'World's Most Powerful Tidal Turbine' Starts To Export Power To the Grid (cnbc.com) 111
A tidal turbine weighing 680 metric tons and dubbed "the world's most powerful" has started grid-connected power generation at the European Marine Energy Centre in Orkney, an archipelago located north of mainland Scotland. CNBC reports: In an announcement Wednesday, Scottish engineering firm Orbital Marine Power explained how its 2 megawatt O2 turbine had been anchored in a body of water called the Fall of Warness, with a subsea cable linking it to a local electricity network on land. It's expected that the turbine, which is 74 meters long, will "operate in the waters off Orkney for the next 15 years," the company said, and have "the capacity to meet the annual electricity demand of around 2,000 UK homes."
The turbine is also set to send power to a land-based electrolyzer that will generate so-called green hydrogen. In a statement, Orbital Marine Power's CEO, Andrew Scott, described Wednesday's news as "a major milestone for the O2." Funding for the O2's construction has come from public lenders via Abundance Investment. The Scottish government has also provided £3.4 million (around $4.72 million) of support through its Saltire Tidal Energy Challenge Fund. Looking to the future, Orbital Marine Power said it was "setting its sights" on the commercialization of its tech via the deployment of multi-megawatt arrays.
The turbine is also set to send power to a land-based electrolyzer that will generate so-called green hydrogen. In a statement, Orbital Marine Power's CEO, Andrew Scott, described Wednesday's news as "a major milestone for the O2." Funding for the O2's construction has come from public lenders via Abundance Investment. The Scottish government has also provided £3.4 million (around $4.72 million) of support through its Saltire Tidal Energy Challenge Fund. Looking to the future, Orbital Marine Power said it was "setting its sights" on the commercialization of its tech via the deployment of multi-megawatt arrays.
I seem to remember an episode of Doctor who (Score:4, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
They seem like they would be extremely expensive to install and maintain
They are indeed. This was a pilot program designed to suck up government money. In a windy place like the Orkneys, some wind turbines would have made way more sense.
Additionally, tidal power is very detrimental to the environment. The best sites are in estuaries which are biological hotspots.
"Tidal power" makes about as much sense as "green hydrogen". This project includes both.
Re: (Score:2)
...some wind turbines would have made way more sense.
Thanks, the last time I heard a figure, Orkney produced 125% of its electrical needs from wind power and "they" have said that the link to the UK national grid is maxed out and will not be getting upgraded. In fact, that is the reason the power will be used to generate hydrogen.
Re: (Score:2)
In fact, that is the reason the power will be used to generate hydrogen.
Which is currently use for energy storage - as everyone loves to point out, wind and tides are intermittent.
They are also converting the APU on the current car ferry to hydrogen power, and getting used to handling hydrogen in a marine environment.. They also plan to build a new fuel-cell powered ferry - the design contract has just been awarded [orcadian.co.uk].
We are going to need something to replace diesel for ships, and fuel-cells powered by green hydrogen is one possibility. You've got to start somewhere.
Re: (Score:2)
OTOH, tidal power much more predictably intermittent. I can go to a Met Office website and download the tide tables for any harbour in the the UK for the next year, and from that deduce the power availability from the tide that far in advance.
Most ships run on something much nastier than diesel - bunker oil. That stuff needs phasing out ASAP. But it's very cheap, which is why your average container ship loaded with con
Re: (Score:2)
This was a pilot program designed to suck up government money.
Herp derp.
In a windy place like the Orkneys, some wind turbines would have made way more sense.
It's also got very high tides, 2.5 meters, which makes it a great place to test the tech.
Additionally, tidal power is very detrimental to the environment. The best sites are in estuaries which are biological hotspots.
You're thinking of tidal barrages not undersea turbines. This is Orkney, it's got a bunch of tidal channels. Unless you're thinking of
Re:I seem to remember an episode of Doctor who (Score:4)
It's a prototype that has a key advantage over wind - it is 100% predictable. The tides follow an unchanging schedule so you know exactly when power will be available. That's rather handy in some places where you can schedule things to coincide with the availability of tidal power.
Obviously wind will be the bulk of generation, there is so much of it off the British coast, but that doesn't mean this technology isn't valuable for certain applications.
Re: I seem to remember an episode of Doctor who (Score:1)
You are an idiot. As always.
Perhaps you want to read up before accusing them to 'have sucked up governments funds.
Especially as they put the thing at a perfect place. And: unlike wind turbines in a storm: they work 16h a day. All year long.
Re: (Score:2)
Location, location, location. You need big tides, so lots of water trapped against a continent, piling it up, as the sun and or moon, pull on the water, well pull on the entire planet but the water moves more readily. Now if you are drawing power from tidal water forces, you are slowing water and putting energy into planet but energy would go into planet anyhow, pushing against land, generating energy that you do not use, so no change.
Not many locations, it needs to be near coast, lots of marine life, prob
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
that is why it is not everywhere.
The environmental damage is only one reason tidal power isn't used.
Other reasons are:
1. Tides are intermittent, and the cycle shifts by 40 minutes per day, so even the intermittency is intermittent.
2. Limited deployment sites.
3. Lots of maintenance problems due to saltwater corrosion of metal parts.
4. Expensive.
Re: I seem to remember an episode of Doctor who (Score:5, Informative)
Tides are indeed intermittent and variable, but they are entirely predictable. Unlike wind. Tides aren't slack at the same time everywhere either. The UK gets a lot of power from wind (43% [templar.co.uk] as I write this), but just 10 days ago when an area of high pressure sat over the UK for a week, the UK was importing more power from France than it was generating from wind. This isn't a factor with tidal. The UK benefits from large tides too, with places like the " Bristol Channel/Severn Estuary having one of the greatest tidal ranges in the world. So if tidal power will work, the UK is one of the most likely places to use it.
Re: (Score:1)
Tides aren't slack at the same time everywhere either.
Nor are winds, they're always blowing somewhere and usually not so far away by modern standards. They may not be blowing anywhere on a tiny little island like England, though, which is just one more reason why they can't just give the EU the finger and exist all on their own.
Re: I seem to remember an episode of Doctor who (Score:2)
You do talk some nonsense sometimes, donâ(TM)t you? What on earth has the UKâ(TM)s (not sure why you said âoeEnglandâ) relationship with the EU got to do with this? It is occasionally a net exporter to three of itâ(TM)s neighbours. Furthermore, Scotland is smaller than England yet it tends to be a net exporter. If the EU stopped existing then nothing would change in terms of electricity imports and exports.
Re: (Score:3)
isn't a terribly good comparison with the Pentland Firth, because the "Bristol Channel/Severn Estuary" is closed at one end (the Severn end) and has an input of fresh water there (and form the Usk, and various other rivers, depending on where you want to build your generating plant) ; in contrast, the Pentland firth is open sea at both ends. It gets it's tidal energy (and therefore "interesting times" currents) because high (low) tide at one end is at a di
Re: (Score:3)
"1. Tides are intermittent,...." - eh? they are completely predictable
"2. Limited deployment sites." - so? adds to the ways of generating power, the more the merrier. Its great for islands like Orkey
"3. Lots of maintenance..." - possi
Re: (Score:2)
680 tons of material to create 2MW of power.
Even if optimizations make this figure 10 times better, it would still be woefully uncompetitive with wind or solar (even in Orkney).
If this is the state of the art of tidal power, it is a total loss.
Re: (Score:2)
Most of that mass being iron and concrete, things we aren't exactly in short supply of.
Not sure why mass is even a relevant factor worth considering. It's almost like you're desperate to justify not liking it...
=Smidge=
Re: (Score:2)
Maybe you are confusing this with tidal lagoons. It's not that, this is basically a boat that has a couple of turbines which sit under the surface, so not unlike the screws on a normal water craft. The effect on the environment will be pretty minimal.
Re: I seem to remember an episode of Doctor who (Score:2)
All points basically wrong.
Except for intermittent- which is however completely irrelevant
Care to explain 'environmental damage'? Dumb ass?
Re: (Score:2)
Intermittency is not such a big deal if you have something to store the energy in, like a battery. In this case, they're making hydrogen.
Re: (Score:2)
"1. Tides are intermittent, and the cycle shifts by 40 minutes per day, so even the intermittency is intermittent."
Yes, those turbines work both ways and we know exactly beforehand when the tide will be how high years in the future.
"2. Limited deployment sites."
Yes, Austria and Luxembourg are fucked, no ocean.
"3. Lots of maintenance problems due to saltwater corrosion of metal parts."
Ever heard of stainless steel?
Or 'ships'?
"4. Expensive."
Sure, but unlike a nuclear operation, you'll get all sorts of insuran
no free lunch (Score:1, Informative)
Low output (2MW, compared to say a coal fired generator probably >100MW) I cannot do a cost comparison but the capitol cost of the setup is obviously significant and only 15years expected life is pretty crap. Free "Fuel" however.
By that logic all fuel is "free". See? I can get free fuel by mining a bunch of steel for building a big boiler and then digging up "free" coal, natural gas, peat, petroleum, municipal waste, Milli Vanilli cassettes, worn tires, trees, worn windmill blades (carbon fiber burns, right?), Pete, agricultural waste (whatever that is), books, and your grandchildren's hopes for clean air and water. Yep, free fuel, because if I can mine for the "free" materials for making this waterwheel then the fuel is just as
Re: (Score:2)
Sunlight is sent to you for free, wind is sent to you for free and here the tidal flows are sent to the turbine for free.
Re: (Score:2)
This is a single unit of limited size and capacity.
It's like saying wind power isn't viable because a single wind turbine generates only 2MW on average.
How much power does your coal fired generator produce if we use a single wheelbarrow and a shovel to feed its furnace?
Re: (Score:2)
Low output (2MW, compared to say a coal fired generator probably 100MW)
And a LOT less than a 50th of the size!
The cost should drop as soon as we get a lot more of these thing and then they will be less than 2% of the cost.
15 years expected life is pretty crap.
Since when has any piece of infrastructure been junked precisely at its expected EOL? This will be used until it no longer generates money. If they have not done it right, less than 15 years. If they have, longer.
Re: (Score:2)
Electricity Generation pretty much costs about a $1,000,000 a MegaWatt on average to setup. You need 100MW capacity it will cost about 100 Million you want 5MW then its around 5 million. The cost of generating differs but thats the sort of capital cost you are looking at.
Re: (Score:2)
For me, it was the first time I read Skylark Three [wikipedia.org], the second book in E.E. Smith's classic Skylark series.
Re: (Score:2)
Visit Eling [elingexperience.co.uk] outside Southampton for a historic perspective on tidal water energy.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Not necessarily. Studies are being done in several places, impact seems signiificantly lower than predicted.
Can you provide a citation for these "studies"?
Re: I seem to remember an episode of Doctor who (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Plenty of them in different countries, google is your friend.
A Google search shows nothing relevant.
So I tried Google Translate. When I entered "Google is your friend" it translated it as "Camembert is full of crap."
Re: I seem to remember an episode of Doctor who (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Then feel free to make me look foolish by providing the citations that you claim are so easy to find.
Re: I seem to remember an episode of Doctor who (Score:3)
https://www.hakaimagazine.com/... [hakaimagazine.com]
https://www.rechargenews.com/t... [rechargenews.com]
https://www.offshore-energy.bi... [offshore-energy.biz]
https://www.un.org/Depts/los/c... [un.org]
Re: I seem to remember an episode of Doctor who (Score:3)
Though I will admit that several studies also stress the need for more studies.
Re: I seem to remember an episode of Doctor who (Score:4, Interesting)
Initially it might have sounded like a great idea, where a tidal pool fills up like a levy due to the tidal forces and then like with a damn you can have the water run through a turbine to generate power as the tidal pool empties.
However there the findings were tidal cycles were being affected by the power plants, which was supposed to have some severe impacts on the delicate balances in those biomes that have become reliant on those cycles.
Though of course this only appears to apply to tide pools. With free standing turbines, the impact should be far less pronounced.
Re: I seem to remember an episode of Doctor who (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
To me the claim that these underwater turbines being really bad for marine animals sounds about as founded as wind turbines killing tons of birds.
Sure, some poor animal might collide and get injured or killed, but unless you build those things into a choke point where animals naturally congregate due to air or water currents, this should not be a major issue. If someone wants me to think otherwise, they better come backed up by some evidence.
Re: (Score:2)
It's possible to scare wildlife away too. I actually worked in that sector for a while, basically some underwater speakers and flashing lights that are tuned to frequencies that the local fish population doesn't like.
Very useful for things like the intake of nuclear plant cooling loops where you don't want fish carcases blocking the plumbing up.
Re: I seem to remember an episode of Doctor who (Score:2)
However there the findings were tidal cycles were being affected by the power plants, which was supposed to have some severe impacts on the delicate balances in those biomes that have become reliant on those cycles.
I did not know that a pool behind a dam influences the courses of the sun and the moon.
Did you tell the companies (e.g. EDF) which are running those plants?
Re: (Score:2)
Try to think with your brain instead with your ass next time.
Re: I seem to remember an episode of Doctor who (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
The goal shouldn't be to be perfect, it should be to be better. (Perfect is the enemy is good, and so forth...)
Though I'd like to point out that these assumptions of tidal energy being both harmful to the environment and expensive are mostly based on outdated technology from the 1960's and outdated research.
Back then the implementations aimed to replicate the concept of dams with the "Bar
Re: (Score:2)
And how is this phase shift relevant for anything - except for you trying to sound somehow smart?
Re: (Score:3)
But you choose to be a smartass with the way you phrased your question. Being a smartass however only works well if you're not being a dumbass at the same time.
Aquatic life living in those zones has adapted to the phases of the tides over long periods of time leading to some quasi stable system, with currents bringing in oxygen, nutrients and other stuff in during a rising tide and ca
Re: (Score:2)
Now if you suddenly make some changes to those phases
There are no changes to those phases.
Except they are no longer in synch with the moon/sun influencing the tides. From the point of view of animals or plants behind the dam: nothing has changed at all.
You see: the smart ass or dumb ass is you.
Re: (Score:2)
Quick round-up:
Re: (Score:1)
Plenty of them in different countries, google is your friend.
Google is not my friend. I want to see what you saw. I won't see what you saw unless I searched the same terms at the same time that you did, and even that might not work because then one must choose from the results what to read.
If Google is your friend then you should have plenty of links to share.
Re: I seem to remember an episode of Doctor who (Score:2)
https://www.hakaimagazine.com/... [hakaimagazine.com]
https://www.rechargenews.com/t... [rechargenews.com]
https://www.offshore-energy.bi... [offshore-energy.biz]
https://www.un.org/Depts/los/c... [un.org]
Re: I seem to remember an episode of Doctor who (Score:2)
Though I will graciously admit that several studies also stress the need for more studies.
Re: (Score:1)
This device is NOT located in an estuary. The gap between the northernmost tip of Scotland and the Orkneys is a tidal passage several miles wide. The currents can reach 5knots. I've crossed it in a relatively small boat and we started out heading about 45deg west of our destination. The current took us right past where were heading it was that strong. The captain got us into the relatively slack water close to the shore and we docked safely.
Re: (Score:3)
Tidal power destroys the local ecosystem. It affects estuaries and such by disrupting the natural flow.
I note you asking for evidence of a counterclaim lower down this thread...
I also note you've failed to provide links to back up your own claim. Perhaps you'd be so kind as to oblige?
For my part, it is of course easy to find links to prospective studies [washington.edu] that are over a decade old, but the outcomes of those studies do seem to be a little harder to come by.
It is perhaps worth noting that, in the UK at least, there is a legal requirement to perform an environmental impact study [www.gov.uk] before work can commence on these
You never win against nature (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:1)
Makes the four day work week an even better idea, and we can get rid of leap year along with daylight savings time
Re: (Score:2)
We already thought of that which is why Elon has agreed to strap some rockets to Earth and let 'em rip to speed up the spin. The hard part is timing it just right so that we don't spin Earth too fast and fly off it before the tidal turbine kick in.
Re: (Score:2)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Re: (Score:2)
Pff... we'll be lucky to build a function fusion reactor much less massive fusion engines by 2061.
Re: You never win against nature (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Oh great. Now we're going to slow the Earth down and have longer days. What's next?
does that mean we can get the long evenings of daylight savings without messing about with clocks? And also get a lie-in every day?
I'm in
Re: (Score:2)
That's fine, I have a 25 hour body clock anyway, and it'll eventually sync us up with the Martians.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: You never win against nature (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
No need to pave all of it.
Re:You never win against nature (Score:5, Insightful)
Imagine so many solar panels that the Earth starts cooling
You think this captured solar energy is magically disappearing? Thermodynamics says no. If anything, the lower albedo of dark panels might cause fractionally greater warming.
But if you want to talk about power generation changing the weather, we don't have to imagine anything - fossil fuels have been doing exactly that for many decades.
Re: (Score:2)
Imagine so many solar panels that the Earth starts cooling
Yeah, imagine cooling when there is global warming, how terrible.
If we somehow got so many solar panels that the earth cooled, and then one day it became a problem because it solved global warming, literally all we'd have to do is stop making the backs of the panels white. And yes, literally literally. So that part of your comment was ignorant or disingenuous FUD. Let's look at the next part.
Or so many wind turbines that it changes the weather.
This has actually been studied, and wind turbines cause a minor localized downwind "warming" effect (actually reduced
Power output over time, in salt water? (Score:3)
Solar and wind output diminishes over time due to environmental wear on exposed parts. It will be interesting to see how well this stands up over similar times.
Push it, break it, improve it. Rinse & repeat => progress
Re: (Score:2)
Yeah, unfortunately due to this wear and tear, good solar panels drop to only 50% of their former efficiency after a century of use.
Re:Power output over time, in salt water? (Score:4, Interesting)
And? (Score:2)
Do you think other forms of power generators don't require regular expensive maintenance too? I've got news for you then I'm afraid.
ROI sucks (Score:1)
72 Million total for 15 years? A few stupid wind mills will pull in more.
It's a money grab.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Bullshit. This is a working, to-scale prototype. If it performs, then this thing gets industrialized and becomes a lot cheaper. Running such an installation for a few years before spending the money on the industrialization is completely standard procedure.
So, no, it is not a "money grab". It is just how innovation actually works.
Bow down and pay the piper. (Score:2)
Big Energy is desperate to find solutions that keep them in power. The alternative is that individuals and small entities generate their own power and leave Big Energy out of the picture.
As a result we are seeing massive wind farms, solar arrays and now these silly 'tidal turbines' that will require massive taxpayer maintenance support before their inevitable failure due to maintenance costs.
What about rooftop solar? Sorry, that gives power to the people and takes it from Big Energy. It must be taxed or dim
Re: (Score:2)
What about rooftop solar?
Solar installations on preexisting roofs cost about twice as much per installed watt as grid-scale solar. Wind is even cheaper.
If you want solar on your roof, feel free. But tax dollars shouldn't be subsidizing inefficient solutions.
Re: (Score:2)
Does that include the cost of the wires to get power from the big power station to the home?
Re: (Score:2)
And backyard wind does not work at all.
Re: (Score:2)
I'm a pretty vocal advocate for renewable energy, and in particular the democratizing effect it has because anyone with the space to do so can build their own power generation infrastructure.
But even I will be quick to point out that rooftop solar is only even an option to a fraction of the human population, and can never even come close to meeting all our energy needs.
> It must be taxed or diminished in any way the legislators can arrange
Are you, by any chance, from Australia? 'cause that might explain
£200 / MWh (Score:4, Informative)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: £200 / MWh (Score:4, Informative)
That's what it is, a technology demonstration. However £200/MWh is not all that bad for certain parts of the UK because they require expensive infrastructure to get power there or diesel generation.
Hinkley C is currently at well over half that and rising. But again, that's just the price to shift the electrons, you also need to factor in the cost of getting it where it's needed. For some places a local generator at £200/MWh will be significantly cheaper.
Re: (Score:2)
The price of generating electricity in California is not relevant to consumers in Orkney. The main problem in Orkney is already the capacity of the cable to the mainland, so capacity in Somerset doesn't help.
Re: (Score:2)
This is a to-scale prototype. If it performs for a few years, then there will be incentives to look into mass production. This is a completely standard approach.
Can we see some metrics for comparison? (Score:1, Informative)
How does this compare on CO2 emissions in tons/GWh?
Safety in deaths per TWh?
Levelized cost of energy in dollars/MWh?
Mass of material needed in tons/TWh?
Energy return on energy invested?
Area required in watts/m2?
Total capital cost if used as part of a replacement for fossil fuels in a national energy plan?
Here's some links to show how many others compare:
https://world-nuclear.org/info... [world-nuclear.org]
https://ourworldindata.org/saf... [ourworldindata.org]
https://www.iea.org/reports/pr... [iea.org]
https://cmo-ripu.blogspot.com/... [blogspot.com]
http://www.withouthotair [withouthotair.com]
Re: (Score:2)
So, are you against ITER based on cost?
Re: (Score:2)
You replied the wrong post.
Re: (Score:2)
Oops, sorry the comment layout system gets me sometimes.
Re: Can we see some metrics for comparison? (Score:2)
If you were interested in that. You would calculate that yourself ...
Title is wrong (Score:3)
France has 10Mw tidal turbines in service since 1967.
Different technology, but still, their claim is wrong.
https://tethys.pnnl.gov/projec... [pnnl.gov]
Re: Title is wrong (Score:2)
France does not have tidal turbines.
They have tidal power plants, that work like pumped storage plants behind a dam.
Huge differrnce!
Re: (Score:2)
And what is in a Tidal power plant ?
You guessed it, it's a turbine.
Re: (Score:2)
But not a tidal turbine, but a standard one.
If you are to lazy or to stupid to read the article you could at least have looked at the pictures.
Probably a waste of money (Score:1)
Just eyeballing the numbers and making reasonable assumptions, let's say it puts out 2 million watts peak, 1 million average, that is at 10 cents a kilowatt-hour, $100 an hour. If it is running 8,000 hours a year, it makes $800,000 a year. If you borrowed the money at 5%, it had better not cost more than $10 million or so to build and not more than $300,000 a year to run and maintain. And if it lasts 15 years that is another $666,000 a year you lose just in making rust. Unlikely to be a financial win
Re: (Score:2)
If you price a technology by numbers on the prototype, no technology looks good. Hence nobody with a clue does that.
Whoopdedo! (Score:1)
Wow! I'm so impressed. Wait, who cares?
Re:But does it scale? (Score:5, Informative)
It already has. I don't know how they claim it's the "world's most powerful" tidal turbine. The Sihwa Lake Tidal Power Station [wikipedia.org] has ten turbines, each one producing 25.4 MW. The article isn't very clear, but I think this is just a technology demonstration from a company trying to get into the business.
Re: But does it scale? (Score:2)
The article us perfectly clear.
You are simply to silly to grasp that this is a 'wind turbine' put upside down into a tidal current. And not a turbine in dam!
Re: (Score:3)
Will this tech scale
This project [power-technology.com], also in Scotland, is apparently on track [weforum.org], so yes I'd say it looks like it will scale.
The main reason this is 'news' is that this company is using a novel turbine design, and it produces slightly more energy / turbine, making it the world's largest. It's pretty much like building the world's tallest building. It hits the headlines for a day, then someone plans and builds a taller one a year or so later.