River and Estuary Current Power Overview
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. River/Estuarine Current Power Report
2.1. Academic Interest on River and Estuarine Domain
- Mechanical (turbine modeling, flow, fluid mechanics, etc.),
- Electrical (Conversion chain, command strategy, etc.),
- General (State of the art, energy or bathymetric characterization of sites, technical-and-economic analysis, general study about hydrokinetic power, concept proof, etc.),
- Off-topic (Papers explicitly not about hydrokinetic power or irrelevant, unfinished studies, etc.).
2.2. Strong Operation Potential by Its Consumer Proximity
- Marine area limited by Indonesia, Papua New Guinea and the north of Australia;
- East coast of China;
- East coast of Alaska;
- The Hudson’s bay (Canada);
- Marine area located near the southern tip of Argentina;
- Marine area restricted by UK, republic of Ireland and France.
2.3. Industrial Consideration on Stream Current Power Domain
- First generation: Conception similar to onshore wind turbine, technologies using a horizontal axis turbine or a nozzle turbine which is stationary referred to the seabed.
- Second generation: Technologies which turbine is not stationary, using a floating or partially submerged platform on which one or several turbines are fixed.
- Third generation: Technologies not using turbine as mechanical converter.
3. RECP Deployment Limitations
3.1. Real Operation Potential, Under Constraints
3.2. RECP Projects Under Development
4. RECP Technological Development Prospects
5. Conclusions and Discussion
- A lack of visibility concerning the technically exploitable energy potential, which is also impacted by existing human exploitations;
- A lack of potential or real electric consumption data of locations for the energy need estimation, and/or measure campaigns which are not always public;
- Especially in river and estuarine current power sector, a technological maturity not achieved yet, due to the technology diversity considered by the different industrialists;
- The debris presence in water which can damage the installed turbines, although avoidance solutions exist;
- The environmental impacts associated with the hydrokinetic energy extraction by mechanical converters and the bio-fouling phenomenon, much more severe in marine environment than in freshwater;
- From an economical point of view: A high LCOE of the stream current energy compared to others energy technologies as a result of its innovative feature, difficulties to predict the long-term cost reduction and a lack of investment impacting the future commercialization of hydrokinetic power technologies.
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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1 | The LCOE is defined as the life-cycle cost divided by lifetime energy production. It is a convenient tool with which to compare the unit cost of different technologies throughout their economic life and serves as a benchmarking or ranking tool with which to compare different technological alternatives that could be achieved by different investments and time operations. |
2 | N.I: Not clearly Indicated on the manufacturer website. |
Worldwide | Marine Energy Capacity (MW)/Marine Energy Production (GWh) | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Years | ||||||||||
2008 | 2009 | 2010 | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | |
Capacity | 245 | 244 | 250 | 503 | 510 | 509 | 513 | 513 | 519 | 526 |
Production | 487 | 486 | 514 | 564 | 963 | 926 | 999 | 1008 | 1024 |
Topic Types | No. Papers | No. (%) |
---|---|---|
Elsevier (Mech) | 211.5 | 31.95 |
Elsevier (Elec) | 5.5 | 0.83 |
Elsevier (General) | 172 | 25.98 |
Elsevier (Off-topic) | 158 | 23.87 |
IEEE Xplore (Mech) | 45 | 6.80 |
IEEE Xplore (Elec) | 16 | 2.42 |
IEEE Xplore (General) | 42 | 6.34 |
IEEE Xplore (Off-topic) | 12 | 1.81 |
Compagny Name | Location | Creation Date | Power Product Range | Device Type | No. of Projects |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
DesignPro Renewables ©DP DesignPro Ltd. | Ireland, Rathkeale | 2016 | 25 kW | Vertical axis turbines, floating structure | 1 |
HydroQuest ©HydroQuest | France, Grenoble | 2010 | 40–80 kW (3.1 m/s) | Vertical axis turbines, mounted on a floating structure with debris guard | 3 |
Aqua Libre Energieentwicklungs ©Aqua Libre GmbH. | Austria, Margarethen am Moos | 2006 | 70 kW (3.3 m/s) | Horizontal axis ducted turbine with debris protection, floating structure | N.I (1) |
GKinetic ©GKinetic Energy Ltd. | Ireland, Newcastle West | 2014 | 100 kW | Vertical axis turbines, floating structure | N.I |
Guinard Energies ©Guinard Energies | France, Brest | 2008 | 3.5–20 kW (3.1 m/s) | Multidirectional and horizontal axis ducted turbines, floating or gravity baseplate structure | 3 |
ORPC (RivGen® Power System) ©ORPC Inc. | United States, Portland | 2004 | Variable | Multiple horizontal axis and transverse flux turbines, pontoon support structure | N.I (2) |
Hydrotube Energie ©Hydrotube Energie | France, Bordeaux | 2008 | 50 kW (3.8 m/s) | Bidirectional horizontal axis and axial flux turbine mounted under a floating structure with debris guard | N.I (1) |
Smart Hydro ©Smart Hydro Power | Germany, Feldafing | 2010 | 5 kW (2.8 m/s) | Horizontal axis ducted turbine with debris protection, anchoring or gravity baseplate structure | 8 |
Eel Energy ©Eel Energy | France, Boulogne -sur-Mer | 2011 | N.I | Undulating membrane | N.I under development |
Idenergie ©Idénergie Inc. | Canada, Montreal | 2010 | 0.5 kW (3.5 m/s) | Double horizontal axis and transverse flux turbines (Darrieus), structure on the river bed attached to a bank with straps | N.I (Several) |
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Flambard, J.; Amirat, Y.; Feld, G.; Benbouzid, M.; Ruiz, N. River and Estuary Current Power Overview. J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2019, 7, 365. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse7100365
Flambard J, Amirat Y, Feld G, Benbouzid M, Ruiz N. River and Estuary Current Power Overview. Journal of Marine Science and Engineering. 2019; 7(10):365. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse7100365
Chicago/Turabian StyleFlambard, Jorel, Yassine Amirat, Gilles Feld, Mohamed Benbouzid, and Nicolas Ruiz. 2019. "River and Estuary Current Power Overview" Journal of Marine Science and Engineering 7, no. 10: 365. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse7100365