Floating Power Plant in Buffer Zone of Addo ENP

Information & Discussions on Addo Elephant National Park
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Toko
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Floating Power Plant in Buffer Zone of Addo ENP

Post by Toko »

This project involves the permanent mooring of an FPP vessel in the Port of Ngqura for a 5-15 year project life, with a floating fuel storage facility (a bunker barge) moored at any available quay. Power will be evacuated from the power barge via an overhead line to a switching yard. From here power will be evacuated via a 132 kV line over a distance of approximately 6 km to the Dedisa substation, which currently has an available capacity of 600 MW.

The eastern breakwater (where the FPP will be moored) is within 500 m of Jahleel Island which forms part of the Addo Elephant National Park.
The proposed project area falls within the Addo Elephant National Park buffer zone.

EIA FOR A FLOATING POWER PLANT, PORT OF NGQURA: http://www.cesnet.co.za/pubdocs/PRDW%20 ... Report.pdf
In 2005, the Bird Island group and St. Croix Island group both located in Algoa Bay were
proclaimed as part of the Greater Addo Elephant National Park. In addition to this, these islands
have been proclaimed as an Important Bird Area (No SA 095). According to BirdLife International
both of the Algoa Bay Island groups are of considerable importance as they are the only islands
along a 1,777 km stretch of coastline between Cape Agulhas and Inhaca Island in Mozambique.
Fourteen seabird, several shorebird and 33 terrestrial bird species have been recorded on the
Algoa Bay Islands and eight seabird species currently breed there.
There are four globally threatened species, namely African Penguin, Cape Cormorant, Cape
Gannet and the African Black Oystercatcher, and two regionally threatened species, namely
Caspian Tern (Sterna), and Roseate Tern. The species reaching the 1% or more congregatory
threshold are Kelp Gull (Larus dominicanus) and Antarctic Tern, while Swift Tern (Thalasseus
bergii) and Ruddy Turnstone (Arenaria interpres) are thought to reach the 0.5% or more
congregatory threshold (BirdLife International). Jahleel Island, which is the closest island to the
proposed project area (less than 1 km), forms part of the St Croix Island Group.


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Toko
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Re: Floating Power Plant in Buffer Zone of Addo ENP

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http://www.heraldlive.co.za/shore-power ... ne-ngqura/

Off-shore power in pipeline for Ngqura
By Guy Rogers on March 21, 2016


While floating plant can be quick energy fix, the jury is still out on the EIA, writes Guy Rogers

THE Department of Energy and Transnet have launched a project at Ngqura to generate power off-shore and channel it into the Eskom grid.

An environmental impact assessment (EIA) is underway to weigh up the benefits and costs of berthing the Floating Power Plant (FPP) as it is called at one of two possible sites in the port.

The intention is that an independent power producer will be brought on board to develop, own and operate the FPP as part of the department’s independent power producer programme.

FPPs can be installed relatively quickly compared to landside power plants and the aim is that it will help meet the most urgent electricity demands while the longer-term natural gas project is established at Ngqura over the next three to five years.

Some detail about the project and some of the concerns including how the FPP will affect the proposed Addo marine protected area and the endangered African penguins nesting on Jahleel Island less than a kilometre away emerge in the initial assessment by EOH Coastal & Environmental Services (CES), who have been contracted by the department.

Their “scoping report” has been released for public scrutiny and they are now busy with a more in-depth assessment of problematic aspects of the project.

Weekend Post sent questions to the independent power producer office which is coordinating the project but their response was not available by the time of writing.

According to the scoping report the Ngqura FPP will carry power-generating turbines that can be run on fuel oil or gas. Fuel oil will be used until liquid gas storage facilities and an importation regime are established, at which point the fuelling will change to gas.

The FPP will run continuously and will consume 60000 to 80000 tons of fuel a month. Storage of the fuel and the method of refuelling are key aspects that must still be worked and assessed.

The most likely site identified in the report is 200m from shore and 50m from Ngqura’s eastern breakwater where the FPP will be moored to concrete “dolphins”. The estimated 600MW it will generate will be transferred via an “overhead line” from the FPP to a landside switchyard and the transformed electricity will then be directed via a 6km transmission line to the Dedisa substation and then into the national electricity grid.

It is not clear how the overhead line will be secured against gales and the FPP pitching on the waves in stormy conditions.

FPP technology is not new, however. Floating power plants were initially developed during World War II by General Electric and since then a range of models have been launched including custom made barges that are towed into position, and more mobile refitted powerships.

Advanced FPPs include ones with wind turbines and with submarine propellers that generate power from the movement of waves, currents and tides.

Turkish energy company Karadeniz owns a fleet of FPPs that it rents out to countries around the world that need additional power and at least one is presently doing duty in Africa – in Ghana.

It is not clear if the Ngqura FPP will be a re-fitted powership or a barge and whether the shipbuilding work may be done in the Eastern Cape under the Phakisa programme. Neither is it clear if clean energy power generation alternatives are possible for South Africa’s new FPPs – which will be installed at Ngqura and also at Richard’s Bay and Saldanha.

Under potential negative impacts for the Ngqura site, the report says there is a danger of water pollution by hydrocarbons and other hazardous contaminants in fuel spills from the FPP and other vessels during the construction and operation phase of the project if they are “not appropriately managed.

“In addition, noise and air emissions from the FPP may result in the disturbance of birds on Jahleel Island if not managed appropriately.

“The discharge of heated water may result in the disruption of marine ecological processes.”

The report rates the potential negative impact of these issues as high and moderate for the FPPs two possible berths.

The ratings drop to moderate and low if mitigation measures are implemented but a mitigation measure is offered only for the fuel pollution. It says “storage, transfer and handling of the fuel must be designed and operated to international standards… and spill contingency plans must be put in place”.

SANParks marine coordinator Ané Oosthuizen was this week leading a team participating in wall-to-wall public participation sessions on SANPark’s proposed 1200km² Addo Elephant National Park marine protected area.

She was unable to respond in detail to questions about the Ngqura FPP but said: “We have concerns. We are dealing with them through the EIA process.”


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Toko
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Re: Floating Power Plant in Buffer Zone of Addo ENP

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Some detail about the project and some of the concerns including how the FPP will affect the proposed Addo marine protected area and the endangered African penguins nesting on Jahleel Island less than a kilometre away emerge in the initial assessment by EOH Coastal & Environmental Services (CES), who have been contracted by the department.

The new Addo Marine Protected Area (MPA) has been proposed by the Minister of Environmental Affairs on the 3rd of February of this year, together with another 21 other MPAs in South Africa.

http://www.millerslocal.co.za/uploads/5 ... do_mpa.pdf

From what I can see on the map, Jahleel Island is just within the new MPA on the western boarder.

-O- -O- -O- -O- -O- -O-
addo-mpa.jpg
addo-mpa.jpg (77.41 KiB) Viewed 582 times
Addo Marine ecosystem has the largest breeding colony of African Penguins in the world. The MPA would mainly protect the penguin’s feeding grounds, because there is a lot of competition between the species and the fishing community, as well as the surrounding development industries. 0:


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Re: Floating Power Plant in Buffer Zone of Addo ENP

Post by Puff Addy »

Image

Here's a floating power plant like the one in Ghana.


Image

Here are some African Penguins at Brenton Island (we visited the St Croix islands last December).


Just when I thought Port Elizabeth couldn't get any more hideous... 0*\

The power plant should go very well with the floating oil rigs at Ngqura, the rubber factory in Uitenhage, P.E.'s manganese ore terminal, etcetera, etcetera, etcetera... O/

EDIT: Oops, the penguin photo was made at Brenton Island, which is closer to St Croix.
Last edited by Puff Addy on Mon Mar 21, 2016 9:57 pm, edited 2 times in total.


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Toko
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Re: Floating Power Plant in Buffer Zone of Addo ENP

Post by Toko »

Puff Addy wrote: The power plant should go very well with the floating oil rigs at Ngqura, the rubber factory in Uitenhage, P.E.'s manganese ore terminal, etcetera, etcetera, etcetera... O/
With regard to the proposed new manganese ore site due to be established at Coega to take the ore relocated from Port Elizabeth:

SANParks marine coordinator Ané Oosthuizen said in the CSIR’s 2013 environmental impact assessment for the new terminal, “our main concern is the impact of the manganese dust. The penguins on the islands are susceptible to lung infection. We are concerned about the cumulative impacts of dust, from the manganese facility and other projects like the proposed cement crusher facility.”
The assessment notes the danger of Aspergillus fungus propagating on soft substrates and that the manganese dust could provide exactly this kind of habitat “with the consequent greater potential for infection of penguins”.

These penguins were doing very well thanks to experimental fishing exclusion zones declared after the decline and now they face some new threats. 0*\


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Re: Floating Power Plant in Buffer Zone of Addo ENP

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@#$ @#$ @#$

We got to see the manganese dust first hand as the current terminal is right next to the marina and our boat and all the others were covered with the stuff.


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Toko
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Re: Floating Power Plant in Buffer Zone of Addo ENP

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O-/ O-/


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Re: Floating Power Plant in Buffer Zone of Addo ENP

Post by Flutterby »

What an eyesore! 0*\


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Re: Floating Power Plant in Buffer Zone of Addo ENP

Post by Richprins »

Theoretically it will be for a year or two? -O-


Please check Needs Attention pre-booking: https://africawild-forum.com/viewtopic.php?f=322&t=596
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Re: Floating Power Plant in Buffer Zone of Addo ENP

Post by Puff Addy »

If it doesn't become a permanent feature in P.E., maybe it could be moored in Sterkfontein Dam to power the Drakensberg cableway! lol


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