Memo
To:
At.:
From:
Project
Date:
Subject:
By & Havn
Michael Lundgaard, By & Havn
Bo Brahtz Christensen, DHI
11823523 Lynetteholm
12 May 2021
Additional comments on the Esbo consultation responses
Following the Esbo consultation meeting on 22 April, a number of comments and responses
were received from the Swedish environmental authorities. The consultation responses
primarily address concerns related to the blocking effect of water and salt transport through
Øresund and the consequences of dredged sediment disposal in Køge Bugt.
Flow/blockage in Øresund
The blocking effect of the project has been highlighted in the technical background report
no.1 Hydraulic studies. This report revealed a blockage of the water flow of 0.23-0.25%
and 0.21-0.23% for salt transport.
Lynetteholm is a filling by land, which has as a derived consequence that the flow cross
section in Øresund is narrowed locally. The narrowing causes a local increase in current
speeds and flow resistance and has a slightly dampening effect on the dynamics, which
manifests itself in the calculated blockage. To change the frequency and amount of
saltwater inflows to the Baltic Sea, the project must create an impact as a sill, and this is
not the case for the Lynetteholm project. Hollænderdybet east of the Middelgrunden is
deeper and broader than Kongedybet and will lead salt towards the Baltic Sea. The
controlling flow cross-sections for the exchange of salt and water between the Baltic Sea
and the Kattegat will continue to be the Drogden threshold and the funnel at Helsingore-
Helsingborg. Therefore, the assessment is quite general that Lynetteholm will not change
the frequency and amount of saltwater inflows to the Baltic Sea.
Lynetteholm differs from the Öresund Bridge project in that the impact is more local. The
Öresund Bridge stretches across Øresund in the Drogden threshold area, where the actual
regulation of water exchange takes place. Therefore, the Øresund Link could contribute
further to the threshold effect, thereby making it more difficult to exchange water and salt
between the Baltic Sea and the Kattegat via Øresund. This is not the case with
Lynetteholm.
In connection with the Øresund Bridge project and the tunnel and bridge, a new island,
Peberholm, was established and likewise reclamation of a larger area east of Copenhagen
Airport, where the tunnel portal is established (see Figure 1). The filling resulted in a
narrowing of the Drogden trench in an area where some of the highest current speeds
occur, cf. Figure 2 and Figure 3. The flow resistance is proportional to the square of the
currrent speed. The filling at the airport is located in an area where the narrowed cross-
section significantly impacts flow resistance. The Lynetteholm filling is placed in an area
where the current conditions are much more moderate and less critical for the flow
dhi notat-12-05-2021 esbo follow-up_bh_eng.docx / Bbc / 2021-05-12
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