March 2014, Vol. 69 No. 3

Features

Wind Farm Construction Provides New Market For HDPE Installations

Some of the largest wind farms in the United States are using large diameter, solid wall high-density polyethylene (HDPE) conduit to protect electrical cables and the environment.

While the conduit provides long-life, it is also helping projects to be cost-effective.

“HDPE conduit has the right cost-to-benefit ratio that includes the pipe stiffness necessary to withstand the weight of deep burial while being able to be flexible and strong enough to allow for horizontal directional drilling (HDD),” stated Tony Radoszewski, executive director of the Plastics Pipe Institute Inc., (PPI), the major trade association representing all segments of the plastic pipe industry.

“It is ideal especially for projects where there is a need to reduce the amount of digging such as in a wetland or by going under roads to keep them intact. HDPE conduit can be ‘snaked’ underneath. Plus, the HDPE conduit is flexible enough to resist seismic shifts. The polyethylene itself is chemically resistant to high acidity or alkalinity from the soil. The length of HDPE conduit in either long ‘stick’ sections or hundred-foot coils can reduce the number of mechanical joints necessary for the installation, which in turn, reduces the overall project costs.

“What is especially important for electrical cable use,” he continued, “is that HDPE conduit does not require any cathodic protection that would be needed to prevent corrosion of a pipe with a metal surface.

One of the newest wind power operations, the Beebe Wind Farm in Breckenridge, MI, has 34 turbines operational with another 16 to come on-stream in 2014. The crew from M. J. Electric LLC (Iron Mountain, MI) found the use of HDPE conduit also improved installation time and enabled the crew to use either cut-and-cover trenching or HDD. The 34.5kV lines are housed in the eight-inch diameter HDPE conduit and are buried as deep as 30-feet with some runs being 1,000 to 2,000 feet long. The land used for the Beebe Wind Farm is an agricultural farm.

“There are usually four or five turbines on a circuit which are strung together with an underground collection cable out in the farmer’s field or the grasslands, depending on what part of the country we’re in,” explained Rick Moore, director of purchasing, M. J. Electric. “Ultimately, each circuit collecting the energy generated by the wind turbine ends up at a substation.”

M. J. Electric was responsible for the underground collection system, sub-station and subsequent transmission lines at Beebe. “We used HDPE conduit exclusively for underground boring operations for runs under roads, ditches, ponds, creeks and environmentally-sensitive areas. We standardized on either SDR 11 or SDR 13.5 as both of these will provide the strength for the long bores.”

The large gauge collector circuits typically take 10-15,000 feet of conduit which was provided for the Beebe project by Endot Industries Inc. (Rockaway, NJ) in 40- and 50-foot lengths. Called Enduct IDE 850, SDR 11, the side walls are ¾-inch thick with a nominal outside diameter of 8.6 inches and complies with the ASTM F2160 standard entitled Standard Specification for Solid Wall High Density Polyethylene (HDPE) Conduit Based on Controlled Outside Diameter (OD).

Project execution

According to Rod Brossart, general foreman for M. J. Electric, “We’ll start on a project with our directional boring crew about a month or so ahead of the trenching. If it’s a longer bore shot it might take a couple of days to complete and we want to make sure that our trenching crew doesn’t get caught up. We generally have anywhere from eight to 11 on the crew.

“On a wind farm, directional boring is used for road and utility crossings or in a wetland area. At Beebe, some of the drainage ditches were 12 to 15-feet deep and 25 to 30-feet wide. I think we were eight to 9-feet below the bottom of the ditch, so in some parts that put us 25-feet deep if you were to dig straight down from the top of the ditch. For this, when we’re in a farm field like Beebe where there wasn’t any rock, we use a drain tile-type trencher.”

Labor relief

According to PPI’s Radoszewski, this is a significant situation where the use of HDPE conduit can provide labor-savings as well as a safety advantage.

“When a crew is trenching down some 25 feet, using HDPE conduit sections that are put together on the surface or coming off a coil is quicker and safer than having the crew doing the work down in that trench. I’ve seen crews cut a trench, heat fuse a couple of hundred feet of 50-foot section HDPE conduit and cover it up in just a few hours.”

Brossart added that “when we directionally bore, we can steer it but can only angle it down about 10 percent – basically one foot every rod. So if we’re going across a drainage ditch that is 30-feet wide, but 15-feet deep, we have to do our math so that we’re far enough back to set-up and be at the depth needed for the middle of that ditch and be able to come back up.”

“For our runs, we trench up to a certain point – say 20 feet before we get to the bore,” explained Brossart. “The excavation is made, there’s usually a splice on one side or the other of the bore, and then the trenching crew begins operations on the opposite side. It is easy to set up the fusing equipment, put the sections together and pull it straight in through the directional bore.

“We’ll backlash the cable. We do everything possible to minimize the number of splices. We just don’t say ‘you’re starting at tower one, and heading to tower two and three’, we take a look, plan the cable runs and manage the number of splices. Between tower one and two, there might be two or three directional bores and we’ll figure out how we can do it with either no splices or just one splice. We may end up pulling 500 or 800-feet of cable through a bore and that will get us to where there’s just one splice.”

After the conduit is pulled or in the trench, the cable, which for the Beebe collector circuits was 35kV URD (Underground Residential Distribution) aluminum power cable, was pulled through.

Distance between towers varies. “For the typical installation we’re seeing them 1,100 to 2,200 feet apart,” Brossart said. “At Beebe, the way the layout was it seemed that the county would allow only two turbines to be installed every square mile. There might have been 2,200 feet between them but from either of those two turbines to the next one could have been 5,000 or 7,000 feet.”

In the past, according to Moore, it would be typical to use the same cast iron pipe found in water systems. “This would certainly be a premium cost for conduit or galvanized rigid steel conduit and the cost of couplings to join sections just like in any industrial application. These products come in 10-foot-lengths versus the 50-foot lengths we get for the HDPE conduit so there is certainly a cost savings with not having to deal with such great heavy small pieces; we can deal with longer, bigger sections.”

As for the industry perspective of wind power, Radoszewski commented, “The latest Department of Energy figures state that by 2030 wind power could account for approximately 20 percent of the United States’ electric supply. Now wind farms produce a little more than three percent, but more than 12 gigawatts of capacity came on-stream in 2012. Michigan alone has a legal mandate to have 10 percent renewable energy by 2015, and it has many more wind farms in the planning stages, most of which have several hundred wind turbines each. This is a rapidly growing industry which needs the best products that provide cost effectiveness and installation efficiency to keep up with the demand.”

FOR MORE INFORMATION:
M. J. Electric LLC (Iron Mountain, MI)
Plastic Pipe Institute, (469) 499-1044, www.plasticpipe.org.

From Archive

Comments

{{ error }}
{{ comment.comment.Name }} • {{ comment.timeAgo }}
{{ comment.comment.Text }}