Falcon ROV Conducts Torr Head Tidal Energy Study

Equipment

Saab Seaeye Falcon ROV spent three days gathering vital benthic data for an impact assessment of a proposed tidal array installation at Torr Head on Northern Ireland’s coast.

Undertaking the assessment project was Marine Ecological Surveys Limited for their client, Tidal Ventures Ltd, who intend developing a 100 megawatt tidal array.

Daniel Brutto, general manager at Marine Ecological Surveys (MESL) explained that a detailed benthic characterisation survey of the habitats and species was necessary to predict the likely impact of the proposed development of the array on the marine environment.

He explains that the survey, apart from being required by government agencies to evaluate the affect of the proposals on the marine environment, also helps engineers refine their plans for site location and determine cable runs by identifying the routes least likely to impact the environment.

He also says that considerable savings in field work costs come from providing such ground-truthing data.

As such tidal sites are chosen for their high-energy nature, they bring challenges in the shape of high winds, high tides and strong wave energies, declares Daniel Brutto.

Consequently, the MESL team had to work within a single neap tide window whilst surveying 40 sites over a three-day period, Saab wrote.

To undertake the project, MESL chose Roving Eye Enterprises, who added a high definition camera to their Falcon ROV and spent the three-day window filming at the 40 locations whilst sending the data topside to a team of MESL marine scientists on board the vessel, who were also directing the survey.

Keith Bichan at Roving Eye said:

“The place is deep and very tidal, with tides running at five metres a second, so we quickly had to learn the slacks and eddies across the 40 locations, and still work in currents running at over two knots.”

Daniel Brutto added that the Falcon ROV was a more effective choice for countering the tidal energies of the site compared to using a dropdown camera. Such a camera would have resulted in shorter operational opportunities, a more prolonged and expensive survey, and lessor quality data.

He concludes that the data gathered by the Falcon has helped their client both in the engineering of the site and in characterising habitats off Torr Head by building an understanding of their complexity and distribution, and by developing an important habitat map of the area.

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