P60 Icing occurrences on overhead
lines in Belgium
Magne, Rudy,
Johan Jaques, van
Dijke, Dani‘l, MeteoGroup, Netherlands
A
client in Belgium wanted to know the frequently of occurrence of icing on the
overhead lines. For that purpose a 3 km CFSR - WRF climatology has been done
over Belgium for the last 20 years. Four icing types: freezing rain, wet snow,
hoar frost, and hard rime have been derived using algorithms based on
precipitation, wet bulb temperature, surface temperature, wind speed and
relative humidity. The icing occurrences maps show very interesting patterns
over Belgium: impact of the major cities, coastal boundaries and Ardennes
(hills).
Verifications
against observations show that both in absolute and relative terms the WRF
simulations can be used as a guide for the icing types, distribution and
frequency on overhead lines in Belgium. Results tend to show that very high
impact phenomena like freezing rain or wet snow are relatively rare, whereas
the low impact phenomenon hoar frost is several times more frequent. The medium
to high impact phenomenon freezing fog is relatively rare in Flanders (north of
Belgium), but more frequent in Wallonnia (south of
Belgium) and constitutes an import type of icing in the Ardennes. On average
over a winter will about 80 hours of icing problems occur near the coast, about
120 hours in Flanders up to 245 hours in Luxemburg.