Thursday, October 14, 2021

THE JAMES WEBB TELESCOPE

How to ship the world's largest space telescope 5,800 miles across the ocean

How to Ship the World’s Largest Space Telescope 5,800 Miles Across the Ocean
Ahead of its journey to its launch site, NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope is shown 
being lowered into its protective transport container in the Northrop Grumman clean
 room in Redondo Beach, California. Credit: NASA/Northrop Grumman

When NASA's James Webb Space Telescope launches, it will undergo one of the most harrowing deployment processes any spacecraft has ever endured. But before it even gets on top of its ride to space, Webb had to complete a final journey here on Earth: a roughly 5,800-mile (9,300-kilometer) voyage at sea.

Webb was shipped from California on Sept. 26, ultimately passing through the Panama Canal to reach the Port de Pariacabo—located on the Kourou River in French Guiana, on the northeastern coast of South America—on Oct. 12. Webb will now be driven to its launch site, Europe's Spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana, where it will begin two months of operational preparations before its scheduled Dec. 18 launch.

With the largest and most powerful space telescope ever built as cargo, nothing about this trip was normal.

A custom-made 'suitcase'

As a one-of-a-kind machine, Webb required a colossal, specially designed "suitcase" known as STTARS, short for Space Telescope Transporter for Air, Road and Sea. STTARS weighs about 168,000 pounds (76,000 kilograms). It is 18 feet (5.5 meters) high, 15 feet (4.6 meters) wide, and 110 feet (33.5 meters) long—about twice the length of a semi-trailer.

This custom container was outfitted for any extreme or unexpected conditions Webb could have encountered during travel. In designing, building, and testing STTARS, engineers carefully tested how to best protect the container from heavy rainfall and other environmental factors.

The Webb telescope's journey to space began with engineers packing the telescope into its protective transport container. The container was then moved from Northrop Grumman in Redondo Beach, California, to Seal Beach, California. Waiting at Seal Beach was the ship that would carry Webb to French Guiana. Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center; Michael McClare (KBRwyle); Sophia Roberts (AIMM); Michael P. Menzel (AIMM); Tom Graves (Northrop Grumman); Larkin Carey (Ball Aerospace & Technologies)

Charting the course

Planning any trip is hard work. With Webb, added to that are the logistics of transporting an extremely large and incredibly sensitive space telescope across two oceans.

For Charlie Diaz, Webb's launch site operations manager at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, Webb's arrival in Kourou was the culmination of years of preparation: "There are just thousands of different things that go on behind the scenes: pulling permits, avoiding obstructions, selecting alternate routes…all kinds of nuances. I'm so proud of our team—we've been working at this now for a long time."

Webb's ship voyage will ultimately be bookended by two short drives, one in California and one in French Guiana. The first took Webb from Northrop Grumman's facilities in Redondo Beach, California, to its nearby port of departure at Naval Weapons Station Seal Beach. The second drive will bring Webb from the Port de Pariacabo to its launch site of Europe's Spaceport in Kourou.

Prior to these drives, Diaz's team conducted route surveys using satellite imagery to understand the variables at stake. They noted details down to potholes that needed to be filled or traffic lights that had to be lifted due to STTARS' height. In case of emergencies, the team also selected "safe havens," or places along the way where they could safely perform any necessary maintenance on the container.

Due to its sheer size and weight, STTARS traveled at a speed of only 5–10 miles per hour (8–16 kilometers per hour) on the road to maintain a smooth ride.

While STTARS has previously transported Webb components to other NASA or partner facilities primarily by air, the team chose to transport Webb by sea to Kourou due to the logistics of landing at the Cayenne Airport in French Guiana. The 40-mile (65-kilometer) route between the airport and the launch site features seven bridges that STTARS would have been too heavy to cross. In addition, the drive from the Port de Pariacabo to Webb's launch site is relatively short. In comparison, a drive from the Cayenne Airport to the launch site, factoring in STTARS' slow speeds and other constraints, would have taken about two days.

Compared to the turbulence of air travel and the forces experienced during landing, traveling by sea aboard the cargo transport ship MN Colibri was quite literally smooth sailing. MN Colibri was designed specifically to transport enormous rocket parts as well as sensitive payloads to Europe's Spaceport, also known as the Guiana Space Center. On average, the ship cruised at around 15 knots, or 17 miles per hour (27 kilometers per hour). Sandra Irish, lead structural engineer for Webb at Goddard, was in charge of making sure that no stresseswould "rock the boat" past an accepted level. Working with the shipping company and crew, she and her team ensured a ship route for STTARS that avoided rough waters.

After arriving at Seal Beach, California, Webb (inside of the protective transport container) was loaded into the MN Colibri. This process took several steps to accomplish. Once the telescope was loaded inside the cargo hold, the MN Colibri set sail for French Guiana. Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center; Michael McClare (KBRwyle): Sophia Roberts (AIMM): Michael P. Menzel (AIMM); Victor Bradley

Running a clean ship

As with other spacecraft, Webb must be kept clean while it is on Earth.

STTARS is essentially a mobile clean room. When Webb is on the move, STTARS maintains a low level of contaminants inside the container—no more than 100 airborne particles greater than or equal to 0.5 microns in size. For reference, half a micron is just one hundredth of the width of a human hair!

Webb's contamination control team employed several tried-and-true methods to clean both the outside and inside of the container and prepare it for receiving and carrying Webb. Members carefully inspected each screw, nut, and bolt for residual contaminants using ultraviolet light. Next, Webb was installed into STTARS while both were inside the Northrop Grumman clean room. This will seal in cleanliness until STTARS can be opened inside the receiving clean room at the launch site.

STTARS sailed to French Guiana inside MN Colibri's cavernous cargo hold, protected from weather and the sea, along with other equipment and supplies for launch preparations. A sophisticated heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning (HVAC) system built for STTARS monitored and controlled the humidity and temperature inside the container. Several accompanying trailers, loaded with dozens of pressurized bottles, provided a continuous supply of pristine, manufactured, dry air into the transporter's interior.

Neil Patel, Webb's transportation manager at Goddard, was one of five Webb team members who accompanied STTARS on its journey to ensure that Webb would remain in good condition: "Traveling through the Panama Canal with Webb was a once-in-a-lifetime experience, and a first-time activity for our team. It was very special to be bringing this observatory to the very last place it will be here on Earth," he said.

Having been transported by land, air, and now sea, the Webb telescope can already be considered a seasoned traveler. Soon, it will enter the final frontier it hasn't explored—the great expanse of space.

NASA's Webb space telescope arrives in French Guiana after sea voyage

$10 Billion Webb Space Telescope Arrives at Europe’s Spaceport

Webb Arrives at Pariacabo Harbor

The James Webb Space Telescope, a once-in-a-generation space mission, arrived safely at Pariacabo harbor in French Guiana on October 12, 2021, ahead of its launch on an Ariane 5 rocket from Europe’s Spaceport. Credit: ESA/CNES/Arianespace

The James Webb Space Telescope has arrived safely at Pariacabo harbor in French Guiana. ESA in close collaboration with NASA will now prepare this once-in-a-generation mission for its launch on Ariane 5 from Europe’s Spaceport this December.

Few space science missions have been as eagerly anticipated as the James Webb Space Telescope (Webb). As the next great space science observatory following Hubble, Webb is designed to resolve unanswered questions about the Universe and see farther into our origins: from the formation of stars and planets to the birth of the first galaxies in the early Universe.

Every launch requires meticulous planning and preparation. For Webb, this process began about 15 years ago. Its arrival at Pariacabo harbor is a major milestone in the Ariane 5 launch campaign.

Webb Space Telescope Arrives at Pariacabo Harbor

The James Webb Space Telescope has arrived safely at Pariacabo harbor in French Guiana. Credit: ESA/CNES/Arianespace

Webb arrived from California on board the MN Colibri which sailed the Panama Canal to French Guiana. The shallow Kourou river was specially dredged to ensure a clear passage and the vessel followed high tide to safely reach port.

Though the telescope weighs only six tonnes, it is more than 10.5 m high and almost 4.5 m wide when folded. It was shipped in its folded position in a 30 m long container which, with auxiliary equipment, weighs more than 70 tonnes. This is such an exceptional mission that a heavy articulated vehicle was brought on board MN Colibri to carefully transport Webb to the Spaceport.

The Spaceport’s preparation facilities are ready for Webb’s arrival. As extra protection from contamination, the clean rooms are fitted with additional walls of air filters and a dedicated curtain will shroud Webb after it is mounted on the rocket.

NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope Assembled and Tested

James Webb Space Telescope folded after testing completed. Credit: NASA/Chris Gunn

This launch campaign involves more than 100 specialists. Teams will work separately to prepare the telescope and the launch vehicle until they become one combined team to join the telescope with its rocket for a momentous liftoff.

When Webb arrives at the Spaceport, it will be unpacked inside a dedicated spacecraft preparation facility where it will be examined to ensure that it is undamaged from its voyage and in good working order.

In parallel to Webb preparations, Ariane 5 rocket parts from Europe will come together in the launch vehicle integration building.

Webb Launch Timeline

Webb launch timeline. Credit: ESA

Europe’s powerful and highly reliable heavy-lift workhorse has an excellent track record spanning more than 100 launches and three decades. Ariane 5’s ample fairing, 5.4 m diameter and 17 m high, provides enough space for Webb’s folded spacecraft components, sunshield, and mirrors.

Ariane 5 is well suited for science satellites with proven capability to send missions to the second Lagrange Point (L2). Ariane 5 will release Webb directly on a path towards L2 on which it will continue for four weeks, eventually arriving at L2 which is four times farther away than the Moon is from Earth.

Webb and Ariane 5 Perfect Fit

Webb and Ariane 5: a fit made perfect. Ariane 5 has been customized to accommodate all the specific requirements of the Webb mission. Credit: ESA

A few customized features make Ariane 5 a perfect fit for Webb. These include the adaptation of venting ports at the base of the fairing which will be forced fully open during the flight. The fairing – the rocket’s nose cone – will protect Webb from the acoustics at liftoff and during its journey through Earth’s atmosphere. Its venting ports will enable extremely smooth depressurization of the fairing from ground pressure to vacuum during the flight.

Then, to avoid overheating of any elements of Webb, Ariane 5 will perform a specially developed rolling maneuver to ensure that all parts of the satellite will be equally exposed to the sun.

An extra battery will provide power for a boost to the upper stage after release of the telescope, safely distancing it from Webb.

Vega Ariane 5 and Ariane 6 Launch Zones at Europe's Spaceport

Aerial view over Europe’s Spaceport in Kourou in French Guiana on July 28, 2021. Pictured from left to right, the Vega, Ariane 5 (foreground), and Ariane 6 (background right) launch zones at Europe’s Spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana. Credit: ESA–S. Corvaja

Arianespace operates a family of rockets at Europe’s Spaceport: Ariane 5, Vega, and Soyuz. This launch site is surrounded by jungle and covers 690 km2. It is an ideal location for launching rockets for several reasons.

First, at only 5 degrees north of the equator, the rockets launched here can benefit from the ‘slingshot effect’ due to the speed of Earth’s rotation, increasing their performance as they already travel at over 300 m/s when they lift off. Also, an open ocean towards the east and north offers a large range of possible launch trajectories away from populated areas.

Finally, this region has a very low risk of cyclones or earthquakes which is important when such delicate operations are taking place.

“Webb is an excellent example of international teamwork and cooperation. We welcome Webb and our partners to Europe’s Spaceport in French Guiana to continue this adventure towards a thrilling liftoff on board Ariane 5 and to sharing the many Webb science breakthroughs to come!” commented Daniel Neuenschwander, ESA Director of Space Transportation.

Working with partners, ESA was responsible for the development and qualification of Ariane 5 adaptations for the Webb mission and for the procurement of the launch service.

Webb is an international partnership between NASA, the European Space Agency (ESA) and the Canadian Space Agency (CSA).

James Webb Space Telescope completes its voyage to French Guiana

Only a million or so miles to go

Richard Speed
Wed 13 Oct 2021 

The multinational James Webb Space Telescope – named after a former NASA administrator – has arrived in French Guiana, home to Europe's Spaceport, with launch finally in sight.

An international collaboration (including contributions from NASA, ESA and the Canadian Space Agency), the long-in-gestation and eye-wateringly overbudget observatory is due for launch atop an Ariane 5 rocket on 18 December, just squeaking into 2021, if all goes well.

Aside from the 16-day, 5,800-mile trip at sea from California, it has been quite the journey for the space telescope, on which work began in 1996 ahead of a 2007 launch date. Back then the budget was around $500m. These days it's nearer $10bn after repeated delays and a redesign. To be fair, however, nothing quite like the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has ever been built before. Then again, that is still quite the overrun and delay.

Unlike the Hubble Space Telescope (HST), which lurks in a Space Shuttle-friendly Earth orbit, the JWST will be placed near the Earth-Sun L2 Lagrange point. A large sunshield will keep the payload cool to permit observations in the infrared using the iconic 6.5m mirror, which is itself made up of 18 hexagonal mirrors and considerably larger than the comparatively weedy 2.4m mirror of the ageing HST.

The focus on the infrared means that while the JWST won't work in the same wavelengths as the HST, its lower frequency range means it should be able to observe objects far older and more distant than the HST can. However, its location means that dealing with any spacecraft anomalies will present considerably more of a challenge than the Hubble servicing missions of old. Which, in turn, has caused some of the delays as engineers have tested and tested again the observatory while it is on the ground.

Construction was completed in 2016 (although integration of all the components took a few years longer). The intervening years before its shipment to French Guiana have seen multiple tests, including one that resulted in the sunshield tearing. Other issues included problems with the propulsion system and, in one report [PDF], "loose hardware was found in the lower area of the spacecraft."

While it might have seemed at times that the launch date would never stop slipping, the JWST is now closer to the launchpad than it has ever been. And, once in space, all will be forgiven once the data starts flowing from the science payload.

"We are going to see things in the universe beyond what we can even imagine today," said Thomas Zurbuchen, associate administrator for NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington, after paying tribute to the efforts of the multinational team responsible for the telescope.

James Webb Space Telescope penciled in for launch this century. Yes, Dec 18, 2021
This way up: James Webb Space Telescope gets ready for shipment after final tests
Not only is Hubble back online after outage, it's already taking photos of the cosmos
NASA fixes Hubble Space Telescope using backup power supply unit, payload computer

Before it can trouble the top of an Ariane 5, engineers must extract the JWST from its shipping container (following a drive to the launch site) before performing some final checks and loading the spacecraft with fuel. It will then be enclosed in the Ariane fairing for launch.

The first few days of the JWST's journey to its final orbit will see the solar array, antennas and sunshield deployed, with the full mirror being unfolded at around the two-week mark.

The spacecraft is expected to arrive at the second Lagrange point 30 days after launch with the entire commissioning phase expected to take six months, followed by a five-year science mission. The goal is a lifetime greater than 10 years, although the limiting factor will be the fuel needed to keep the spacecraft in place around L2.

Not quite the prodigiously long life of the HST but, again, there isn't much on the JWST that can really be serviced by astronauts should things go wrong. Even getting a crewed spacecraft to the JWST's final location would be a challenge in itself. ®


The most powerful space telescope ever built will look back in time to the Dark Ages of the universe


Hubble took pictures of the oldest galaxies it could – seen here – but the James Webb Space Telescope can go back much farther in time. NASA


October 12, 2021 3.31pm EDT

Some have called NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope the “telescope that ate astronomy.” It is the most powerful space telescope ever built and a complex piece of mechanical origami that has pushed the limits of human engineering. On Dec. 18, 2021, after years of delays and billions of dollars in cost overruns, the telescope is scheduled to launch into orbit and usher in the next era of astronomy.

I’m an astronomer with a specialty in observational cosmology – I’ve been studying distant galaxies for 30 years. Some of the biggest unanswered questions about the universe relate to its early years just after the Big Bang. When did the first stars and galaxies form? Which came first, and why? I am incredibly excited that astronomers may soon uncover the story of how galaxies started because James Webb was built specifically to answer these very questions.
The Universe went through a period of time known as the Dark Ages before stars or galaxies emitted any light. Space Telescope Institute


The ‘Dark Ages’ of the universe


Excellent evidence shows that the universe started with an event called the Big Bang 13.8 billion years ago, which left it in an ultra-hot, ultra-dense state. The universe immediately began expanding after the Big Bang, cooling as it did so. One second after the Big Bang, the universe was a hundred trillion miles across with an average temperature of an incredible 18 billion F (10 billion C). Around 400,000 years after the Big Bang, the universe was 10 million light years across and the temperature had cooled to 5,500 F (3,000 C). If anyone had been there to see it at this point, the universe would have been glowing dull red like a giant heat lamp.

Throughout this time, space was filled with a smooth soup of high energy particles, radiation, hydrogen and helium. There was no structure. As the expanding universe became bigger and colder, the soup thinned out and everything faded to black. This was the start of what astronomers call the Dark Ages of the universe.

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The soup of the Dark Ages was not perfectly uniform and due to gravity, tiny areas of gas began to clump together and become more dense. The smooth universe became lumpy and these small clumps of denser gas were seeds for the eventual formation of stars, galaxies and everything else in the universe.

Although there was nothing to see, the Dark Ages were an important phase in the evolution of the universe.


Light from the early universe is in the infrared wavelength – meaning longer than red light – when it reaches Earth. Inductiveload/NASA via Wikimedia CommonsCC BY-SA



Looking for the first light

The Dark Ages ended when gravity formed the first stars and galaxies that eventually began to emit the first light. Although astronomers don’t know when first light happened, the best guess is that it was several hundred million years after the Big Bang. Astronomers also don’t know whether stars or galaxies formed first.

Current theories based on how gravity forms structure in a universe dominated by dark matter suggest that small objects – like stars and star clusters – likely formed first and then later grew into dwarf galaxies and then larger galaxies like the Milky Way. These first stars in the universe were extreme objects compared to stars of today. They were a million times brighter but they lived very short lives. They burned hot and bright and when they died, they left behind black holes up to a hundred times the Sun’s mass, which might have acted as the seeds for galaxy formation.

Astronomers would love to study this fascinating and important era of the universe, but detecting first light is incredibly challenging. Compared to massive, bright galaxies of today, the first objects were very small and due to the constant expansion of the universe, they’re now tens of billions of light years away from Earth. Also, the earliest stars were surrounded by gas left over from their formation and this gas acted like fog that absorbed most of the light. It took several hundred million years for radiation to blast away the fog. This early light is very faint by the time it gets to Earth.

But this is not the only challenge.

As the universe expands, it continuously stretches the wavelength of light traveling through it. This is called redshift because it shifts light of shorter wavelengths – like blue or white light – to longer wavelengths like red or infrared light. Though not a perfect analogy, it is similar to how when a car drives past you, the pitch of any sounds it is making drops noticeably.
Similar to how a pitch of a sound drops if the source is moving away from you, the wavelength of light stretches due to the expansion of the universe.

By the time light emitted by an early star or galaxy 13 billion years ago reaches any telescope on Earth, it has been stretched by a factor of 10 by the expansion of the universe. It arrives as infrared light, meaning it has a wavelength longer than that of red light. To see first light, you have to be looking for infrared light.


Telescope as a time machine

Enter the James Webb Space Telescope.

Telescopes are like time machines. If an object is 10,000 light-years away, that means the light takes 10,000 years to reach Earth. So the further out in space astronomers look, the further back in time we are looking.


The James Webb Space Telescope was specifically designed to detect the oldest galaxies in the universe. NASA/JPL-CaltechCC BY-SA

Engineers optimized James Webb for specifically detecting the faint infrared light of the earliest stars or galaxies. Compared to the Hubble Space Telescope, James Webb has a 15 times wider field of view on its camera, collects six times more light and its sensors are tuned to be most sensitive to infrared light.

The strategy will be to stare deeply at one patch of sky for a long time, collecting as much light and information from the most distant and oldest galaxies as possible. With this data, it may be possible to answer when and how the Dark Ages ended, but there are many other important discoveries to be made. For example, unraveling this story may also help explain the nature of dark matter, the mysterious form of matter that makes up about 80% of the mass of the universe.

James Webb is the most technically difficult mission NASA has ever attempted. But I think the scientific questions it may help answer will be worth every ounce of effort. I and other astronomers are waiting excitedly for the data to start coming back sometime in 2022.


Author
Chris Impey
University Distinguished Professor of Astronomy, University of Arizona

Disclosure statement
Chris Impey receives funding from the National Science Foundation and the Hearst Foundation.
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University of Arizona provides funding as a member of The Conversation US.



CANADA
More than 180,000 workers have left the restaurant sector. Most have become white-collar workers — and they’re not coming back


By Jacob Lorinc
Business Reporter
Wed., Oct. 13, 2021

Wages and COVID-19 restrictions pushed workers out of the restaurant and food services industry and into professional service roles in white-collar sectors, according to an analysis by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA).

By February 2021, almost a quarter-million workers in Canada who used to be employed in food and accommodation had found new jobs outside that sector, many of them switching to roles as secretaries or assistants for accountants, lawyers, architects and more, the study finds.

Employment in food services is now 14.8 per cent below its pre-pandemic level, according to Canada’s September labour-force survey. That’s an improvement from the worker shortages during third-wave restrictions earlier this year, but it means there are still 180,000 workers who left food-service positions in February 2020 and never returned.

It’s no surprise restaurant workers have flocked to secure jobs with higher wages, said David Macdonald, senior economist with the CCPA and author of the report, titled

 “Tipping point: Pandemic forced restaurant and bar workers into better paying jobs.”

“Restaurant jobs in the sector are harder now than they were pre-pandemic. Not only are you exposed to a deadly health risk, but you have to wear a mask all day, endure customer abuse while enforcing mask and vaccination rules, all while hoping new lockdowns don’t shut your job down for the fourth time,” said Macdonald.

The CCPA tracked monthly labour-force numbers per industry using public data from Statistics Canada to reveal a major sectoral realignment that saw a steep decrease in food-services workers that mirrored an almost-equally steep increase in professional services workers.


The professional services sector has gained 183,000 workers since February 2020 while food and accommodation services lost 180,000.

“This isn’t to say that servers have become engineers, doctors or teachers but, rather, that they’re filling support positions in these industries,” reads the report. “For example, a former restaurant server could become an office manager or secretary. It may also be that those servers have post-secondary education training in these other industries and that repeated shutdowns in food and accommodation pushed them into other jobs.”

Food and accommodation services have long operated on a low-wage business model that relies on easy-to-hire cheap labour to cook, serve and clean at restaurants and bars. Data from Statistics Canada shows that, since February 2020, average hourly wages for food service workers have increased by a matter of cents. The average hourly wage for a full-time industry worker grew by $0.58 between February 2020 and September 2021, from $16.80 to $17.38.

The low wages have worsened the job vacancy rates for these employers, Macdonald says: “Low wages are having a bigger impact on vacancies and the amount that they’ll have to increase wages in order to address those vacancies has grown.”

According to CCPA’s analysis, the job vacancy rate, now at nine per cent, could decline by three percentage points if employers raised their offered wages by $5 per hour.

The persistently low salaries are also a consequence of the beating that restaurants have taken after three lengthy lockdowns since March 2020. According to Restaurants Canada, an advocacy group for the industry, 80 per cent of restaurants have seen their profits decline during the pandemic. Nearly half have consistently lost money for more than a year.

Some hospitality and food services leaders have said they’re facing a labour shortage due to generous social assistance programs that incentivize would-be employees to stay home. Macdonald said the CCPA findings largely negate that theory.

“Our data shows that (the workers) have already returned to work, just in a different sector,” he said.

Workers who shifted to other industries could return to the restaurant business, but it would likely have to be with higher pay and better hours.

In the coming months, Macdonald expects to see a rise in prices for consumers at restaurants and bars as a result of higher wages to retain staff. He also says businesses may turn to automation and on-demand delivery to conserve labour.

More significant shifts will likely be seen when government subsidies expire later this month.

“Absent that government support, business models that are reliant on low-wage labour may no longer be viable,” he said.


Jacob Lorinc is a Toronto-based reporter covering business for the Star. Reach him via email: jlorinc@thestar.ca
Oilpatch experiencing labour shortage that could slow recovery, industry says

KENNEY SUGGESTS NURSES BECOME TRADESPEOPLE IF THEY WANT MORE MOOLA

By Staff The Canadian Press
Posted October 13, 2021 1:41 pm


WATCH: Will Alberta start seeing more future trades workers?

Canadian energy contractors are facing a shortage of rig workers that could slow oilpatch recovery.

Oil and gas companies are ramping up production to meet global energy demand as COVID-19 restrictions ease. Oil prices are at seven-year highs, with West Texas Intermediate trading this week at more than US$80 per barrel.

The Canadian Association of Energy Contractors says there were 175 active drilling rigs in Canada last week, compared to just 75 in the same period last year. It says employment in the sector has increased 130 per cent year-over-year.

But the industry group says labour shortages are a problem. It says some companies who can’t find workers are struggling to fill customer demand for rigs.

READ MORE: Alberta energy minister says oil price spike won’t increase industry cleanup spending

Companies are finding it difficult to attract workers back to the oil and gas sector after a six-year economic downturn. Some rig workers have left Western Canada while others have retrained in other industries.

The Canadian Association of Energy Contractors says wages for rig workers have already increased by about 10 per cent from last year due to market demand.

 

Novel treatment technology 'could reduce UK nuclear waste burden'

Novel treatment technology 'could reduce UK nuclear waste burden'
Credit: DOI: 10.1039/D1EE00332A

Researchers at The University of Manchester have developed a novel treatment technology that may help to significantly reduce the UK's nuclear waste burden.

The management of radioactive   is one of the major challenges of nuclear power plant decommissioning throughout the world, particularly in the UK, as well as in France and Russia.

More than 300,000 tons of nuclear graphite waste worldwide, and around 100,000 tons in the UK, await disposal in a Geological Disposal Facility that is yet to be built.

Dr. Tatiana Grebennikova, Dr. Clint Sharrad and Professor Abbie Jones have found a novel and non-destructive method of removing radioactivity from this type of waste and downgrading it from the category of 'higher activity waste' to that of a much lower level. This breakthrough could therefore significantly speed up disposal of such material and reduce the overall cost of dealing with our legacy waste.

The treatment developed uses electrolysis to drive the removal of radioactive species from irradiated nuclear graphite into a molten salt medium. Molten salts have an advantage over, for example, water in that  have a wide electrochemical window, which means we can readily access electric potentials that can better force the removal of these nuclear graphite isotopes.

Using this method the team was able to reduce the radioactivity of UK Magnox grade graphite so that reclassification of the graphite from Intermediate Level Waste to Low Level Waste is possible, making it far easier and cheaper to dispose of.

Professor Abbie Jones, Chair in Nuclear Graphite, said: "The UK  has built all but one of its reactors (>40 in total) using graphite as core moderator material and structural components. As these cease to operate, this will result in a volume of graphite waste equivalent to ~ 1300 double decker buses (~ 100'000 tons). As most of the advanced modular nuclear reactor technologies proposed for future low carbon energy production may also use nuclear graphite, technologies that can minimize the burden of this waste are vital.

"We have submitted an international patent with The University of Manchester on this  and are planning follow-on research to determine if we can decontaminate nuclear graphite to levels even further than observed thus far. We will also use our ongoing links with the International Atomic Energy Agency to explore the feasibility of upscaling this technology for the treatment to address further extensive legacy nuclear graphite waste worldwide."

Dr. Clint Sharrad, Reader in Nuclear Decommissioning Engineering, added: "If we are successful in industrializing this technology, it could lead to up to £1 billion in savings for the UK taxpayer by reducing disposal costs for current graphite legacy wastes, as well as improved sustainability of advanced reactor technology where graphite will be deployed again.

"The nuclear sector as a whole is already exploring and developing innovative technologies to decommission legacy facilities quickly and safely. Our work has shown how innovation can be successfully achieved by possessing a willingness to work across disciplines and research areas."

The paper, titled "Electrochemical decontamination of irradiated nuclear graphite from corrosion and fission products using molten salt," was published in the journal Energy & Environmental Science.Nuclear waste could be recycled for diamond battery power

More information: Tatiana Grebennikova et al, Electrochemical decontamination of irradiated nuclear graphite from corrosion and fission products using molten salt, Energy & Environmental Science (2021). DOI: 10.1039/D1EE00332A

Journal information: Energy & Environmental Science 

Provided by University of Manchester 

Removing massive amounts of fish (and their poop) has altered ocean chemistry: study


Daniel J. Rowe
CTVNewsMontreal.ca
 Digital Reporter
 Tuesday, October 12, 2021 

Overfishing has altered the ocean's biochemistry


Tuna are assorted in lines at a fish market after being landed at Shiogama port, Miygagi Prefecture, northeastern Japan, Thursday, April 14, 2011. (AP / Kyodo News)

MONTREAL -- There are not a lot of fish in the ocean. Well, there are, but not as much as there were.

McGill University Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences professor Eric Galbraith led a study that found that overfishing has altered the ocean's chemistry and may play a part in climate change.

There would now be twice as many fish in the ocean as there were in the 1990s, when fishing was at its peak, said Glabraith, which has changed the chemical composition in the deep ocean.

"The important message here is that this is another benefit to be gained from reducing overfishing," he said. So, if you reduce fishing pressure, this aspect of the ocean will go back fairly quickly within a few decades to what it was naturally."

Galbraith said it's the first time anyone has tried to put a number on the total amount of fish in the ocean using computer models to realistically simulate how fast fish can grow and adding fishing data to see how many are being taken out of the ocean.

As a result of taking five to 10 billion tons of fish out of the ocean, the ocean's circulation system -- how nutrients and carbon naturally move around the ocean -- was affected, Galbraith's study found.

"So these fish were all swimming around, they were eating, they were pooping and poop was sinking down into the deep ocean," he said. "Fish poop contains a lot of carbon, and so it [fishing] would have been removing carbon from the upper part of the ocean and sticking it down in the deep ocean."

Removing that carbon removes CO2 from the ocean's surface, which pulls carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere in the same way trees do.

Though Galbraith admits that researchers do not know the exact number of how much that removed CO2 has changed the atmosphere, it is clear that something happened.

"This paper is really just a realization of: 'Whoa!' The fishing had much more of an impact on how the ocean chemistry function than we realized," he said.

When it comes to climate change, Galbraith said the effect of fishing is of a similar magnitude as the more commonly studied effects of how global warming has altered ocean circulation.

"It's another thing to try to understand better," said Galbraith. "It's an impact that we weren't aware we had had. I think the good part is that it's an impact that we can undo, relatively easily by just fishing less."

Overfishing is an issue that has been studied for centuries, but typically from an economic standpoint.

The Grand Banks of Newfoundland, for example, was overfished in the late 20th century leading to the Canadian Grand Banks fishery closing in 1992 due to the collapse of cod and other fish stocks.

Galbraith's study, however, shows that overfishing's impact extends to the whole system of life in the oceans and the chemistry of the water itself.

"This is the tragedy of overfishing, is that when you fish too hard, you reduce the amount of fish that are there, which makes it more difficult to catch fish which makes fish more expensive, and you end up having less fish to eat. So this is also telling us that another benefit of reducing overfishing would be that we would move the natural circulation system back closer to how it used to be."

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Professor Eric Galbraith of McGill University led a study that found what the removal of fish (and their poop) has had on the ocean
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Scientists propose using CO2 to create Martian fuel

MINING.COM Staff Writer | October 12, 2021

UC chemical engineer Jingjie Wu holds up the reactor where a catalyst converts carbon dioxide into methane. (Image by Andrew Higley, courtesy of UC Creative + Brand).

Astronauts roaming Mars could save half the fuel for a return trip home by making what they need on the red planet once they arrive.


According to engineers at the University of Cincinnati, space explorers could follow the updated version of an old process that involves using a carbon catalyst in a reactor to convert carbon dioxide into methane.

In detail, the UofC researchers have developed a process based on the “Sabatier reaction,” which is a process the International Space Station uses to scrub the carbon dioxide from the air the astronauts breathe and generate rocket fuel to keep the station in high orbit.

But since the Martian atmosphere is composed almost entirely of carbon dioxide, astronauts could treat it like a gas station and easily pump carbon dioxide through the reactor and produce methane for a rocket.

In a paper published in the journal Nature Communications, the experts explain that the process of capturing and transforming CO2 also holds promise to help mitigate climate change, while producing fuel on Earth as a byproduct.

“The Biden Administration has set a goal of achieving a 50% reduction in greenhouse gas pollutants by 2030 and an economy that relies on renewable energy by 2050,” senior researcher Jingjie Wu said in a media statement. “That means we’ll have to recycle carbon dioxide.”

Wu and his students, including lead author Tianyu Zhang, are also experimenting with different catalysts such as graphene quantum dots — layers of carbon just nanometers big — that can increase the yield of methane.

“The process is 100 times more productive than it was just 10 years ago. So you can imagine that progress will come faster and faster,” Wu said. “In the next 10 years, we’ll have a lot of startup companies to commercialize this technique.”

Wu pointed out that his students are also applying this technique with different catalysts to produce ethylene. Called the world’s most important chemical, ethylene is used in the manufacture of plastics, rubber, synthetic clothing and other products.
Breakthrough for Rio Tinto’s smelter hydropower project in British Columbia

MINING.com Editor | October 12, 2021 

Kemano T2 Break through. Image from Rio Tinto.

In a major milestone for Rio Tinto’s Kemano T2 hydropower project in British Columbia, the tunnel boring machine has broken through to the other side.


The Kemano T2 Project is completing a second tunnel to carry water into the Kemano Powerhouse, to ensure the long-term reliability of the power supply for Rio Tinto’s BC Works smelter in Kitimat.

The tunnel boring machine cut 7.6 kilometres through the rock in remote mountains over 30 months, completing the route for a 16 kilometre tunnel that was started in the early 1990s.

“This is a significant milestone towards finishing the second tunnel and securing the long term reliability of hydropower for Rio Tinto’s smelter in Kitimat, which produces some of the world’s lowest carbon aluminium,” said Kemano T2 Project Manager Alex Jones in a media release.

“Boring this tunnel is a highly-skilled and technical feat that has been achieved in an extremely remote location that is only accessible by air or sea. We thank all of our partners who are supporting this important project – from our employees, to contractors, First Nations, government and community members,” said Jones.

The 1,300 tonne Herrenknecht tunnel boring machine is named tl’ughus by the Cheslatta Carrier Nation after a legendary giant monster snake and is decorated with artwork by Haisla Nation students. It is 190 metres long and more than six metres in diameter.

The tunnel will be filled up with water in the middle of next year, with the project expected to be complete in the second half of 2022.
BC First Nations say river’s health can be restored without shutting down Rio Tinto smelter

Nelson Bennett - Business in Vancouver | October 13, 2021 

Rio Tinto’s aluminum works in British Columbia, Canada. Image: Rio Tinto

Sometime in the spring of 2022, several Nechako River First Nations hope the British Columbia Supreme Court will rule in their favour in a lawsuit against Rio Tinto Alcan Inc. that would address their concerns about the health of the river.


But they are also hoping for a compromise that would restore river flows to the Nechako without having to remove the Kenney Dam and shut down Rio Tinto’s BC Works aluminum smelter in Kitimat.

Chief Priscilla Mueller of the Saik’uz First Nation said Rio Tinto has lately shown some willingness to listen to the concerns of First Nations, which are focused mainly on the negative impact the dam and low river flows have had on salmon and sturgeon.

“We’ve never had a relationship with Rio Tinto, and I really believe now that we’re building a relationship,” Mueller said. “They’ve been out to our Nechako First Nations communities and those meetings were positive.”

The Nechako River was dammed in the 1950s to generate power for the Kitimat aluminum smelter.

Depending on the time of year, the Kenney Dam can reduce river flows to 25% of what they would be without the dam. In drier years, that can be a serious problem for fish.

“We literally have no salmon left,” Mueller said. “And the sturgeon, everybody knows that they’re becoming extinct. Today, we have to buy our salmon, which is very, very sad for our communities. This was our livelihood.”

The Nechako First Nations’ BC Supreme Court case claims that the dam has had a negative impact on their Aboriginal rights. If the court rules in their favour, it could have economic fallout for Kitimat’s biggest employer: the BC Works aluminum smelter, which employs roughly 1,000 people.

Somewhere between the interests of industry and jobs and the interests of the environment, fish and First Nations, there may be a compromise. Ideally, for the river and its fish, the Kenney Dam would be removed, allowing the river to be restored to normal flow levels. That’s not what the First Nations expect the BC Supreme Court will order. But they hope the court will recognize the impacts the dam has had on the river, fish and livelihoods of Nechako First Nations and recommend a plan to restore at least some of the river’s natural flow levels.

“There is a real opportunity to keep the smelter running 100% and restore natural flow in the river, and that’s what the nations are trying to get to,” said Alex Grzybowski, an adviser to the Nechako First Nations.

Rising river levels concern


The biggest concern about river levels is in the springtime, when levels would typically be at a seasonal high. In drier years, to maintain sufficient river flows, water could be spilled over the dam. Rio Tinto would have to forgo some power generation, but could buy the power it needs from BC Hydro. The Kemano Generating Station already produces more power than the smelter needs. Rio Tinto sells some of that surplus power to BC Hydro. Since the new Site C dam is expected to produce a power surplus, there should be sufficient generating capacity to sell power to the Rio Tinto when water needs to be held back in the spring.

Should such an arrangement be agreed to – or enforced by the court – it would require an amendment to, or replacement of, the 1987 Settlement Agreement, which governs Nechako water flows and release. Rio Tinto is bound by that agreement.

A new governance model being proposed by the Regional District of Bulkley-Nechako (RDBN) and the Saik’uz, Stellat’en, and Nadleh Whut’en First Nations appears to anticipate some new agreement for the Nechako – one that includes First Nations.

Earlier this year, the RDBN and the Nechako First Nations signed a memorandum of understanding aimed at giving those parties a seat at the Nechako River governance table.

Rio Tinto appears to be at least listening to the concerns of the Nechako First Nations.

“For the past three years we have been working with a variety of parties at the Water Engagement Initiative for the benefit of the Nechako River,” a spokesman for Rio Tinto said in a written statement. “We are committed to working with the Nechako First Nations, other First Nations, government and stakeholders to review all aspects of the Nechako Reservoir management process.”


(This article first appeared in Business in Vancouver)
GREEN MINERALS DON'T MAKE MINING SUSTAINABLE
Chile offers incentives to miners to take on more lithium projects

Bloomberg News | October 13, 2021 

Maricunga salt flat in Chile (Image: Wikimedia Commons)

Chile is offering new contracts to tap the world’s biggest reserves of lithium in a effort to reclaim market share as demand for the battery metal surges.


The government is making bidding rules available to local and foreign firms for five quotas of 80,000 metric tons apiece. Winners will get seven years to explore and develop projects and 20 years of production. The state will charge a royalty for the allocation of quotas and variable payments during production.

The South American nation has been losing market share as new frontiers open up ahead of an expected quadrupling of demand for the key ingredient in rechargeable batteries. The two incumbents in the giant Atacama salt flat, SQM and Albemarle Corp., are expanding, but Chilean authorities are looking to accelerate supply growth by opening up other new areas.

Automakers and battery manufacturers are seeking to shore up supplies of commodities seen as critical to the development of electric cars, with lithium carbonate prices in China reaching record highs. Confidence is growing that the market is finally shaking off a glut that dragged down prices in 2018.

“The increase in global lithium demand and the challenge to promote new technologies to help fight climate change and transition to cleaner energy represents an opportunity to boost Chile’s lithium industry and strengthen its strategic position, benefiting the country and its people,” the mining ministry said Wednesday in a statement.

While Australia is the largest supplier of lithium, Chile boasts the most reserves worldwide by a large margin.

(By James Attwood, with assistance from Yvonne Yue Li)
POSTMODERN METAL ALCHEMY
Silver-infused bacteria make fuel cells more efficient
MINING.COM Staff Writer | October 13, 2021 

Silver. (Reference image by James St. John, Flickr).

A new study published in the journal Science describes the development of microbial fuel cells — a technology that utilizes natural bacteria to extract electrons from organic matter in wastewater to generate electrical currents.


It has been known that populations of bacteria can help decontaminate groundwater by breaking down harmful chemical compounds, but the new research also shows a practical way to harness renewable energy from this process.

Led by a team at the University of California – Los Angeles, the study is focused on the bacteria genus Shewanella, which can grow and thrive in all types of environments — including soil, wastewater and seawater — regardless of oxygen levels.

ONCE INSIDE THE BACTERIA, SILVER PARTICLES ACT AS MICROSCOPIC TRANSMISSION WIRES, CAPTURING MORE ELECTRONS PRODUCED BY THE BACTERIA

Shewanella species naturally break down organic waste matter into smaller molecules, with electrons being a byproduct of the metabolic process. When the bacteria grow as films on electrodes, some of the electrons can be captured, forming a microbial fuel cell that produces electricity.

However, microbial fuel cells powered by Shewanella oneidensis have previously not captured enough currents from the bacteria to make the technology practical for industrial use. Few electrons could move quickly enough to escape the bacteria’s membranes and enter the electrodes to provide sufficient electrical currents and power.

To address this issue, the researchers added nanoparticles of silver to electrodes that are composed of a type of graphene oxide. The nanoparticles release silver ions, which bacteria reduce to silver nanoparticles using electrons generated from their metabolic process and then incorporate into their cells. Once inside the bacteria, the silver particles act as microscopic transmission wires, capturing more electrons produced by the bacteria.

“Adding the silver nanoparticles into the bacteria is like creating a dedicated express lane for electrons, which enabled us to extract more electrons and at faster speeds,” Xiangfeng Duan, the study’s co-corresponding author, said in a media statement.

With greatly improved electron transport efficiency, the resulting silver-infused Shewanella film outputs more than 80% of the metabolic electrons to an external circuit, generating power of 0.66 milliwatts per square centimetre — more than double the previous best for microbial-based fuel cells.

With the increased current and improved efficiencies, the research showed that fuel cells powered by silver-Shewanella hybrid bacteria may pave the way for sufficient power output in practical settings.