Title: Marine Renewable Research:
1- Marine Renewable Research
- The SuperGen Marine Energy Research Consortium
- Robin Wallace, University of Edinburgh
- Ian Bryden, Robert Gordon University
- George Smith, Heriot-Watt University
- George Aggidis, University of Lancaster
- Peter McGregor, Fraser of Allander Institute
2Collaborators
- EMEC Orkney,
- Talisman Energy,
- The Clean Energy Company,
- Umitech,
- Corus,
- Marine Current Turbines,
- The Engineering Business
- IT Power,
- Power Technologies (UK),
- Artemis Intelligent Power Ltd,
- South West Electrolysers,
- Natural Power Company,
- Conoco Europe Gas Ltd,
- INEOS Chlor,
- Scottish Power,
- Scottish Southern Energy,
- Qinetiq,
- SEPA,
- SNH,
- CEFAS,
- HIE,
- Crown Estates
- Met Office
- Sgurr Energy
3Aims
- To increase knowledge and understanding of the
extraction of energy from the sea - To reduce uncertainties for future stakeholders
in the development and deployment of the
technology - To enable progression of new marine energy
concepts and devices into their true position in
a future energy portfolio. - Generic outcomes 3-10 yr horizon leading on to
paths to equipment and energy markets.
4Work packages
- 1. Appraisal of marine energy resource and
interaction between converters and fluid
environment. - 2. Development of methodologies for device
evaluation and optimisation. - 3. Engineering Guidance
- 4. Offshore energy conversion and power
conditioning - 5. Chemical conversion and transport of marine
energy - 6. Network Interaction of Marine Energy
- 7. Lifetime economics
5Work packages
- 8. Moorings
- 9. Novel control systems for marine energy
converters - 10. Full-scale Field Validation
- 11. Establishment and Assessment of Laboratory
Testing Procedures of Tidal Current Energy
Devices - 12. Economic, Environmental Social Impact of
New Marine Technologies for the Production of
Electricity - 13. Dissemination and Outreach
6some key output so far
71. Appraisal of marine energy resource and
interaction between converters and fluid
environment.
- Numerical modelling of Orkney wave climate
(EMEC) and comparison with measured data - Significant wave height, steepness, direction
- and groupiness (wave height and period)
8Validation of wave model with Buoy measurements
at EMEC
9Modelling energy loss from wave environment
10Tidal current speeds modelled in Yell Sound
11GIS site selection
- Route avoiding SSSI
- Many other features included
123. Engineering guidance
- Will
- (i) establish robust procedures for the design,
development and evaluation of MECs. - (ii) advance the science of performance
measurement. - develop testing protocols to underpin evolving
international codes and standards. - An ongoing task with input
- from internal work packages
- and external activities
- Hard to keep up with
- the industry!
134. Offshore energy conversion and power
conditioning
- Will ensure electricity generated by MECs
integrates with the electricity supply network
without unduly increasing the cost of connection,
production or delivery. - Network friendly generator
- control and transmission
- systems
146. Network interaction of marine energy
- Will quantify the interaction of MECs with
distribution network, mitigate impact on local
supply quality and allow greater access to the
electricity market
156. Network interaction of marine energy
Scottish TD network model Novel OPF and
congestion management techniques
168. Moorings and foundations
- (i) Adapting conventional design methodology to
particularly apply to moored MECS - (ii) Experimental and computational experiments
179. Novel control systems for MECs
- Will develop adaptive and self-learning control
systems for generic and specific MECs to increase
performance and survivability over a wide range
of changing sea and tidal states.
1811. Establishment and assessment of laboratory
testing procedures of tidal current energy devices
- Will produce robust Codes of Practice for
testing of Tidal Energy Conversion systems(TECS)
in tow tanks and moving flow channels within
defined limits of scale.
19Supergen is not just anengineering research
project
- 7. Lifetime economics - Generic methodologies
and specific techniques for equitable lifetime
costing and performance appraisal - 12. Economic, environmental social impact of
new marine technologies for the production of
electricity - Will determine the micro- and
macro-economic mechanisms that will have to exist
within the regional UK economy to enable, and
resulting from, greater market penetration of
marine energy.
2013. Inreach, outreach and dissemination
- Many opportunities for inreach from academia,
agencies, government and industry. - Will
- - add value by including and adding to other
research groups activities. - - broadcast new knowledge from marine research.
- - widen industrial/academic network
- - establish travel bursary for external/young
researchers and staff exchange - Web site is at http//www.supergen-marine.org.uk
21Observations
- Open collaboration new way of working
- Outward facing and inclusive
- Inter-dependent WPs require close management but
offer geometric sum of effort - Research staff and student mobility excellent
- Many new academic and industrial collaborators