Renewable energy advisor Dulas has completed a 70kW hydro retrofit project inside an existing water treatment works at Mynydd Llandygai in North Wales. The work adds to the 12MW of operation and maintenance services Dulas currently provides on behalf of utility Welsh Water.

Renewable energy advisor Dulas has completed a 70kW hydro retrofit project inside an existing water treatment works at Mynydd Llandygai in North Wales. The work adds to the 12MW of operation and maintenance services Dulas currently provides on behalf of utility Welsh Water.

Located just outside of Bangor, the Mynydd Llandygai water treatment works provides drinking water to a network supplying a large area of north-west Wales. However, as the needs of the area have grown, it was necessary to improve the plant’s efficiency through the installation of a Pelton turbine.

This makes use of two runners of differing size, each of which are powered by a separate water supply from separate reservoirs. In order to ensure that both runners rotate at the same speed, Dulas’ team of engineers carefully adjusted the volumes of water from each source.

In addition, one of the key considerations facing Dulas’ team of engineers was the integration of this new equipment with the pre-existing software at the treatment plant, which runs 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

The work, which commenced in Spring 2016, saw Dulas draw on experience accrued at nearly twenty Welsh Water sites. The project was subsequently completed with minimal disruption to the plant’s operation, providing Welsh Water’s customers with continued access to safe, clean drinking water.

“As a supplier to Welsh Water, the expertise our team has built up across the country was critical to the successful completion of the retrofit work at Mynydd Llandygai,” said Crispin Angood, Senior Project Manager at Dulas. “Recent changes to the feed-in tariff subsidy payment have caused installation to slow, but this means that updating Wales’ existing hydro assets has become all the more important, especially with an eye to longer-term renewable energy targets.”