SAME ENERGY AND SUSTAINABILITY WEBINAR
FEBRUARY, 2016
Regional Water Resource Sustainability Through
Federal and Private Sector Collaboration
LTC Kevin Lovell, PMP
Deputy District Commander
Chicago District, USACE
Joseph Huang
Practice Leader
MWH Global
SAME Snap Shot 2
Agenda
Introductions
Regional Sustainability Defined
Federal and Private Sector Roles
Water Resource Criticality
Regional Sustainability Case Study #1: The CSSC
Electric Barrier – Protecting 1/5 of the Worlds Fresh
Water Supply.
Regional Sustainability Case Study #2: BIM in the
Development of Hydro Power and Water Resource
Protection
3
Webinar Goals
• Provide a common definition of regional sustainability
• Show Examples of:
• Collaboration between government and private sectors
• Sustainability across regions and its influencers
• Innovation to achieve remarkable results
• Foster a professional discussion
SAME Snap Shot 4
Regional Sustainability
Integrated, multi- and inter- disciplinary strategic efforts
emphasizing economic, equity, and ecological
concerns at the regional level.
5
“Different Types of Sustainability” by Matthias Stürmer - Digital sustainability of open source communities, SMWCon Fall 2014, Vienna
6
Water
Resource
Quality and
Availability
Transportation
Infrastructure
Efficiency and
Status
Energy
Production
and
Distribution
Infrastructure
Why Regional Sustainability?
Economics is Key to National Security
Federal Roles
• Apply Constitution
• Pass Authorization and
Appropriation Bills
• Support Interstate
Commerce via Waterway
& Road Network
Maintenance
Private Sector Roles
• Provide Design &
Technical Innovation
• Contract Opportunity
Participation
• Deliver Quality On Time
and On Budget
7
US Army Corps of Engineers
BUILDING STRONG®
Case Study #1: Regional Sustainability
Focus on the Great Lakes &
Mississippi River Basins
8
BUILDING STRONG®
Case Study #1
Protecting the Mississippi River and
Great Lakes Basins
Deterring Invasive Species Movement
Multi Faceted Collaborative Strategy
Innovative, One of a Kind System
… But Why does the US Army Corps of
Engineers have this responsibility?
9
BUILDING STRONG®
LTC Kevin Lovell, PMP
Current Deputy Commander of the
Chicago District, USACE
Focused on Water Resource Regulation, Protection &
Navigation Portfolio Management
B.S. Mechanical Engineering, Marquette University 1995
M.S. Management, Univ. of Maryland, Univ. College 2007
PMP, 2007
BUILDING STRONG®
USACE’s Value to the Nation
Congress Directs USACE’s Mission to provide value
for the Nation to its diverse stakeholders.
11
• Deliver positive impacts for today and tomorrow - in
construction, natural resource management, energy, sustainability
and capacity building, and more.
• Leverage world-class professionals, civilians, and soldiers alike.
• Be “ambassadors” on a daily basis to political leaders, America’s
small businesses, and to citizens wherever we serve them.
• We are the “Nation’s Engineers.”
USACE: US Army Corps of Engineers
BUILDING STRONG®
Chicago District Environmental Projects
12
BUILDING STRONG®
Chicago District’s – Navigation
13
• Seven Harbor projects
• 90% traffic within system
• 14,287 jobs in Chicago area
• $652 M in wages, salaries
• $2.8 B in business revenue
Since 1979, the operations and maintenance of the Illinois Waterway
has been the responsibility of the USACE, Rock Island District.
BUILDING STRONG®14
BUILDING STRONG®
Chicago Area Waterway System (CAWS) Primary pathway connecting the Great Lakes and
Mississippi River basins
Consists of 78 miles of canals and modified
streams
Five outlets to Lake Michigan within the CAWS
15
The Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal
remains an important pathway for navigation
and the transport of wastewater effluent and
storm water runoff.
Also a potential pathway for the movement of
invasive species
eDNA Monitoring and Calibration
Asian Carp Monitoring
Des Plaines River
Bypass (Int. I)
FY11 FY13FY12FY10
Efficacy Study: Implement Solutions as Funding and Authority Permit
Great Lakes and Mississippi River Interbasin Study (GLMRIS)
Des Plaines Barrier
USACE Aquatic Invasive Species (AIS) Strategy
Modified Structural
Operations (Int. III)
Barrier Risk Reduction Study and EA (Int. IV)
Optimum Parameters Research (Int. II)
Demonstration Barrier(2002) Barrier IIB (2011)
FY15 FY16FY14
1 Volt/in, pulses 4 ms at 5 hz 2.3 Volts/in, pulses 2.5 ms at 30 hzStandby mode
eDNA Monitoring by USFWS
O’Brien Lock
and Dam
FY17
Perm Barrier Iconcept
1
2
3
4
LIN
ES
OF
OP
ER
AT
ION
Barrier I
Site PrepBarrier I DesignBarrier I Building
& Electronics
Barrier I Testing &
Commissioning
Project O&M
Funded
Operation of Electric Barriers
Barrier IIA (2009)
GLMRIS
Report
Brandon Road Feasibility Study
Telemetry
Additional research and reports as needed
16
BUILDING STRONG®17
CSSC Barrier Driver: ANS Location
BUILDING STRONG®
Strategy Effort #1: Electric Barriers
18
FY 16 Activities:
• Continue Operation & Maintenance of the
Existing Barriers
• Continue Barrier I Construction
• Complete Barrier IIA Electrical Upgrades
• Construct New Roof for Barrier IIB
• Complete Safety Retrofits
• Award Demonstration Barrier Electrode
Replacement Contract
• Award Site-Wide Grounding Contract
• Award Barrier IIA New Cooling System
Contract
Permanent Barrier I
Design
Recent Photo of Barrier I
Construction
BUILDING STRONG®
How Do The Dispersal Barriers Work? Electrodes are secured to the bottom of the canal
Electrical cables connect the electrodes to the control building
Pulsing DC current is generated in the control building and sent to the
electrodes creating an electric field in the water
The electric field increases in strength from the upstream & downstream
edges to the center
A fish entering the field becomes increasingly uncomfortable & is
discouraged from swimming across it
Demonstration Barrier
19
BUILDING STRONG®20
Factors Influencing Barrier Effectiveness
BUILDING STRONG®
Demonstration Barrier Upstream benthic-focused electric field
Downstream full water column electric field
UpstreamDownstream
Electric Field Near Water Surface
Vo
lta
ge
Distance
21
Barrier Date of
Activation
Voltage
(volts/inch)
Frequency
(Hz)
Pulse Duration
(ms)
Demo 2002 1.0 5 4
Demo Barrier
BUILDING STRONG®
Barriers IIA & IIB 1 wider, lower-strength electric field
1 narrower, higher-strength electric field
Upstream
Vo
lta
ge
Distance
22
Electric Field Near Water Surface
Downstream
Barrier Date of
Activation
Voltage
(volts/inch)
Frequency
(Hz)
Pulse Duration
(ms)
IIA 2009 2.3 34 2.3
IIB 2011 2.3 34 2.3
Barrier IIA Barrier IIB
BUILDING STRONG®
Permanent Barrier I - Design Features
Two high field arrays
Demo Barrier used as low field array
Increased power capacity - ~3X Greater than A or B
Redundant power feeds
Administrative area
Storage areas
23
Barrier I
Demo
IIA IIB
BUILDING STRONG®
The Way Ahead: Short Term Permanent Barrier I Completed
► Site preparation
► Installation of underwater
electrodes & parasitics
► Purchase of specialized long-
lead electrical equipment
Building Contract► Began construction Mar 2015
► Currently working on vertical
construction
Backup Power Contract► Awarded Aug 2015
► Preparing for spring mobilization
24
Building Construction as
of 21 Dec 2015
BUILDING STRONG®
Permanent Barrier I - Design Features Two high field arrays
Demo Barrier used as low field array
Increased power capacity - ~3X Greater than A or B
Redundant power feeds
Administrative area & Storage areas
25
0.4 mW1.5 mW 1.5 mW 4.3 mW
BUILDING STRONG®
The Way Ahead: PB-1 Schedule FY16
► Continue building construction
► Begin install of backup power systems
► Award electrical equipment install contract
FY17 Q1 - Complete building construction & backup power install
Q2 – Complete electrical equipment install
Q3 – Complete startup/safety testing
26
Rendering of
Completed
Permanent Barrier I
PB-1: Permanent Barrier 1
BUILDING STRONG®
The Way Ahead: Long Term Solutions
27
BUILDING STRONG®
Regional Sustainability Strategic Goals
Protect the Great Lakes & Mississippi basins
Leverage Governmental and Private Sector
Collaboration
Technical expertise & Innovative experience
Relook existing paradigms & create new
solutions
28
BUILDING STRONG®
Chicago District, US Army Corps of Engineers
www.lrc.usace.army.mil29
LTC Kevin J. Lovell, PMP
(W): 312-846-5301
Top Related