Sector:
Power Grid
Expertise:
Heavy transport
Load-in & load-out
Benefits:
Reduced disruption
Optimized schedule
Location:
United States
A unique transport provides relief for environmental concerns.
Mammoet has successfully transported two cable reels related to the Seneca Lake Submarine Cable Replacement Project in Romulus, New York for the New York State Electric & Gas Corporation (NYSEG). Mammoet was hired by general contractor Reed and Reed, Inc. to move two cable reels from the nearby rail siding to the Sampson State Park Marina and roll them off onto a barge.
The replacement project consists of the removal and replacement of cables that stretch across the bottom of Seneca Lake. The existing cables connect the east and west sides of the lake to carry electricity generated by Greenidge Power Plant. After 77 years, not only were there concerns regarding the life expectancy of the four aging cables, but also environmental concerns. When originally installed in 1942, the cables contained mineral oil-impregnated paper insulation, a lead sheath and asphalt slush coating, all of which are now known as potential environmental hazards. The replacement project calls for two new electric distribution cables, approximately three miles in length, to be installed south of the existing cables to allow for continued operation and to safeguard system reliability. The cable is delivered on a reel and each reel weighs approximately 104 MT.
Mammoet’s crew assembled 12 axle lines of Goldhofer trailers for transloading of reels at the rail siding, and by utilizing a hydraulic gantry the first reel was transloaded from the rail car onto stands and staged. Next, the second reel was transloaded from rail car onto the Goldhofer transporters and once secured, it was safely transported to the barge site at the marina. Mammoet crews arranged the barge ramps and rolled the reel onto the barge. The crew returned to the rail siding to self-load the second reel to transporter, transported it to the marina and awaited the barge’s return to be offloaded. Mammoet coordinated all logistics for the delivery of the reels and provided a cost-saving approach to loading the reels to a barge by proposing a roll-on method as opposed to using a crawler crane.
The barge used was not a typical barge, but a Poseidon barge, or a portable sectional barge that required a detailed ballast plan prior to roll-on activities. Mammoet’s local office in Swedesboro, NJ collaborated with Mammoet’s engineers from the global head office in the Netherlands to deliver a safe and flawless ballast plan for the unique barge.
The comprehensive engineering and planning, along with the right equipment choices, provided a solid foundation for project success. The project was executed safely, on time and without incident.