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9 MW. 144 MW. 111 MW. 84 MW. IoA Good Practice Guide – Cumulative Issues. A Good Practice Guide to the Application of ETSU-R-97
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IoA Good Practice Guide – Cumulative Issues • A Good Practice Guide to the Application of ETSU-R-97 • “During scoping of a new wind farm development consideration should be given to cumulative noise impacts from any other wind farms in the locality. If the proposed wind farm produces noise levels within 10 dB of any existing wind farm/s at the same receptor location, then a cumulative noise impact assessment is necessary” • “Equally in such cases where noise from the proposed wind farm is predicted to be 10 dB greater than that from the existing wind farm (but compliant with ETSU-R-97 in its own right), then a cumulative noise impact assessment would not be necessary”
Cumulative Assessment • Both schemes proposed together • 40 dB(A) appropriate • Cumulative total within ETSU-R-97 criteria • Grant both schemes A - Proposed B - Proposed R2
Assessment Process • Day-time – the greater of 40 dB(A) or 5 dB(A) above background A closer look
Assessment Process • Day-time – the greater of 40 dB(A) or 5 dB(A) above background ` Can operate at its consent
Assessment Process • Day-time – the greater of 40 dB(A) or 5 dB(A) above background ` Can operate at its consent
Assessment Process • Day-time – the greater of 40 dB(A) or 5 dB(A) above background Cumulative total 3 dB(A) too high ` `
Assessment Process • Day-time – the greater of 40 dB(A) or 5 dB(A) above background The total is effectively the cumulative addition of the individual limits Potential to fully utilise the limit at all wind speeds as shown is very unlikely but theoretically what has been consented
Cumulative Assessment • Assessment confirms cumulative total within ETSU-R-97 criteria • Each scheme is proposed at the same time • How can this be made to work? • Apportion limit between schemes to meet overall requirement • Based on logarithmic subtraction A - Proposed B - Proposed R2
Assessment Process • Day-time – the greater of 40 dB(A) or 5 dB(A) above background Margin? ` `
Cumulative Assessment • Day-time – the greater of 40 dB(A) or 5 dB(A) above background Limit for Scheme A Margin ` `
Cumulative Assessment • Day-time – the greater of 40 dB(A) or 5 dB(A) above background Limit for Scheme B Margin ` `
Cumulative Assessment • Day-time – the greater of 40 dB(A) or 5 dB(A) above background ETSU-R-97 criteria met
Cumulative Assessment • Fair apportionment of the limits IF both schemes are proposed at the same time • Example given • Margin exists between total cumulative noise levels and the limit • Zero margin – process still works • Only works where schemes are proposed at the same time! • Other situations
Cumulative Assessment - 35 to 40? • Choice of the fixed part of the day-time noise limit should be evaluated based on the total number of turbines in the vicinity • Choice within an existing consent of 35 dB(A) should not be fixed for all time for subsequent developments → 40 dB(A) may be appropriate based on 3 aspects given in ETSU-R-97 Small scheme R2 A - Proposed built & operating • If the small scheme was consented choosing 35 dB(A) this may not remain appropriate for the combined total
Cumulative Assessment – Further Examples • Scheme A has consent basedon 40 dB(A) • Scheme B may add to total cumulative noise levels • Scheme B may need to be limited to10 dB(A) below Scheme A consent limits(e.g. 40 dB + 30 dB = 40.4 dB) • This may not be necessary where Scheme A cannot feasibly utilise all of the consent noise limits A - Consented B - Proposed R2
Cumulative Assessment – Further Examples • This may not be necessary where Scheme A cannot feasibly utilise all of the consent noise limits • Where noise from Scheme A is ‘controlled’ by another receptor location (R3 in this case) A - Consented B - Proposed R2 R3
Cumulative Assessment – Further Examples • This may not be necessary where Scheme A cannot feasibly utilise all of the consent noise limits • Where noise from Scheme A is predicted to be sufficiently below the consent limit • May be due to separation distances as shown • Caution to model using the correct turbine sound power levels for the operating wind farm A - Consented B - Proposed R2
Cumulative Assessment – Further Examples • This may not be necessary where Scheme A cannot feasibly utilise all of the consent noise limits • Where receptors cannot be downwind of both schemes at the same time • Clear case when 180 degrees apart • Caution with assumed directional attenuation as much less certain A - Consented B - Proposed R2
Cumulative Assessment – Further Examples • This may not be necessary where Scheme B for an extension to Scheme A by the same operator and forms one larger wind farm • Demonstrate that the extended scheme can still meet the original consented limits A - Consented A Extension R2
Cumulative Assessment – Further Examples • Small wind turbines - often consented without full ETSU-R-97 assessment orETSU-R-97 noise limits • ETSU-R-97 criteria may already be exceeded by small turbines at nearby dwellings • Small wind turbines should not preclude wind farms or visa-versa built & operating Small wind turbine A - Proposed R2
Conclusions • ETSU-R-97 criteria apply to cumulative noise from all wind turbines • Potential for schemes to ‘use up’ the ETSU-R-97 limit • Proposed together – ‘fair’ apportionment of limits may work • Consistency in modelling • Reasonable operating margin → not restricted to candidate turbine • Where not proposed together • Evaluate 35 to 40 choice • May require 10 dB down noise limits in some cases • Directional factors may be relevant • Operating schemes may not be able to ‘use up’ limit (needs to be fully considered) • Other ‘controlling’ receptor locations may be relevant • Extensions allow ‘holistic’ management of noise • Micro/small turbines should not preclude wind farms or visa-versa