|
Oslo, Norway [RenewableEnergyWorld.com]
The Harstad-based company Hydra Tidal will install a full-scale
(1.5-MW) prototype of its tidal energy plant at Gimsøystraumen, a
marine channel in Nordland County. The Morild floating power plant will
be moored to the seabed and mostly submerged, with turbine wings
spanning a diameter of 23 metres. However, its most unique feature is
that its turbine blades are made of laminated pine.
Wood
has not been used in modern turbine blade designs for decades. But
company founder and R&D director Svein D. Henriksen extols the
virtues of wood for such applications.
“Wood is a porous, homogenous material — so it has better mechanical
and hydrological characteristics than today’s conventional materials
such as composites and steel. The major challenge is the actual
assembly process, but we believe we have found a good solution.” He
points out that using wood in turbine blades is also an environmentally
sound choice, especially in a lifecycle perspective.
Assembly, installation and maintenance are simpler for a floating
facility than for one permanently anchored to the seabed. The Morild
power plant can be assembled on land and then towed to its operating
location for installation. It can also be detached and floated to the
surface for repair.
Two Projects with Research Council Funding
Hydra Tidal
is receiving funding for two different projects under the Research Council of Norway’s RENERGI programme.
One project is studying Morild’s wood components at the Norwegian
University of Science and Technology (NTNU) laboratories in Trondheim
and will verify the company’s findings. The other project involves
testing the effects of extreme environmental conditions on the entire
Morild construction. The primary objective is to examine, test and
analyse how such conditions affect a floating facility for converting
the energy of slow coastal currents, tidal streams and ocean currents.
The projects will culminate in a full-scale test in the water in
June 2010. The costs of developing the concept have totalled roughly
NOK 125 million over the last 10 years, funded primarily by a large
number of industrial participants and investors.
International Potential, Job Creation
In the channel where Morild is to be placed at the end of June, the
maximum current is 3.5 knots, with tidal periods of six hours, 20
minutes. The plant will start out generating a modest 1 GWh annually,
but the testing phase is intended to focus on verifying the technology
rather than on production levels.
“After testing, we will move the plant to Moskenesstraumen (a
channel with tidal streams up to six knots), where its output will be
stepped up considerably,” explains Mr Henriksen, who also has great
ambitions for Morild internationally. “There are powerful ocean
currents along many of the world’s coastlines, and foreign players have
shown considerable interest in this project. At the moment we have
patent applications being processed in about 20 countries.”
“Our objective is to develop this technology in close collaboration
with Norwegian industry players in order to create jobs in Norway. This
can be done, provided that there are conducive framework conditions for
commercialising successful technologies.”
Although he is a proponent of establishing better commercialisation
schemes in Norway, Mr Henriksen believes that funding for development
should remain highly competitive. “That’s the only way to ensure that
the winning technologies really are the best ones in the long run.”
Atle Abelsen/Else Lie are writers at The Research Council of
Norway. This article was translated from Norwegian by Darren McKellep
and Victoria Coleman
by
Atle Abelsen/Else Lie. Translation: Darren McKellep/Victoria
Coleman
Published: April 23, 2010
|