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| Marine Current Turbine's 300kw machine
Photo courtesy of Marine Current Turbine |
The waters around the Argyll coastline offer abundant opportunities for the budding tidal stream renewable energy industry. Although the marine tidal turbine technologies tend to follow the same lines as wind turbines, due to the greater energy density (up to 4 times that of air) and hence power available in ocean currents, these devices can be much smaller than their Aeolian counterparts. Tidal power is more dependable than wind due to its predictable nature thus making it a better source of electrical energy for feeding the baseload of the national grid. The tides run almost 6 hours in one direction and then reverse and run for 6 hours in the opposite direction thus giving a power source that is available 24 hours a day unlike wind and solar. At the turn of the tide power levels would fall but since the tide does not turn at the same instant up and down the coast there would always be power production if a number of tidal generators at differing locations were hooked into the grid. Many of the companies involved in this sector claim that their machines are less intrusive than on-shore and off-shore wind turbines due to their smaller footprint and lower visual impact. Environmentally these devices are less intrusive and have minimal effect on marine creatures due to the relatively slow rotation speed of the turbine blades. Above is a photograph of Marine Current Turbine's nacelle device being lowered into the sea off Lynmouth in Devon. This 11m blade turbine produces 300kw and was the first off-shore tidal marine turbine to produce electricity in Europe. In Phase 2 of their 'Sea Flow' project they are planning a larger demonstration device and will follow this up in Phase 3 with a small tidal stream farm similar to the picture below. (Shows a maintenance vessel inspecting a raised turbine unit.) The Norwegian company, Hammerfest Strom, went one better and connected their 300kv tidal generator machine to the town of Hammerfest's grid thus becoming the first grid connected tidal turbine in the world. MCT's tidal generator uses a load dump and is therefore not grid connected. The Norwegian company believe that they will have their first tidal farm of over 20 second generation devices operational before the end of 2008. This would be the 3rd phase of their 'Blue Concept' project and would result in a tidal farm that would produce 10MW of renewable electricity. Most of the tidal devices work well in a 4-5 knot current and anything less would be uneconomical in energy production terms. Argyll is blessed with a number of such sites and could see many of these devices being deployed in these waters in the years to come.
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