Thermal Impact from a Thermoelectric Power Plant on a Tropical Coastal Lagoon
2015
Cardoso-Mohedano, J. G. | Bernardello, R. | Sanchez-Cabeza, J. A. | Ruiz-Fernández, A. C. | Alonso-Rodriguez, R. | Cruzado, A.
Tropical coastal areas are sensitive ecosystems to climate change, mainly due to sea level rise and increasing water temperatures. Furthermore, they may be subject to numerous stresses, including heat releases from energy production. The Urias coastal lagoon (SE Gulf of California), a subtropical tidal estuary, receives cooling water releases from a thermoelectric power plant, urban and industrial wastes, and shrimp farm discharges. In order to evaluate the plant thermal impact, we measured synchronous temperature time series close to and far from the plant. Furthermore, in order to discriminate the thermal pollution impact from natural variability, we used a high-resolution hydrodynamic model forced by, amongst others, cooling water release as a continuous flow (7.78 m³ s⁻¹) at 6 °C overheating temperature. Model results and field data indicated that the main thermal impact was temporally restricted to the warmest months, spatially restricted to the surface layers (above 0.6 m) and distributed along the shoreline within ∼100 m of the release point. The methodology and results of this study can be extrapolated to tropical coastal lagoons that receive heat discharges.
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