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Territorialisation of Public Action on Animal Health
The aim is to analyse the emergence of animal health ‘territories’ by cross-referencing public health action mechanisms and the territorial configurations of livestock sectors. The aim is then to support the multi-stakeholder systems that help to adapt national animal health instruments and standards locally, and to reflect on public action at local level.
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Design of protection works against torrential risks on the Cheekye
Trapping large magnitude debris flows induced by massive rock avalanche collapses: Cheekye debris barrier, Squamish (British Columbia, Canada)
Near Vancouver, on the west coast of Canada, the Cheekye River is subject to episodic torrential debris flows of very high magnitudes induced by collapses at altitude. Such collapses involving volumes of several million m³ have occurred in the region (Mount Meager, 2010; Joffre Peak, 2019). Numerous scientific studies show that a major event of the same type could occur at any time in the Cheekye River. Modelling has shown that the phenomenon threatens the Brackendale district of the town of Squamish as well as Highway 99, which links Vancouver to tourist resorts such as Whistler. The risk is considered too high by British Columbia standards, and mitigation measures are required.
Some fifteen different strategies were studied with a view to mitigating the risks associated with such an event. A multi-criteria analysis showed that the most appropriate solution would be a filter dam designed to trap almost all of the 10,000-year return period debris flow. The structure in question would be the largest debris flow trap in North America.
Our support was sought because of the extraordinary dimensions: 2,400,000 m3 of debris flow to be trapped in a structure around 30 m high. Sedimentation structures of the same type in France are generally 100 to 1,000 times smaller, and the largest French structures are still 10 times smaller than the Cheekye barrier. Filter dams designed to trap debris flows are rare in North America, so North American specialists lack experience in designing such structures. However, such structures are regularly used in Europe and Japan. BGC Engineering, the consultancy in charge of designing the structure, therefore sought the support of researchers from INRAE’s ETNA research unit, who had published some noteworthy research on the subject in recent years and who lead international working groups on these issues.
ETNA scientists helped to refine the functional design of the barrier: its type, shape and main dimensions. A specific modelling tool was developed for the occasion in order to characterise the operation of the structure in terms of storage and release as a function of the inflows and the obstruction rates of the various hydraulic components. In addition to their knowledge of the operation of these structures, this development provided an opportunity to apply possibilistic uncertainty propagation methods, which were particularly well-suited to the small amount of data available and the many doubts that persisted.
The mission to support BGC Engineering, a major North American consultancy firm, focused on the design of this protection structure against torrential risks on the Cheekye river.
The results of this appraisal, carried out mainly in conjunction with BGC Engineering and various local bodies, remain confidential and may not be published.
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Colombia – Ituango dam in danger: emergency mission by the UN
21 May to 3 June 2018
On 18 May 2018, the French Committee for Dams & Reservoirs (CFBR) asked its members to take part in an emergency international assessment mission on a large dam (>200m high) at risk in Colombia, where more than 25,000 people had been displaced to safer areas and 130,000 inhabitants were at risk.
The Colombian authorities appealed for international aid from the UN and the European Union.
The ERCC, the European crisis management cell, then relayed the request in France to the Crisis Management Operational Centre (COGIC, Ministry of the Interior) and the Ministerial Monitoring and Alert Centre (CMVOA, Ministry of the Environment).
Claudio Carvajal was welcomed in Medellín on 21 May by the local United Nations team in charge of logistics and security, on the instructions and express coordination of INRAE, and at the expense of the European Union.
A team of four experts was put together by the United Nations Office for the Environment (UNOE).
These experts proposed an analysis and a series of recommendations that will be taken into account in the project’s stabilisation processes (specialists in dams, hydroelectric design, geotechnics and geology).
Claudio Carvajal’s work was greatly appreciated. It should be pointed out that he was supported in his modelling work by his research colleagues back in France.
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Georgia: impact of a hydroelectric dam on fish populations
Namakhvani waterfall dam on the River Rion
Collection of international expertise projects at INRAE27 In 2017, the local branch of the Norwegian group Clean Energy Group, Georgia 1, planned to invest in Georgia in order to develop a hydroelectric cascade project at the Namakhvani dam, on the Rioni river, in the municipalities of Tskhaltubo and Tsageri. This project anticipated maintaining a minimum flow of 10% of the average annual flow, but without any prior scientific basis. Clean Energy Group therefore entered into an agreement with SRL Consulting (Grenoble) to fill this gap with additional studies on the environmental and social aspects of the project. For the studies on the impact of the project on fish habitat and fish populations, this consultancy firm itself chose to delegate and Hervé Capra from the Dynam laboratory (then the MALY unit) in Lyon was commissioned.
The fish species had been surveyed during a previous study in 2015: eight species were identified, some of which are endemic, and some of which are on the Georgian red list. However, the study did not take into account the likely impact of the existing dam downstream on fish populations, particularly migratory fish, due to the lack of a crossing device.
- The aim of Hervé Capra’s study was therefore to :
- describe the river fish habitat affected by the presence and operation of the two dams/reservoirs;
- assess the effects of the 2 hydroelectric systems on the distribution of fish species in the river Rioni;
- justify the environmental flow defined downstream of the Namakhvani dam;
- propose measures to mitigate, compensate for or improve the management of hydropeaking flows.
- Enka, the new contractor, plans to commission the Namakhvani dam in 2018.
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Soil erodibility using HET and JET tests
HET = Hole Erosion Test vs. JET = Jet Erosion Test
As most hydraulic structure failures are attributed to internal erosion, the Flanders Hydraulics Research (FHR) centre in Flanders, Belgium, wanted tools to assess the safety of the Scheldt’s sea and river dykes, as well as the project to reinforce and raise these dykes.
Stéphane Bonelli and Sylvie Nicaise from the RECOVER unit were asked to coordinate the erosion tests. The experimental tests were carried out in the Geomechanics laboratory of the RECOVER unit and in the field in Belgium. They were carried out on different test benches depending on their type, e.g. JET for overflow, HET for conduit erosion, CET for contact erosion, etc. The conclusions validated the choice of tools adapted to the different constraints.
These tools, which improve the analysis of the risk of internal erosion, meet an expectation and are likely to lead to international development.
This expertise was incorporated into the FHR projects on the Scheldt dykes following the report on the vulnerability of dyke soil to internal and surface erosion. HET: Hole Erosion Test was developed by Irstea JET: Jet Erosion Test is part of the ASTM1 D5852 standard (withdrawn in 2016)
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Lom-Pangar dam (Cameroon)
The research and development work carried out on internal erosion led to an innovative assessment of Cameroon’s largest dam, the Lom Pangar dam, which was impounded in 2016. The 57 m high dam stores 6 billion m3 of water for hydroelectricity. The Coyne & Bellier1/ISL Ingénierie consortium commissioned INRAE in 2014 to carry out laboratory tests on the dam’s foundation soil in order to provide information on the risk of internal erosion. More than 30 HET (Hole Erosion Test) tests were carried out in Aix-en-Provence on materials taken in Cameroon during the geotechnical reconnaissance campaign in April 2014. Specific procedures were deployed to carry out tests on intact samples, and to incorporate the effects of dam construction (increased density) and reservoir filling (saturation). The results obtained made it possible to quantify the influence of important parameters on erodibility: dry soil density, water content and above all the fraction of fine clay, making it possible to distinguish between silts (weathered gneisses) and lateritic clays. These results were then used to diagnose the risk of internal erosion of the foundation. This would be the first analysis of this level carried out on the foundation soil of a large dam before its construction.
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Expertise: Hai he river catchment area: Phase 3
Project: Recommendations for design, management and monitoring of constructed wetlands in Haihe watershed
AFD – FEXTE – International Office for Water
Access to water is a major concern for China, which has only 7% of the world’s water resources for one-fifth of the world’s population.
The location of these resources is also uneven: abundant in the south, water is scarce in the west and north. Finally, its quality is threatened by pollution from industrial, urban and agricultural waste.
In north-east China, the Hai river basin, or Hai he, covers an area of 318,000 km² with a population of 130 million, and is one of the country’s most developed economic areas, with Beijing and Tianjin in particular.
Along with two other rivers (Zhou and Luan), this basin was selected as a pilot sector for strengthening IWRM (Integrated Water Resources Management & Protection) skills under the cooperation agreement signed on 29 December 2009.
INRAE’s participation in the expertise on ecological engineering follows Julien Tournebize’s involvement in a training course for the Hai He delegation in 2014 on behalf of IOWater. This Chinese delegation was received by INRAE in October 2018.
This extension testifies to the quality of the relations established and shows a real desire to go further in Franco-Chinese cooperation on IWRM. The project has also been selected to receive the Chinese Government Friendship Award, presented by the Deputy Prime Minister, Mr Ma Kai, on the occasion of the Chinese National Day.
This phase covers adaptation and resilience to climate change, the fight against point-source and diffuse pollution, the management of aquatic ecosystems, the restoration of environments, monitoring networks, information systems, the management of reservoir lakes and master plans for wastewater treatment. An economic component financed by FEXTE1 and implemented by AFD provides for additional expertise and the testing of French water management technologies.
The “economic” component proposed is the “preparatory study for the review of biodiversity monitoring and purification efficiency (capacity to eliminate pollutants) in the project to develop artificial wetlands in the Hai river basin”. This document presents the technical aspects of this project.
The activities financed under the FEXTE project provide additional assistance and expertise to the French parties to identify future investment needs related to watershed management and to develop technical specifications for the actions included in the programmed measures. It also helps to identify relevant technologies or skills in France. This could be of interest to the Chinese partners.
Following the appraisal mission in April 2014, the one in September 2017 was joint with Biotope and commissioned by IOWater.
With this organisation, an expert report had been produced on the regulation of diffuse pollution and biodiversity, in particular of the artificial wetland on the Juqiao reservoir. The report was submitted to IOWater, the commissioning organisation.
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