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Cleanup, Ketelmeer

Ketelmeer, a lake in the Netherlands with a length of some 10 kilometers and a width varying from two to three kilometers, separates the North Eastern and Southern Polders constructed during the late 1960s and early 1970s. It is a major example of the problem of 'historic pollution'. Lake Ketelmeer receives the waters of the Rijn and IJssel and over a period of three or more decades, tens of millions of cubic meters of highly contaminated sediments entered Ketelmeer from hundreds of upstream locations. The bottom was covered by polluted sediments to an average depth of 50 cm. A significant proportion of this material had to be removed, or capped by the cleaner sediments of recent years, if a normal aquatic environment was to be restored.

The strategy for Ketelmeer was based on selective removal, in areas such as the main shipping channels, together with the construction of a permanent and fully isolated repository for contaminated dredged material. This facility, the IJsseloog, will serve both Ketelmeer and the entire northern region of The Netherlands and has a capacity of 23 million m3. When the facility is full, it is likely to be capped and developed as a recreational area within a rejuvenated Ketelmeer. This new island, with its adjacent wetland habitats, has the potential to become a significant nature reserve in its own right. The Boskalis system deployed at Ketelmeer had a capacity of 500 cu m/hr and had the ability to strip very thin layers (0.05 m to 0.60 m). The system featured on an environmental disc cutter (a horizontal rotating disc) with a visor on the dredge side. Boskalis contributed to two key objectives. The first was to achieve a significant reduction in the re-suspension of sediments, due to vessel traffic in the main channels and movements in the many small harbors around Ketelmeer. The second was to deepen the shipping channel from the IJssel to Lake IJsselmeer.

Related projects

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P67 FPSO Transportation

On behalf of Company Petrobras and Client COOEC, Boskalis executed the dry transportation of the P-67 FPSO in 2018 from the COOEC Qingdao yard in China to Rio de Janeiro in Brazil. The P-67 FPSO will produce 150,000 bpd and compress six million cubic meters of natural gas daily in the Lula North section of the Lula-Cernambi field in the Santos basin.

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Artificial island
off the coast of
Jakarta, Indonesia

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Road enlargement motorway A1-A6, Diemen-Almere

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Port maintenance,
Açu Port

Açu Port in São João da Barra, Rio de Janeiro (Brazil) is one of the largest port-industry complex in Latin America. The port consists of two terminals: T1, an offshore terminal for handling iron ore and oil, and T2, an onshore terminal built around the inner navigation channel which accommodates offshore supply companies and will handle bauxite, general cargo and vehicles.

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