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Technology: Tidal Lagoons
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Environmental Considerations
Offshore tidal power generation resolves the environmental and economic
problems of the barrage system and puts tidal power generation back amongst
the choices for commercial-scale renewable power generation. Rather than
blocking an estuary with a barrage, offshore tidal power generators use
an impoundment structure, making it completely self-contained and independent
of the shoreline (visualize a circular dam, built on the seabed), thereby
eliminating the environmental problems associated with blocking off and
changing the shoreline. Migratory fish simply swim around the structure[i]
and ships and boats navigate past the structure. The optimal site for
offshore tidal power generation is the shallow water of near-shore areas,
while shipping lanes require deeper water. The offshore siting is the
distinctive characteristic of the design and one of the fundamental claims
of its patents[ii]. Turbines are situated in a powerhouse that is contained
in the impoundment structure and is always underwater. Power is transmitted
to shore via underground/underwater cables and connected to the grid.
The structure need not be more than a few yards beyond the low tide level
and the optimal site is one that is as shallow as possible, thereby minimizing
the cost of building the impoundment wall.
Impoundment Wall
The impoundment structure is a conventional rubble mound breakwater, with
ordinary performance specifications and is built from the most economical
materials. In the event of a failure of the structure, the consequences
do not include safety issues or collateral property damage. The most likely
cause of a failure would be a strong nearby earthquake and the most likely
type of damage would be a breach of the impoundment structure. Thus, the
principle consequence of failure would be economic (temporary interruption
of service) and, therefore, economics are the primary driver in choosing
the materials[iii] and construction method.
Building a complete impoundment structure offshore
may seem to be more expensive than building a relatively short barrage
which uses the natural contours of the existing shoreline to do most of
the containment work. The barrage is much shorter than an
impoundment structure with the same output capacity, but the barrage is
a much larger structure. The cost per unit output of the offshore tidal
power generator is less than that of the barrage for the following reasons:
· Depth
Hydrostatic and hydrodynamic forces increase
markedly with depth. The impoundment structure is built on near-shore
tidal flats proximal to the low tide level and avoids deeper areas.
In contrast, the barrage must span an estuary and must cope with whatever
depths exist on the site. In the case of the STB, the depths are up
to 40 meters below low water. With every unit of depth, the hydrostatic
and hydrodynamic forces increase roughly six-fold. Using a 10 meter
tidal range as a reference point, the force that must be withstood by
a barrage in 40 meters depth water is roughly 1296 (6 x 6 x 6 x 6) times
the force that must be withstood by the impoundment structure built
near low water.
· Load Factor
Barrages must generate primarily in one direction
(on the ebb tide) in order to minimize progressive disruption of the
intertidal zone that would eventually lead to the silting up of the
head pond. The offshore tidal power generator is free to utilize both
the ebb and the flood tides for generation, thereby roughly doubling
the load factor of the barrage. Double the load factor is equivalent
to halving the capital cost per unit output.
· Efficiency
Both the impoundment structure and the barrage
are intended to hold back water. The power of the tides lies only in
the tidal range, the difference in water levels between high tide and
low tide. The impoundment structure is built so as to perform only that
function, whereas the barrage also holds back all the water below low
water level and all the water in the intertidal zone. None of this water
produces any power, yet it is very costly to contain.
Generation Equipment
The offshore tidal generator uses conventional low-head hydroelectric
generation equipment and control systems. The equipment consists of
a mixed-flow reversible bulb turbine, a generator, and the control system.
Low-head hydroelectric generation equipment has been in existence for
more than 120 years and state-of-the-art equipment is mature, mechanically
efficient (96+%), familiar (over 100,000 units in use world-wide), reliable,
and durable (the equipment comes with performance guarantees and a design
life of over 50 years.) Manufacturers/suppliers include Alstom, GE,
Kvaerner, Siemens, Voith, Sulzer, and others.
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[i] The barrage obliges the out-migrating and
returning fish to pass through the turbine. The offshore impoundment structure
presents no more of a hazard to fish than would a new sandbar and fish
instinctively avoid swimming through a turbine.
[ii] US Patent # 5,426,332 in 1995 and US Patent
# 5,872,406 in 1999
[iii] Loose rock, concrete, and marine sheetpiles
are among the types of appropriate materials for the impoundment structure.
Introduction
Background
History of Tidal Power
Tidal Lagoons
The Tidal Resource
Conclusions
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