Transportudvalget 2020-21
L 220
Offentligt
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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
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resistance through Øresund. As part of the bridge project, compensation excavation was
carried out to mitigate the blocking effect of the project. The most challenging part of the
calculations was calculating how compensation pits should be excavated, bridge piers
designed and placed, and the design and location of the island of Peberholm. A very
complex calculation matrix. Compensation excavation does not make sense in the case of
Lynetteholm since to minimise the volumes of excavated material, an area with high current
speeds resulting in a high dispersion of excavated sediment spill will have to be selected.
As shown in Figure 2 and Figure 3, such an area is far away from the Lynetteholm project's
primary impact area, introducing a new and more significant and not least undesirable
environmental impact.
Figure 1
Drogden before (1985) and the Öresund Link (2020).
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Figure 2
Annual mean of the depth-averaged current calculated without direction
(gross current) for present conditions in 2018.
Figure 3
Depth-averaged maximum gross current 2018.
The blocking calculations carried out as part of the impact assessment for the Lynetteholm
project have shown that it is necessary to calculate a minimum period of 5-6 months to
achieve a stable blocking estimate. The blocking estimate specified for this project have
been found based on a whole year so that seasonal variations are included, and an
asymptotic value for the impact has been achieved. The blocking calculations from the
Öresund link were carried out for a period covering 2-3 months. Therefore, there is more
uncertainty in the estimates carried out at the time, as the model period needs a more
extended period to converge fully towards an asymptotic value. In the calculations carried
out at the time, the blocking requirement (to be obtained by compensation excavation) was
set at less than 0.1%, with an uncertainty range estimated at +/- 0.25% within an uncertainty
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limited to a 95% confidence interval. The uncertainty accepted by the zero solution is thus
more significant or of the same size as the estimated blockage of Lynetteholm. Twenty
years after the link was established, there has been no significant impact on conditions
south of the Drogden threshold. The same will apply to Lynetteholm.
In their consultation responses, SMHI states that they agree that viewed in isolation, a
blocking effect of 0.25% is acceptable. However, they express concern that there may be
other projects (bridges, wind farms and pipelines) that could cause an additional effect.
There are currently no bridge projects in the Øresund region that will contribute to a
blocking effect. Pipelines will typically be buried and thus not contribute to a blockage.
HOFOR plans to establish a wind farm at Nordre Flint with a capacity of 160 MW, equivalent
to 16 wind turbines of 10 MW. The blocking effect from the wind farm (if built) must be
considered marginal and not give rise to a reassessment of the blocking estimates. Finally,
sea level rises in the coming decades will cause the conductivity of water and salt transport
through Øresund to increase, thus relatively quickly offsetting the calculated blocking effect.
DHI also considers the impact acceptable, as the estimated blockage of Lynetteholm is
less than the permitted maximum uncertainty in the Øresund calculations
and no
environmental impact has been observed after 20 years with the Øresund Bridge.
Sediment dispersion in connection with the disposal of dredged sediment in Køge
Bay
A large part of the responses received concerns the excessive dispersion of the dredged
material. It is important to emphasise that the contaminated part of the material, which is
excavated in connection with bottom replacement along Lynetteholm's perimeter, is placed
in Lynetten's deposit for harbour sediment. According to the instructions regarding disposal
of dredged sediment, dredged sediment will be sediment containing contaminants below
the "Upper Action Value". More specifically, 2.3 million.m
3
of the dredged material will be
below the lower level for dredged sediment, while 0.2 million will be between the lower and
upper level.
Table 1
Indicative action levels for dredged material.
Sediment dispersion calculations have been carried out in connection with the disposal of
dredged sediment in Køge Bay. The calculations are carried out with a coupled near-field
description, where the movement of the dredged material towards the bottom is described
by a near-field model, which is transferred to the "far-field" model, when density-driven
effects no longer determine the movement of the dredged material. The dredged material
is estimated to have a relatively high moisture content, which entails a large loss in
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connection with the disposal of the dredged sediment itself, since the dry matter density is
not large enough to send the dredged material directly down to the bottom, which is why it
instead settles as a sediment cloud just above the bottom, from which it gradually deposits.
It should be noted here that in the model calculations, it is assumed that the dry matter
represents only 23% of the volume of the dredged material. Therefore, the relative loss
from the dredging site will be reduced if the dry matter volume is found to form a larger part
of the dredged material, in which case the density-driven effect of the fall towards the
bottom is amplified.
Furthermore, the dry matter will tend to be consolidated in the lower part of the split barge's
hopper during transport to the disposal sites, making it easier to deposit directly on the
bottom. This is not taken into account in the model calculations, which are based on the
fact that the dredged material is evenly mixed up in the hopper of the split barge during
sediment disposal. The actual dry matter quantity/density of the disposed sediment can be
determined when the volume of disposed sediment and the mass of the excavated material
in the split barge are known.
The model calculations show that there will be a time slot where the spreading of the
disposed sediment is large. Therefore, it will be possible to reduce the dispersion of the
dredged material if sediment disposal is not taking place when it gives rise to an extensive
or undesirable spreading to, for example, the Natura 2000 area at Falsterbo. A large
spreading towards the northeast, as shown in Figure 4, is primarily related to isolated
incidents of up to one day. For example, if a threshold is used as indicated by the red line,
there will be a few days when no sediment disposal can take place and a few days when it
is just some hours.
Figure 4
Modelled time series of the depth-centred concentration (mg/l) in the sediment
plume northeast of the disposal sites.
The uncertainties in model calculations do not relate to the model description, which
consists of a 3D flow description and a near-field calculation of the movement of the
sediment cloud towards the bottom, but instead to the uncertainty of the dredged material
characteristics, especially its dry density in the hopper, since this is the parameter having
the strongest impcat on the nearfield sediment plume behavior.
To ensure optimal sediment disposal and a reduced spreading, it is proposed to establish
a Turbidity Management Group (TMG) with stakeholder representatives, who can
continuously follow the sediment disposal and its impact. To assess the impact, it is
proposed to establish four stations with turbidity meters. One station is placed west of the
disposal sites and is intended to measure the natural background concentration. The
second station is located just inside the Natura 2000 area at Falsterbo, east of the sediment
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disposal sites. This station aims to detect and ensure that the site is not affected to any
significant extent. The last two turbidity meters are located in the main current directions
northeast and southwest of the disposal sites and aim to detect and monitor the spread of
the sediment disposal.
In parallel with this, a planning tool is established to predict the spread of planned sediment
disposals within, for example, a 2
5-day weather window. Detailed 3D calculations of
curent fields support the planning tool; and the result of a forecast calculation can
subsequently be used to evaluate when it is the optimal time for disposal of dredged
sediment to ensure the least possible sediment disposal and not least when it should be
avoided to prevent significant spreading. The planning tool makes it possible to adapt the
sediment disposal while it is ongoing, thus minimising the risk of unwanted spreading. The
planning tool is intended as a mitigating measure, where, based on the forecast for planned
sediment disposal, which turns out to have an undesired large spread, it is possible to move
it to another period within the following 24 hours, if with a revised forecast, it can be shown
that the spread is significantly reduced.
The continuous monitoring of the impact of the sediment disposals also makes it possible
to establish a hindcast model, which can be calibrated based on measurements and
thereby used to estimate and document the actual impact of the sediment disposals.
Likewise, the disposal sites should be checked at intervals to assess how large a portion
of the dredged sediment is maintained at the site. These checks could also help determine
whether the disposal sites will be filled to a level, where there is a risk of a significant re-
suspension and the capacity of the site is exhausted.
DHI considers the effects of the spread of sediment from sediment disposal into Swedish
waters to be negligible, especially if it is ensured by using a forecast system that sediment
disposal is avoided during periods with an unwanted spreading towards northeast or
towards the Swedish Natura 2000 areas at Falsterbo. Furthermore, to obtain the highest
assurance, a TMG follow-up group can be set up with representatives from the Swedish
authorities who can continuously follow the sediment disposal, impacts, and mitigating
measures.
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