management strategies

    Cards (8)

    • Ice road

      Requires minimum snow depth of 6 inches, with top 12 inches of tundra soil frozen to at least -5 °C, and the optimum ambient (environmental) temperature being -6 °C
    • Ice road construction
      1. Takes place December to February
      2. Roads are built in segments, taking 3 days per 1 mile of road
      3. Workers use snow & ice chips to fill uneven spots to create a level building surface
      4. Workers water the snow- / ice-packed road, letting it freeze between each application of water, until minimum thickness of 6 inches is reached
    • Water used to construct & maintain ice roads

      • Come from local lakes
      • Alaska Department of Natural Resources (DNR) & Alaska Department of Fish & Game (DFG) monitor volume of water removed from local lakes to ensure lakes are replenished during spring melt
      • Over abstraction of water from surface freshwater stores is therefore prevented
    • DNR stipulates ice roads must be built in different locations every season

      • To prevent environmental damage e.g. over abstraction of freshwater, damage to fragile vegetation
      • This allows any damaged vegetation to recover
    • Passive approach to piling structures
      • Does not rely on electricity to provide insulation
      • Provides a shadow effect on the ground under the building, cooling the ground
      • Shelters the ground from accumulating of snow, exposing the ground to cold arctic winter temperatures
      • Does not produce any dark gravel dust
      • Does not reduce albedo of surrounding snow
      • Permafrost continues to be covered by the snow, preventing the active layer from melting
    • Therm-O-Trol

      A metal bonded polyurethane foam especially formulated for arctic insulation, used for insulating TAPS
    • Therm-O-Case

      A double-walled oil well casing with multi-layered insulation, used to protect against heat transfer from hot crude oil to surrounding permafrost for 2000-foot deep oil wells
    • Snake Drill

      • Improved lateral drilling technology
      • Size of gravel pad is now smaller while the drilling area accessible from the gravel pad is enlarged
      • If directional drilling is possible across a wide area from a single drilling site, fewer sites are needed for drilling rigs, reducing impact on vegetation and permafrost (access roads, pipelines, production facilities etc.)
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