First Commercial Sub-Sea Tidal Power Station 51
daksis writes "New Scientist is reporting that the first commercial sub-sea tidal power station has gone online in Hammerfest Norway. 'The power station, which resembles an underwater windmill, began generating electricity for the town of Hammerfest. Although still largely a prototype, the generator is the first in the world to harness the power of the sea and be connected to an electricity grid.' If they can make the technology commercially viable, then we'll have yet another weapon in the arsenal for producing cleaner energy."
Think of the fish! (Score:2, Interesting)
Windmills kill birds, wavemills will kill fish!
Somebody think of the fish!
</sarcasm>
Sounds cool. I am all for multiple sources of energy, but one thing many folks forget is that there is a certain amount of environmental impact through all energy sources. These will probably affect the coast lines in some fashion I would guess. I wonder if we'll hear about the different problems these will cause, and have gre
Re:Think of the fish! (Score:1)
This issue WILL come up at some point.
I have a friend who's job it is to count birds that have been chopped in half by the windmills in central California. I'll trade a few birds for clean power but a lot of people won't.
I don't know why they don't just put a mesh cage around the blades of the damn things.
If the birds are stupid enough to fly into a wall of mesh it's their own damn fault.
10 meter blades... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:10 meter blades... (Score:1)
Re:10 meter blades... (Score:1)
IIR(The New Testament)C the Ark never hit an iceberg at 20+ knots. Go figure.
Litigious lake-trout lovers were in the lead (Score:1)
Re:Think of the fish! (Score:1)
Re:Think of the fish! (Score:1)
Re:Think of the fish! (Score:1)
Re:Think of the fish! (Score:1)
Not the first (Score:5, Informative)
While considered a "pilot" operation, it does generate 20 MW of power, supplying the electrical needs for 4500 customers.
Re:Not the first (Score:2)
Re:Not the first (Score:3, Informative)
Impressive though the Annapolis station is, it's not a "sub-sea tidal power station". It's a good old-fashioned tidal barrage. They're a little out of fashion at the moment, because of their effect on salt marshes etc. Ideally, of course, the story would have described it as "the first sub-sea tidal power station of its
Stop exagerating the power produced!!! (Score:2)
While considered a "pilot" operation, it does generate 20 MW of power, supplying the electrical needs for 4500 customers.
Where on earth do you arrive at that 20MW figure?
Remember that "Watts" are not the same as "Watt-hours". (The first is power, the second is energy.)
From the Annapolis site you referenced:
It employs the largest straight-flow turbine in the world to generate more than 30 million kilowatt-hours of electricity per year, enough for 4500 homes.
30 gigaWatt-hours / hours-p
Re:Stop exagerating the power produced!!! (Score:1)
From the first link: "The 148 tonne turbine can generate 20 megawatts at peak output."
From the second (PDF) link: "In 1984, the company assumed operation of the Annapolis Tidal Generating Station, a federal and provincial government pilot project initially designed to explore harnessing energy from the sea that now contributes its 20 MW capacity to the provincial grid."
But as another poster has pointed out, I erred in that it is a barrage type plant -
Cleaner Energy? (Score:2)
Have any studies been done on how these windmills might affect marine life living in that area? The unfortunate thing is that no source of electricity that I have seen
Re:Cleaner Energy? (Score:2)
Even solar?
Re:Cleaner Energy? (Score:1)
Re:Cleaner Energy? (Score:2)
what if i decided to create a big, flat container, paint it black, fill it fulla water, hook up some pipes to it and put it outside... then run those pipes into a turbine... no solar panels, no harmful ingredients, closed, self-contained system...
remember: that's how power plants work... create steam (by whatever means) and use it to power turbines...
Re:Cleaner Energy? (Score:2)
Re:Cleaner Energy? (Score:2)
What I'd like to see is a material that's photovoltaic, and strong enough to be parked on. Then go around and start replacing parking lots with it.
Why not the obvious? (Score:1)
Re:Cleaner Energy? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Cleaner Energy? (Score:2)
there is no question in my mind that fuel-based (both fossil and nuclear) energy sources have a larger and more disruptive ecological footprint
Then the fossil fuel industry funded anti-nuclear propaganda machine has done its job well. That's a relief, since now they'll have to turn their efforts to convincing you that tidal energy is dirty too. Knowing them, they won't rest until there is no question in your mind that tidal energy, like nuclear, has an ecological footprint "just as large as fossil fuel
Re:Cleaner Energy? (Score:2)
Re:Cleaner Energy? (Score:2)
Hey, I'm not saying that fossil fuel plants are any better than nuclear power plants;
Fair enough; I'm saying that (despite all the propaganda) nuclear is a lot better than fossil fuels.
in once case, air pollution and in the other case, radioactive waste that needs to be stored away somewhere
The key difference being that there are simple ecologically sound technical fixes for nuclear wastes--you can mix them back in with the tailings and put them back in the mines they came from, or drop them in a su
Not completely renewable (Score:5, Funny)
We're all gonna die... (Score:1)
tidal power isn't new (Score:5, Informative)
That's plain untrue. Tidal barrages -- which use the tidally-driven flow seawater in and out of a river mouth or basin -- have been used to generate electricity for decades. A barrage across the Rance, in northern France, opened in 1967 and has been generating enough power to supply 200 000 homes ever since.
Re:tidal power isn't new (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:tidal power isn't new (Score:3, Insightful)
But to be really nitpicking, I should point out that it's not the power of the sea being harnessed at all -- it's the power of the moon. Or strictly, the earth-moon gravitational field.
Re:tidal power isn't new (Score:2)
Well the sun has an effect too
Re:tidal power isn't new (Score:1)
BP
What has the power now? (Score:2)
The energy comes from there but the moon is not the actor, it's the impetus. A few years ago when a semi smashed my car and then drove off, I didn't tell the cop that the giant dent was caused by gasoline!
But, what about? (Score:2)
People thought that hydroelectric power was pollution free, but animal rights activists have sued and protested over a dam's ability to chop fish into tiny pieces.
How do we know for certain that tidalectric power won't meet the same resistance? I mean, I can see one of these in Florida chopping up manatee. That would be enough grounds for the activists to sue and otherwise hamstring another means of obtaining power.
Re:But, what about? (Score:5, Informative)
A 10-meter turbine (5 meter radius - about 16 feet) spinning at a top speef of 20RPM (about 2 radians per second) would have a tip speed of about 11 meters per second (~33 feet per second).
That's pretty slow. 30MPH actually. But that's a conservative estimate.
Also, unlike hydroelectric dams, there's no strong current sucking everything into the blades - just tidal currents.
=Smidge=
Re:But, what about? (Score:2)
Ok Smidge, let's show everyone how safe this is by simulating a Manatee strike. You will stick your head out, and have it struck by a 5-meter blade moving at 33 feet per second. Repeatedly.
Re:But, what about? (Score:1)
So you obviously don't want to consider tidal power.
You're probably against wind power for the same reasons, (even thou
Re:But, what about? (Score:2)
I think a modest screen that is large enough to exert relatively low pressure differentials will protect the manatees in the area. However, what I'm really worried about are the sea monkeys. Poor little guys.
Re:But, what about? (Score:1)
And, of course you need strong, nearly continuous currents to make it worthwhile. (Think high latitudes)
power of the sea? (Score:3, Funny)
-Derek
Re:power of the sea? (Score:1)
How many watt-hours does the moon offer us, anyway?
Will it be enough for the next generation of Pentium 4 CPUs?
Power (Score:5, Funny)
Or half of a slashdotters basement
If only it was that easy (Score:3, Insightful)
"Oops, our tanker just leaked some crude and it somehow sank down and ruined your generators. sorry"
Stop this madness NOW! (Score:1)
For every year that passes the moon recedes (on average) by half an inch a year. This can only make things worse!
Don't blame me if your kid asks you one day "What's this moon thing you keep talking about?
UK tidal power.. (Score:2)
The UK has 80% of the best tidal sites [guardian.co.uk] within the EU..