Predictive jellyfish bloom dispersal maps for UK coastal electricity generating facilities

Lead Research Organisation: University of Bristol
Department Name: Earth Sciences

Abstract

The sudden 'en masse' appearance of jellyfish has serious consequences for coastal power stations through biofouling of cooling water systems. The reduction in water flow caused by jellyfish has forced power plants to run at reduced efficiency or temporarily shut down as a precautionary measure to prevent overheating, which impacts the provision of electricity to customers at a significant financial cost to the electricity supplier. A persistent difficulty lies in identifying the origin of blooms and when they will appear at a coastal facility and water intake. The main project partner for this proposal is EDF (nuclear), however the methodology is intentionally generic to allow adaptation to other sensitive coastal sites and therefore our project has the support of both SSE (gas energy) and SSPO (Scottish Salmon Producers Organisation).

The aim of this proposal is to provide a robust tool for rapid evaluation of the likelihood and scale of jellyfish ingress at EDF's Torness Nuclear Power Station based on simulated patterns of historic bloom dispersal within the North Sea from the last 20 years. To achieve this we will translate our previously NERC-funded research with the state-of-the-art marine Connectivity Modelling System to simulate dispersal of individuals within blooms incorporating specific biological behaviours of jellyfish (e.g. vertical migration, rough surface conditions avoidance and buoyancy-related effects of aging). We have two objectives which will be completed within 18 months at a cost of £161,618 (80% fEC):

(1) to provide gridded maps, specific to the time of the year or oceanographic conditions, giving the probability of jellyfish arriving at Torness, as well as minimum and peak arrival times, for blooms arising at any given source location within the North Sea.

(2) to test the suitability of the tool for providing an early warning of potential ingress threat from jellyfish blooms, including validation with historic and satellite-based observational data.

This tool will allow rapid risk evaluation and inform operational response by EDF when a jellyfish bloom is located in the future or during specific weather events. The tool will also identify critical locations in the North Sea where ongoing monitoring is essential for an early warning system for Torness Nuclear Facility.

Planned Impact

Knowledge of ingress threat probability, timing and the geographical scale of jellyfish bloom dispersal will benefit coastal power stations by allowing affected stations to plan ahead, enabling a range of actions that are presently not possible. Currently, the first thing that a power station knows about a severe jellyfish bloom is the sudden loss of differential pressure across the cooling water screens (as they become blocked with jellyfish). When this happens, the station has no choice but to immediately shut down the nuclear reactor(s), turbine generator(s) and cooling water pumps. This equipment is not designed to be regularly turned on and off, and such procedures are expected to contribute to premature failure. The high water pressure generated by the water column behind the blocked screens usually leads to damage of the drum screens and the drive units, requiring costly repair and further lost generation during the repairs. The clean-up operation can also be very time-consuming and expensive. In 2011, Torness Power Station was shut down for a week after a severe bloom of the moon jellyfish, Aurelia aurita. This represented a huge loss of electricity generation (with a value in the order of £10m) to EDF, but also impacted the provision of electricity to customers.

Knowledge of ingress threat probability, timing and the geographical scale of jellyfish bloom dispersal will enable a range of other actions which are not currently possible. The main option would be to reduce load prior to a predicted ingress event. This could be done in a gradual, and much more controlled, manner such that equipment is not stressed. Reducing load corresponds to a reduced requirement for cooling water and, in the event of the predicted bloom arriving at the intakes, a slower ingress of jellyfish - to a rate which the screening system can cope with. In this way, it may not be necessary to shut down entirely, and the station could increase load as soon as the bloom has passed by, keeping generation losses to an absolute minimum. With a reliable early warning system, other options could also be considered in order to further reduce generation losses; such as installing temporary nets or screens to shield the cooling water intakes; or sending fishing vessels to fish-out the jellyfish swarms. Jellyfish are becoming an increasingly recognised and valuable resource (for food, using extracts (e.g. collagen) in other products, and research), and this option could even lead to commercial exploitation of the blooms.

Overall outcome: a decrease in the financial cost and customer disruption caused by temporary shut-downs and rapid unnecessary reductions in load by coastal power stations on the North Sea.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description We employed a specialised particle tracking model, driven by modelled data on ocean currents, to simulate the dispersal (transport) of large numbers of jellyfish in the surface waters of the North Sea. By tracking large numbers of particles over multiple years, we could estimate the probability that a bloom arising at a specific location and time of year would impact specific coastal power stations, based on past ocean current patterns. We demonstrate this approach to developing a simple early- warning system for jellyfish ingress. The approach is designed to work alongside jellyfish bloom detection efforts, providing gridded datasets giving the probability that a bloom detected at a specific location and time of year will impact a target facility, plus likely timings of impact.
Exploitation Route Under operational testing and discussions with EDF software team to create an end user interface. The model output can be used operationally in two ways. Firstly, the maximum range of potential 'risk' locations as well as the estimated transport times can be used to determine the appropriate geographical siting of bloom detection equipment to achieve the 'warning time' required, avoiding siting detection methods in locations where blooms are unlikely to be transported towards the station or would take a long time to reach it. Secondly, the data can be used to make operational decisions on detection of a bloom - a bloom arising outside of the predicted 'risk area' is unlikely to warrant further monitoring, whereas one arising within the 'risk area' can then be monitored over the time frame predicted by the model.
Sectors Aerospace, Defence and Marine,Energy,Environment

 
Description We have developed a model for both the EDF Torness (UK) and Gravelines (French) Nuclear Stations which demonstrates potential source locations for jellyfish blooms arriving at each power facility within different specified time frames, as well as intra- and inter-annual variability in potential sources. The first quantifiable benefit for EDF has been that we have established the scale of the problem i.e. the extent of the area of interest for monitoring blooms and therefore the most appropriate technology to do this.
First Year Of Impact 2017
Sector Energy
 
Description EDF Energy 
Organisation EDF Energy
Department EDF Energy Nuclear Generation
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Private 
PI Contribution (1) Three formal reports for each work package (see below). (2) Monthly hour-long conference calls between EDF Energy R&D, EDF Gravelines, France and U. Bristol. (3) Intellectual input to review proposals
Collaborator Contribution Monthly hour-long conference calls between EDF Energy R&D, EDF Gravelines, France and U. Bristol
Impact (1) Work Package 2 Report: Predictive jellyfish bloom dispersal maps for UK coastal electricity generating facilities (Nov 2018). Sally Wood, Erica Hendy and Claudia Alt. U. Bristol. 35 pg. - Output for operational testing by end user - Guide for geographical range and siting of bloom detection efforts (2) Work Package 1 Report: Predictive jellyfish bloom dispersal maps for UK coastal electricity generating facilities (March 2018 ). Sally Wood and Erica Hendy. U. Bristol. 17 pg. - output from preliminary model provides broad-scale view of potential risk locations for 4 coastal power facilities (Torness, Gravelines, Sizewell and Dungeness), as well as intra- and inter-annual variability in potential sources. (3) Work Package 0 Report: Recommendations for suitable hydrographic input data to model jellyfish bloom arrival at Torness and Gravelines nuclear power facilities (March 2017). Sally Wood and Erica Hendy U. Bristol. 21 pg. (Multidisciplinary - bio-physical modelling; physical oceanography, marine biology, high performance computing)
Start Year 2016
 
Description Multiple press releases (one example given) 
Form Of Engagement Activity A press release, press conference or response to a media enquiry/interview
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Media (as a channel to the public)
Results and Impact E.g. most recent press release (http://www.bristol.ac.uk/news/2014/september/unknown-eruption.html) has been translated and reworked into web topic pieces in at least 4 other languages (Indonesian, French, Spanish, German) as far afield as Colombia and Indonesia, and interviews with American and Spanish media.

E.g. http://www.bristol.ac.uk/news/2016/october/jellyfish-invasions.html has had international impact and we continue to get interest for further work.

We are actively building a collaborative partnership with Colombian researchers.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2012,2013,2014,2016
URL http://www.bristol.ac.uk/news/2016/october/jellyfish-invasions.html
 
Description Presentation to Torness Station Management (Nov 2017), gateway meeting with EDF R&D (Dec 2017) and presentation to CATAPULT (Jan 2018) 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Industry/Business
Results and Impact At the presentation to Torness Station Management (Nov 2017), and at the following gateway meeting with EDF R&D (Dec 2017) we provided examples of the model output as proof of concept for the project and for feedback.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2017,2018