Partrac Completes Marine Noise Monitoring Survey (UK)

Environment

Partrac Completes Marine Noise Monitoring Survey (UK)

The installation of driven piles in the marine environment, whether along quaysides or – for example – during installation of offshore foundations, without mitigation is likely to produce noise levels capable of causing injury and disturbance to marine animals.

Such effects, although incidental to consented activities, have the potential to conflict with a range of legislative provisions. Although guidance is available to developers on how best run projects in an environmentally sensitive manner (including the JNCC The Standard Piling Protocol) and how to mitigate noise impacts, often the regulatory process obliges developers through a License Condition to institute formal marine noise monitoring to assess quantitatively noise levels.

Partrac Ltd were contracted recently by TSL Contractors to provide marine monitoring services which included acoustic (marine noise) data acquisition prior to, and during, piling works for the construction of Fishnish Pier, Sound of Mull, Scotland. The sensitive receiver in this project was a salmon farm some 600 m away from the construction site. For the work Partrac developed a bespoke, stable marine monitoring platform modified to reduce ambient noise and which included a high-end,  ultra low noise and wide dynamic range marine hydrophone.

The instrument, small enough to be carried around in your hand, is especially easy to use, setup, download and calibrate, and is particularly suited to longer term monitoring applications. Although not used in this project, the instrument is also capable of being configured to deliver data in real time, 24/7. The instrument delivers both WAV and spectral output, and software was specially written to analyse the vast amount of data generated and specifically to inspect the data more closely in the peak auditory frequency band.

Regulatory specifications within the License Condition dictated that sound levels should be no more than 79 dB  above species (Salmon) hearing threshold at or close to the peak auditory frequency (~180 Hz). The results showed unequivocally that piling operations at any point during the monitoring period never created noise levels in excess of the threshold, and thus the works were judged unlikely to cause injuries (e.g. hearing impairment) to the salmon.

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Press release, August 16, 2013; Image: WindMW