About SubPower Cables 2011 PDF
About SubPower Cables 2011 PDF
About SubPower Cables 2011 PDF
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How Power Cables Work
Note: Communications within a power cable system are often achieved by the
inclusion of a fibre-optic package to carry the laser light signals. For more
information about fibre-optic submarine cables please refer to About Submarine
Telecommunications Cables on the ICPC website.
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Typical Submarine Power Cable System
Network
Management Cable links with other
Terminus, (e.g. an island) or
renewable energy system
Armoured
(wind, wave, tide), oil /gas
Cable
Shore platform, ocean observatory
Station
Joint
Grid
Connection
NOT TO SCALE
Source: UK Cable Protection Committee, Alcatel-Lucent Submarine Networks and Guernsey Electricity
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Cable Size
Middle range of
oil/gas pipeline
diameters
(600 mm)
Power cable diameters are up to 300 mm
depending on current-carrying capacity
and amount of armour protection
Submarine oil/gas pipes can reach 1500
mm diameter, whereas submarine
telecommunications cables are 17-50
mm diameter depending on armour
Submarine power
Inshore cable (150 mm)
submarine
fibre-optic
cable (50 mm)
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Cable Weight
Deep-sea fibre-optic
cable, sectioned to
show internal
construction; fine
strands at top are
optical fibres used
to transmit data
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Installing a Submarine Cable
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Cable Route Survey
Cable routes are carefully surveyed and selected to minimize
environmental impacts and maximize cable protection
Seabed mapping systems accurately chart depth, topography, slope angles and seabed type
Source: NIWA
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Cable Route Chart
Cook
Strait Detailed Multibeam chart
showing depth and
topography of seabed
Used to plan the main route
for submarine power and
CPZ telecommunications cables
across Cook Strait within the
Cable Protection Zone (CPZ)
CS Sovereign installing HV
interconnector
Source: Global Marine Systems Ltd
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Cables and the Law - 2
Telecommunications
Power
Scientific
Military
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Cables and the Law - 3
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Cables and the Law - 4
The International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea, Hamburg, Germany
Source: Stephan Wallocha
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Cables and the Law - 5
Legal boundaries of the ocean from Territorial Seas to Exclusive Economic Zone and onto the High Seas
Note: The numbers in (brackets) refer to treaty articles
Source: Doug Burnett www.iscpc.org
Power Cables and Renewable Energy
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Power Cables and Environment
Power cables to remote areas and islands
have been in place since early the 1800s
Electromagnetic fields vary, depending
upon cable design
Professionally installed cables have a
benign association with the marine
environment
Cable burial may affect marine life in a
narrow corridor, but disturbance is
Taken 4 years after installation, this picture
temporary and recolonisation follows shows the Basslink submarine power cable in
its articulated pipe (arrows) which is coated
Surface laid cables provide substrates for with a rich encrustation of marine life
marine organisms Source: CEE Consultants and Basslink
be policed to prevent
illegal fishing
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Effects of Natural Hazards - 1
Damage to submarine cable is mainly caused by human activities,
less than 10% of cable faults are due to natural hazards
A major hurricane like Katrina can endanger cables by creating submarine landslides,
strong ocean currents that erode the seabed, and storm surges that flood coastal facilities
Source: NOAA
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Effects of Natural Hazards - 2
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Effects of Climate Change
Cables may be exposed to risks arising from global warming, via:
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Other Seabed Users
Telecommunications cables laid
throughout the worlds oceans
and spanning all depths Neptune
Canada
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Power Cables and the Future - 1
To secure supply, meet greater demand and reduce greenhouse
gas emissions, nations are turning to offshore renewable energy
schemes involving wind, wave and tidal generation.
LEGAL
The ICPC is very concerned about:
Coastal State encroachment on traditional freedoms under UNCLOS
to lay, maintain and repair international cables
Resolution of Continental Shelf boundaries under UNCLOS
Lack of national legislation to implement UNCLOS obligations to
protect international cable infrastructure beyond territorial waters
Restrictions on international cables that are imposed without any
scientific basis to appease local constituencies, some of which regard
submarine cables as an alternative revenue source
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Power Cables and the Future - 3
TECHNOLOGY
Cable design and operations are
constantly evolving. Future systems are
expected to have greater capacity,
reliability and be sited in deeper water
Longer cable routes are proposed from
nations that have surplus energy, e.g.
Iceland to Europe
Offshore wind farms and oil/gas
platforms will extend further offshore
Wave and current/tidal power
generation techniques are rapidly
Hywind floating wind turbine can be
gaining interest throughout the World moored in water depths up to 700m
Source: Statoil
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Power Cables and the Future - 4
ENVIRONMENT
In some regions of the world, submarine cables are likely to be
exposed to more natural hazards related to changing climate
Climate change may also affect other marine activities such as
fishing, with potential impacts on cables
Electromagnetic field studies are on-going to determine any
effects of power cables on marine life
Measures to preserve biodiversity, ecosystems and resources via
various protection zones in national waters and the high seas,
may impinge upon cable passage
The ocean, especially the coastal seas, will be subject to increased
human activities due to expansion of renewable energy schemes
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Points of Interest
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Glossary
Armour: steel wires around cable for strength and protection
EPR: Ethylene-propylene rubber, a dielectric developed in the 1950s and used for
insulation of submarine power cables
Gutta percha: a naturally occurring resin, similar to rubber, used to insulate
cables up to 1930s
HVAC: High voltage alternating current for a multidirectional flow of electric
charge (type of power delivered to buildings and homes for conventional use)
HVDC: High voltage direct current for a unidirectional flow of electric charge
(type of power typically delivered by batteries)
Fibre-optic cable: Single conductor cable with a fibre optic core used for
communications
XLPE: Cross linked polyethylene, a plastic developed in 1930s and used for
submarine power cable insulation
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Contacts
Technical Content and General Enquiries:
Email: [email protected]
Legal Content:
Mr. Doug Burnett
Email: [email protected]
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Acknowledgements
Alcatel Submarine Networks Kingston Community News
ABB LD TravOcean
Basslink Marine Traffic
Center Marine NOAA
LM Glasfiber NIWA
Elsam Neptune Canada
European Marine Energy Centre Nexans
Found Ocean OSPAR Commission
Friends of the Supergrid Statoil
Global Marine Systems Ltd Transpower NZ and Seaworks
Guernsey Electricity UK Cable Protection Committee
IEEE University Washington
JDR Cables Wikipedia
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ICPC - Sharing the seabed in harmony