But
pile driving during construction could have affected marine life
After
periodic acoustic monitoring of the Block Island Wind Farm since before it
began operation in 2016, a University of Rhode Island ocean engineer has found
that the sound from the operation of the turbines is having no detectable
effect on the marine environment.
“The
sound from the wind turbines is just barely detectable underwater,” said James
H. Miller, URI professor of ocean engineering and an expert on sound
propagation in the ocean. “You have to be very close to hear it. As far as we
can see, it’s having no effect on the environment, and much less than shipping
noise.”
Miller
and a team of specialists from Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Marine
Acoustics Inc., and others monitored the noise from the operation of the wind
farm using hydrophones in the water and geophones—which measure the vibration
of the sea bed—on the seafloor.
“We
listened to a lot of ships, a lot of whales, wind and fish, but the sound of
the turbines was very, very subtle,” he said. “We were 50 meters away from the
turbine and we could just barely hear some noise at a very low level. And above
the water line we just barely heard the swishing of the blades turning.”
During
the two-week pile-driving stage of construction, however, Miller said the sound
was quite loud. Pile driving is the first step in building the support
structure for the turbines.
The
greatest concern from the pile driving is its effects on the critically
endangered North Atlantic right whales. To minimize the impacts, pile driving
was prohibited between Nov. 1 and May 1, when the whales were most likely to be
in the area.
Trained observers were also hired by the developers to watch for
any whales that may have wandered into the construction zone. And pile driving
was restricted to the daytime to facilitate visual detection of whales nearby.
The
most surprising result of the acoustic monitoring of the wind farm construction
was the intensity of the vibrations felt in the seabed from the pile driving.
“The
impact on the animals on the seabed is potentially worse than for those in the
water column,” Miller said. “It may have had an effect on nearby
bottom-dwelling organisms like flounder and lobsters, which have a huge
economic value in the state. But we’re still trying to understand what that
effect may be.
“Fish
probably can’t hear the noise from the turbine operations, but there’s no doubt
that they could hear the pile driving,” he added. “And the levels are high
enough that we’re concerned.”
Miller’s
acoustic monitoring of the wind farm is part of an effort by the federal Bureau
of Ocean Energy Management to understand the impact of wind turbine
construction and operations on the environment so future wind farms can be
planned appropriately.
The
Bureau has funded Miller — through Nebraska-based engineering consultants HDR
Inc. — to evaluate the sound from wind farm construction and operations at
other locations along the East Coast. He will soon deploy his acoustic
instruments in the waters off Maryland and Virginia as preparations begin for
the first offshore wind turbines off the Mid-Atlantic coast.
“The
conditions are different there — the seabed is different, the oceanographic
conditions are different, it’s warmer there longer — all of which can have an
impact on sound propagation,” Miller said.
“The seabed there is much more
homogenous sand than we have up here, which we think might make the sound
levels a little bit louder. It’s something we’re still trying to understand.”
About
1,000 offshore wind turbines have been proposed for installation in the waters
from Massachusetts to Georgia in the coming years.
Miller
is also part of an HDR team monitoring sound from shipping, oil exploration and
production, and other sources in the Gulf of Mexico as part of a separate
Bureau of Ocean Energy Management-funded project to describe what he calls “the
existing noise soundscape” in the Gulf.
“It’s
really exciting that we’re being asked to do so much of the acoustic monitoring
in the oceans around the U.S.,” Miller concluded. “We’ve become the national
experts, which has added to Rhode Island’s reputation as the Ocean State.”
URI’s
Narragansett Bay Campus is home to the URI Graduate School of Oceanography
(GSO), one of the world’s premier oceanographic institutions. Founded in 1961,
GSO has built a reputation for excellence in deep water oceanographic research,
coastal planning and management, sustainable fisheries and monitoring the
health of Narragansett Bay. With operations, researchers, faculty and students
worldwide, the Bay Campus education and outreach programs train the next
generation of scientists and policymakers, while ensuring Rhode Island’s K-12
teachers and students gain an appreciation for the importance of ocean science
through a variety of hands-on programs.
On Nov.
6, Rhode Islanders will vote on Question 2, a $70 million higher education
general obligation bond that includes $45 million for upgrades to the
Narragansett Bay Campus. If approved, proceeds from the bond will be used to
improve the GSO’s pier (required to accommodate a newly awarded Regional Class
Research Vessel from the National Science Foundation valued at more than $100
million), construct a 20,000-square-foot Ocean Technology building, a Marine
Operations building and fund other necessary improvements to campus facilities.