (<15 m deep) on the northern side of the
Strait also found the cable route was undetectable after a year. On the southern side, where the cable traversed hard basalt rock near shore,
it was encased in a protective cast iron half shell. Ecological studies by divers over 3.5 years demonstrated the colonization of the hard shell
by similar species occupying hard substrates elsewhere on the basalt reef. Magnetic field strengths associated with the operating cable were
found to be within 0.8% of those predicted from theory with strength dropping rapidly with distance from the cable. Beyond 20 m the field
was indistinguishable from background.
History
Journal
Journal of ocean engineering and science
Volume
1
Pagination
337-353
Location
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
ISSN
2468-0133
Language
eng
Publication classification
C Journal article, C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal