Case study:River Nith Diversion at Greenburn Surface Mine

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Location: 55° 21' 59.71" N, 4° 16' 59.91" W
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Project overview

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Status Complete
Project web site http://www.kier.co.uk/case-study/view-all/greenburn-surface-mine/case-study.aspx
Themes Economic aspects, Flood risk management, Habitat and biodiversity, Social benefits
Country Scotland
Main contact forename Jonathan
Main contact surname Hillier
Main contact user ID
Contact organisation Kier Infrastructure UK
Contact organisation web site http://www.kier.co.uk/
Partner organisations Nith District Salmon Fishery Board
Parent multi-site project
This is a parent project
encompassing the following
projects
No
Project picture

Project summary

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Kier has been mining at the Greenburn Surface Mine Complex since 2003, employing 50% of staff from within a 10-mile radius, in an area of high unemployment. An opportunity was realised where the River Nith, which runs through the site, could be enhanced with ecologically healthier reaches. The existing river reach was degraded because of historical agricultural pressures associated with vegetation clearance, excessive cattle poaching and bank reinforcement. Through realigning 500m of the river, the recovery of high quality coal resources in the area continued, which in turn enabled the considerable funding required to realise this project.

Kier spent six years researching and studying the River Nith with technical and scientific specialists, building on knowledge developed in this catchment. The scientific approach and stakeholder engagement was instrumental in the successful delivery of this project. The realignment morphologies are based on a new conceptual approach to design and best practice river engineering methods to create hydraulic conditions which drive the full suite of fluvial processes that would naturally occur in the river. The design considered the range of physical requirements in the channel form necessary to ensure sufficient diversity within which the full suite of hydraulic and geomorphic processes. This produced the most natural channel form as a product of interactions between hydraulic processes and the physical form of the river corridor (i.e. the natural channel type for the given reach conditions). The key geomorphic characteristics of the existing river local to the reaches were replicated – slope gradient, bank full width and depth, and sinuosity. These variables were measured upstream and downstream with the captured data used to inform and guide the channel design. Replicating the 500m length of the original length and creating a natural slope, maintained the same energy gradient for flow conveyance and sediment transport, which in turn will maintain natural fluvial processes. The natural levels of variability, together with sinuosity, aided the development of natural bed forms - allowing pools and riffles to form naturally through self-sorting rather than by creating artificial features.

The diversion improved the ecological status of the river with planting of willow along the diverted channel that naturally stabilise the river banks and once mature will create fish habitat by forming draped foliage at the water’s edge and dropping leaf litter into the water, enhancing the habitat for Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) and lamprey species (lampetra spp.). In addition, tree planting consisting of hazel, birch, rowan, aspen and hawthorn was undertaken on the diversion to provide additional natural stability to the banks and riparian corridor habitat that did not previously exist. Within the river diversion scrapes were formed to promote the retention of water in discrete pools on the flood plain providing habitat for amphibians, birds and invertebrates. In addition, areas of dead wood and rocks were placed on the flood plain to provide amphibian refugia. These are additional features to what was there previously and are beneficial to the ecological status of the river and surrounding habitat.

To deliver the engineering works, our approach was to develop the new channel a year early in June 2011, with water flow introduced in August 2012. This enabled the channel to weather and bankside vegetation to establish reducing the necessity for engineering materials. Fundamentally, the realignment is set within a 50-metre wide river corridor to accommodate natural channel course adjustments. The substrate from old river channel was recovered while still wet ensuring rapid re-colonisation of invertebrates and plants in the new channel. Upon completion of the new reach, electrofishing was used to relocate fish successfully.

Monitoring surveys and results

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A 20-year monitoring programme has been implemented in 2014 to review the long-term biological and geomorphological components of the river ecosystem, including invertebrates, fish, riparian vegetation, physical habitat and channel morphology, and flow gauging. The achievements in restoring the habitat and improving water quality were highlighted by monitoring reports carried out by Centre for River Eco System Science (CRESS) at Stirling University, Nith District Salmon Fishery Board (NDSFB) and Environ UK.

Macro-invertebrate Surveys

CRESS conducted surveys of benthic macro invertebrates from upstream, downstream and within realigned sections during October 2012 and October 2014 which highlighted:

• Diversity of macro-invertebrate fauna present (66 species from 48 different families) is consistent with a small tributary in good ecological condition and the taxa identified indicates good water quality

• Sample richness increased from 15 to 33 showing a significant improvement in two years as the river naturalised (120% increase in sample richness)

• The community structure was analysed using Shannon’s index of diversity, statistically showing negligible differences between the realigned habitats and the good quality controls upstream and downstream.

• The median Ecological Quality Indices of all samples was 0.95 - a score at the top end of ‘good ecological status’

NDSFB Electrofishing Survey

The results of the first survey highlighted:

• The channel has performed in a completely predictable manner and fish had utilised this section of river channel as a spawning site.

• Salmon fry increased at each of the six survey locations by an average of 21 individuals since 2012

• Two trout parr found in the realigned section in 2012, with 12 found in 2014 - a promising increase of 10 due to the general low abundance throughout the entire Nith system

• Fish densities of juvenile salmonids compared favourably with other Nith sites surveyed during 2014 (41 in total)

• Salmonid species of fish migrated through the diversion channel and successfully spawned upstream, within and downstream of the diversion channel

• Parr aged salmonids have taken up residency within the diversion channel

Lessons learnt

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The realignment work has demonstrated the effectiveness of the soft engineering principles that were adopted in preference to hard artificial river banks. New section of the river is indistinguishable from the adjacent reaches. The use of willows has proved successful.


Image gallery


Local schoolchildren planting trees along the realignment of the River Nith.jpg
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Catchment and subcatchment

Catchment

River basin district Solway Tweed
River basin

Subcatchment

River name Nith
Area category
Area (km2)
Maximum altitude category
Maximum altitude (m)
Dominant geology
Ecoregion
Dominant land cover
Waterbody ID 10612



Site

Name
WFD water body codes 10612
WFD (national) typology Mid-altitude, Small, Calcareous
WFD water body name River Nith (u/s New Cumnock)
Pre-project morphology
Reference morphology
Desired post project morphology
Heavily modified water body No
National/international site designation UK - Site of Special Scientific Interest
Local/regional site designations
Protected species present No
Invasive species present No
Species of interest
Dominant hydrology
Dominant substrate
River corridor land use
Average bankfull channel width category
Average bankfull channel width (m)
Average bankfull channel depth category
Average bankfull channel depth (m)
Mean discharge category
Mean annual discharge (m3/s)
Average channel gradient category
Average channel gradient
Average unit stream power (W/m2)


Project background

Reach length directly affected (m) 500500 m <br />0.5 km <br />50,000 cm <br />
Project started 2007/01/01
Works started 2011/06/01
Works completed 2011/08/31
Project completed 2012/08/31
Total cost category
Total cost (k€) 550550 k€ <br />550,000 € <br />
Benefit to cost ratio
Funding sources

Cost for project phases

Phase cost category cost exact (k€) Lead organisation Contact forename Contact surname
Investigation and design
Stakeholder engagement and communication
Works and works supervision
Post-project management and maintenance
Monitoring



Reasons for river restoration

Mitigation of a pressure Bank reinforcement, Flood risk management, Mining, Agriculture, Cattle poaching
Hydromorphology Channel pattern/planform
Biology Invertebrates: Abundance
Physico-chemical
Other reasons for the project


Measures

Structural measures
Bank/bed modifications Creation of pools and riffles, pools and bars, Improvement of natural flows
Floodplain / River corridor Scrapes, Riparian tree planting
Planform / Channel pattern Increase in sinuosity
Other
Non-structural measures
Management interventions
Social measures (incl. engagement) Work with schools and communities
Other


Monitoring

Hydromorphological quality elements

Element When monitored Type of monitoring Control site used Result
Before measures After measures Qualitative Quantitative

Biological quality elements

Element When monitored Type of monitoring Control site used Result
Before measures After measures Qualitative Quantitative

Physico-chemical quality elements

Element When monitored Type of monitoring Control site used Result
Before measures After measures Qualitative Quantitative

Any other monitoring, e.g. social, economic

Element When monitored Type of monitoring Control site used Result
Before measures After measures Qualitative Quantitative


Monitoring documents



Additional documents and videos


Additional links and references

Link Description

Supplementary Information

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