SALMON
SALAD? New FERC-approved turbine design at Columbia
River dam in Washington state is set to boost survival
rate for juvenile salmon. (Photo courtesy of Grant County
Public Utility District)
The Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission is allowing a Washington state utility
to replace one of 10 aging turbines at its 900-MW Wanapum
Dam on the Columbia River with a specially designed unit to
increase survival of millions of juvenile salmon that migrate
annually through the hydro plant.
The so-called "Kaplan"
turbine has been modified to minimize uncontrolled water turbulence,
which has long been a primary cause of fish injury. The goal
is to give the endangered salmon "a smooth ride,"
says Stephen Brown, director of natural resources for the
Grant County Public Utility District.
The design tweaks elements of the
entire hydraulic passageway, including the distributor, runner
and draft tube, to reduce turbulence. New six-bladed runners
and the distributors have minimum blade gaps, and wicket gate
overhang has been eliminated.
The turbine has a spherical hub
and corresponding modifications to stay vanes and wicket gates.
The utility contends that while a 1% improvement in the short-term
fish survival rate would be deemed a success, the re-designed
turbine could boost that rate as high as 98%.
But fish biologists at the state
Dept. of Fish and Wildlife are not buying the claim. "The
odds that it will be highly beneficial for fish are pretty
low, but it is likely to be at least neutral," says Rod
Wooden, state policy coordinator for the Columbia River. He
says the new turbine design will increase operational flexibility
and power output during fish migration when flow rates and
spills are defined by environmental rules.
The new turbine-generator output
at 111.8 MW is an increase over the existing capacity of 103.8
MW because the system "minimizes hydraulic losses"
that kill and injure fish, says Brian Nordland, a hydraulic
engineer for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
in Lacey, Wash., who was involved in the design of the new
turbine. But he admits that the long-term survival rates of
juvenile fish passing through the turbine remains unknown.
To significantly improve that outlook,
all elements of the plant, not just turbines, must be addressed
holistically, says Wooden. He says the state believes this
could be accomplished at Wanapum Dam with construction of
a separate engineered passageway through the powerhouse, which
could cost $20 million.
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Initial turbine replacement work
at Wanapum Dam is set to finish later this year, with performance
and biological testing next spring. If efficiency and survival
goals are met, the utility intends to replace the nine other
turbines in stages between 2006 and 2012.
The first test turbine is being
manufactured by Voith-Siemens, York, Pa., at a cost of $18
million. The combined cost for all 10 turbines will be $143
million. The utility received a $2.4-million grant from the
U.S. Dept. of Energy to complete original design work. Broomfield,
Colo.-based MWH provided engineering support. The utility
will install the turbines with support from Voith-Siemens,
which will handle parts of the equipment to be embedded in
concrete.
The advanced turbine design may
be applicable at other sites in the Columbia River watershed
where dams and power-generating equipment are largely responsible
for major declines in migratory-fish populations. "Most
of the Columbia River hydro projects use Kaplan turbines and
a lot are aging," Brown points out. "This project
will be watched closely."
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