An Assessment of the Financial Feasibility of an OTEC Ecopark: A Case Study at Cozumel Island
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Area
2.2. Market Description
2.2.1. Energy
2.2.2. Desalinated Water
2.2.3. Offshore Seaweed Aquaculture (OSA)
2.3. Technical Design
2.4. Economic Evaluation
2.5. OTEC Comparative Assessment
2.6. Socio-Environmental Risks Assessment
2.7. Operational Risk Recommendations
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Overall Technical Design
3.2. Financial Evaluation
- An IRR of 35%, meaning that the project would be profitable over its lifespan (30 years).
- An Investment Recovery Period of 5 years, paying equities and loans.
- NPV of $2656.78 M at the end of the projected lifespan demonstrating profitableness.
- (1)
- an expected electricity output of 466,139 MWh/year at a LCOE of $326.63 MWh with a revenue of $63.90 M, 18.36% of the total annual revenue.
- (2)
- desalinated water for human consumption at a rate of 77,026.26 m3/day with revenues of $21.73 M, 6.24% of the total annual revenue.
- (3)
- an OSA that will produce 69.75 ton/day Ulva spp., in dry weight, and revenues of $254.59 M, 73.13% of the total annual revenue;
- (4)
- CEL per MWh produced, with a revenue of $7.72 M, 2.22% of the total annual revenues.
- (5)
- carbon credits equivalent to 19.33 ton/day of carbon sequestration (CO2), with revenues of $0.08 M, 0.2% of the total annual revenue.
3.3. Comparison of the OTEC Ecopark with Other Renewable Energy Alternatives
LCOE Comparison
3.4. Mitigating Socio-Environmental Risks
3.5. Operational Risk Recommendations
3.6. Comparison with Other OTEC Ecoparks
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
OTEC | Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion |
OSA | Offshore Seaweed Aquaculture |
DOW | Deep Ocean Water |
SWAC | Sea Water Air Conditioning |
CC | Closed Cycle |
H | Hybrid |
LCOE | Levelized Cost of Energy |
WEF | Water, Energy, and Food |
SDGs | UN Sustainable Development Goals |
CELs | Clean Energy Certificates |
NPV | Net Present Value |
CAPEX | Capital Costs |
OPEX | Operation, Maintenance, Repair, Replacement and Administrative Expenses |
ISR | Taxes |
PTU | Employee Participation in Profit Sharing Payments |
CF | Capacity Factor |
AEP | Annual Electricity Production |
CRF | Capital Recovery Factor |
N | System life |
ELF | Expenses Levelizing Factor |
PWF | Present Worth Factor |
ERF | Inflation |
i | Interest |
IRR | Internal Rate of Return |
PPV | Installed Power of the Photovoltaic System |
EPV | Daily Power Generation |
GCEM | Solar Standard Test Irradiance |
Gdm | Solar Irradiance |
Efficiency of the System | |
Pw | Wind Power |
Air Density | |
V | Wind Speed |
A | Cross-Sectional Area of the Turbine |
Cp | Power Coefficient |
Appendix A. Specifications for the Financial Feasibility Assessment of OTEC Ecopark
Size | 60 MW-Gross | |||
Cycle | Hybrid | |||
Date | April 2021 | |||
Component | CAPEX ($M) | OPEX | ||
Reparation and Replacement ($M) | Operation and Administrative Expenses 1st Year ($M) | |||
Platform Anchor Submarine power cable | 145.09 | - | 4.84 | - |
34.82 | - | 1.16 | - | |
59.49 | - | 1.98 | - | |
Seawater pipes (installed) Seawater pumps (installed) | 87.05 | - | 2.90 | - |
34.82 | 2.32 | - | - | |
Power block (15 MW gross modules) Heat exchangers Turbo-generators | - | - | - | - |
137.83 | 9.19 | - | - | |
47.88 | 3.19 | - | - | |
Electrical/Ammonia/Chlorine/Controls Installation Mechanical & Electrical | 44.98 | - | 1.50 | - |
62.39 | - | 2.08 | - | |
15-years | 30-years | |||
Offshore Aquaculture (OSA) | 1.04 | 0.10 | - | - |
10-years | ||||
Total | 655.38 | 29.27 | 40.40 | |
Notes: CAPEX Information for USA/Japan/EU Manufacturers Assume the sum of all other cost are equivalent to Closed Cycle OSA cost from Sander et al. [63]. OPEX A total staff of 17 is required to manage and operate floating plant in shifts 24/7 It is assumed that OSA and OTEC sharing transport and labor costs. OSA cost ($5.33 M) from Sander et al. [63] Using MX Labor Rates the O&M portion and social security for the first year are $0.015 M Administrative expenses for the first year are $40.40 M To estimate the R&R portion for the first year: Pumps, HXs and T-G replaced in 15-years all other components in 30-years. First year estimate for R&R portion is (as given in this Table) $29.27 M |
Appendix B. 60 MW H-OTEC Platform Diagrams
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Submodule | Methodology | Reference |
---|---|---|
Energy production | 60 MW-H-OTEC (Mass and energy balance) | Adapted from Tobal et al. [49] |
CC-OTEC (component sizing) | Adapted from Vega & Michaelis [24] | |
Seawater supply and power consumption (components sizing) | Adiputra et al. [50] | |
Electrical equipment and interconnection nodes required. | Bernandoni et al. [51] | |
Amount of CO2 saving by power production | Vega [40] | |
Desalinated water production | Mass and energy balance (components sizing) | Avery & Wu [52] and Morales [53] |
Desalinated water rate | Sensitivity analysis adapted from Tobal et al. [49] | |
OSA production | Nutrient concentrations (NO3, PO4, SO4) and O2 dissolved at 902 m depth from 7 June 2018–10 April 2021 and 0.25 × 0.25 degrees of spatial resolution | Copernicus [54] |
Ulva spp. nutrient demand and net yield per m2 | Hanisak [55] | |
Dimensioning a floating pond | Adapted from the macroalgae ponds of Zertuche-González et al. [48] | |
CO2 capture capacity of Ulva spp. Algae | Chung et al. [37] and Zertuche-González et al. [48] | |
Platform design | Dimensions of the ship | Adapted from Vega & Michaelis [24] |
3D model of the 60 MW offshore OTEC plant-aquaculture system | SolidWork and Fusion360 softwares |
Submodule | Equipment | Characteristics |
---|---|---|
Energy production | Heat exchangers | 40 modules of compact plate-fin developed by Argon National Laboratory |
Turbine | Four 15 MW rotary turbines | |
Pumps | Inline submersible propeller-type pumps | |
Generator | Four STG generators (15,000 kVA 60 Hz) | |
Submarine cable | Four submarine power cables (36 kV) | |
Switching station | Voltage transformer (15 kV to 34.5 kV) | |
Water pipes | Sandwich construction structure pipes, 9.9 m ⌀ for cold water pipe, 10.2 m ⌀ for hot water pipe | |
Desalinated water production | Deaerator | As Vega & Michaellis [24] |
Flash-evaporator | As Vega & Michaellis [24] | |
Water pipes | Sandwich construction structure pipes, 5.4 m ⌀ for desalinated water pipe, 12.4 m ⌀ for hot water pipe | |
Surface condenser | Brazed aluminium plate-fin configuration | |
Platform design | Floating pond | 300 hectares (effective) × 1 m depth |
Pumps and weights | Anchors |
Variable | Indicator | Value |
---|---|---|
Parameters | CAPEX | $655.38 M |
Yearly OPEX | $69.66 M | |
Annual electricity production | 466,139 MWh | |
Daily desalinated water production | 77,026.26 m3/day | |
Daily Ulva spp. Production | 69.75 ton/day | |
Daily CO2 sequestrated (OTEC and Ulva spp.) | 19.33 ton/day | |
Capital payment | CRF: Investment Levelizing Factor for I and N (Capital Recovery Factor) | 9.90% |
Levelized Capital Cost (CC * CRF/Annual Electricity Production) | 139.14 $/MWh | |
OPEX costs | ELF: Expenses Levelized Factor for I, N and escalation | 1.25 |
PWF: Present Worth Factor accounting for inflation | 12.68 | |
Levelized OPEX (OPEX * ELF/Annual Electricity Production) | 187.49 $/MWh | |
LCOE | 326.63 $/MWh | |
Annual sales (No profit, no credits) | Electricity (rates: $0.149/kWh) | $63.90 M |
Water (rates: $0.77/m3) | $21.73 M | |
Ulva spp. ($10,000/ton) | $254.59 M | |
Total Annual Sales (no incomes) | $340 M | |
Annual sales with other incomes | CELs (annual) | $7.72 M |
Carbon Credits (annual) | $0.08 M | |
Total Annual Sales (with incomes) | $348 M |
Phase | Activity | Impact |
---|---|---|
Construction (C) | C1. Material transportation | Changes in the community of marine and terrestrial fauna (C1, C2, C3, C5, C6) |
C2. Construction of civil works (modules, anchorage, noise, vibrations, warehouses, etc.) | Impact on the community of residents due to landscape change. The possible social rejection of the project (C1, C2, C4, C5) | |
C3. Laying of pipes | Maritime routes disruption. Visual impacts on the local landscape (C2, C3, C4, C5) | |
C4. Maritime navigation routes | Changes in the vegetation distribution (C3, C5, C6) | |
C5. Platform | Disruption of wave patterns and changes in oceanic circulation zones (C3, C4, C5) | |
C6. Excavation | Sediment transport modification and | |
coastal erosion processes (C2, C3, C6) | ||
Operation (O) | O1. Platform | Modification of the marine fauna community and migrations. Changes in distribution, production, and abundance of the organisms. Risks of Collision. New habitat deployment. Alteration in behavior and distribution of birds (O1, O2, O3, O4, O6, O7, O8) |
O2. Noise and vibrations | Impact on the community of inhabitants, especially in tourism activities due to change of landscape (O1, O2, O3, O5) | |
O3. Discharge of water with another type of physical-chemical composition (working fluid, brine, anti-biofouling materials, sanitary waste, and nutrient transport) | Maritime routes disruption. Visual impacts on the local landscape. Land-use changes (O1, O4, O5, O6, O7). | |
O4. Pipelines | (O1, O4, O5, O6, O7) | |
O5. Electrical substation | Change and disruption of the vegetation (O1, O4, O5, O6, O7) | |
O6. Submarine power cable | Sediment transport disruption. Possible re-suspension of sediment. Coastal erosion processes. Nutrient plume spread and eutrophication. Changes in the thermohaline structure. Release of toxic discharge. Voltage and electromagnetic field exposure (O1, O4, O5, O6, O7, O8) | |
O7. Anchorage | ||
O8. Sea water extraction |
Activity | Consequence | Mitigation |
---|---|---|
Discharge of mixture-water | Harmful algal blooms alter the ocean’s chemical composition (Rivera et al., [22]). | Discharging the water below the euphotic zone (142.62 m) [25], and using DOW for by-products |
Use of chemicals products | Local ecosystems affected Hazardous to employees | Following industry safety protocols; measuring physicochemical parameters continuously in areas of potential release [98,99]. Ulva spp. cultivation can help absorb undue ammonia release [48,100]. |
Installation of submarine cables | Damage to the Cozumel reef structure, increase in water turbidity, and intensify of underwater noise | Collaborate with federal, state legislation and local institutions to conduct on-site monitoring and detect negative environmental impacts. |
Social perception | Negative social perception [20,101] | Strengthening communications, transparency, social engagement through outreach, environmental education and social networks, participation of the community, taking into consideration the General Administrative Provisions on the Evaluation of Social Impact in the Energy Sector. |
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Share and Cite
Tobal-Cupul, J.G.; Garduño-Ruiz, E.P.; Gorr-Pozzi, E.; Olmedo-González, J.; Martínez, E.D.; Rosales, A.; Navarro-Moreno, D.D.; Benítez-Gallardo, J.E.; García-Vega, F.; Wang, M.; et al. An Assessment of the Financial Feasibility of an OTEC Ecopark: A Case Study at Cozumel Island. Sustainability 2022, 14, 4654. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14084654
Tobal-Cupul JG, Garduño-Ruiz EP, Gorr-Pozzi E, Olmedo-González J, Martínez ED, Rosales A, Navarro-Moreno DD, Benítez-Gallardo JE, García-Vega F, Wang M, et al. An Assessment of the Financial Feasibility of an OTEC Ecopark: A Case Study at Cozumel Island. Sustainability. 2022; 14(8):4654. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14084654
Chicago/Turabian StyleTobal-Cupul, Jessica Guadalupe, Erika Paola Garduño-Ruiz, Emiliano Gorr-Pozzi, Jorge Olmedo-González, Emily Diane Martínez, Andrés Rosales, Dulce Daniela Navarro-Moreno, Jonathan Emmanuel Benítez-Gallardo, Fabiola García-Vega, Michelle Wang, and et al. 2022. "An Assessment of the Financial Feasibility of an OTEC Ecopark: A Case Study at Cozumel Island" Sustainability 14, no. 8: 4654. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14084654