The ocean is a tremendous bank of energy. Covering more than
two-thirds of our planet, the amount of energy embodied in the ocean's
tides, currents, and waves, not to mention temperature and salinity
gradients, could power the world—if we were able to commercialize the
technology to harness its renewable power.
As clean energy advocates, we are excited to highlight new, innovative projects that inject clean power and jobs into communities, deploy American ingenuity and know-how and utilize smart clean energy policies. The DOE invested $10 million in the project as part of its larger water power program that aims to better understand the environmental impacts that come with harnessing ocean energy, as well as refine, and make more cost-effective, the technologies that do so.
In addition to harnessing local sources of energy, the project apparently:
- Harnessed local knowledge and workers to plan the project. Understanding of Maine’s tidal flows and currents, and marine geology was critical in project planning and implementation, and 50 and 70 local workers, including local fisherman facing underemployment from declining fish stocks, as well as others with a Maine maritime background were hired to help complete the project.
- Sourced components from local manufacturers. Beyond the locals working to plan and construct the project, the turbines and generators were also New England-sourced. Bristol, Rhode Island-based Hall Spars, a former yacht mast manufacturing company, supplied the turbines, while Massachusetts-based Comprehensive Power made the generator.
In any ocean energy initiative, there are several elements that we expect to see in a properly developed project:
- Stakeholder outreach: any new industrial ocean renewable energy projects must take into account the interest and expertise of stakeholders and citizens.
- Finding the right location: the project location needs to be sufficient for power generation, while minimizing environmental impacts and avoiding conflicts with other ocean uses.
- Safe technology: the technology should be designed to protect birds, fish, ocean wildlife and the seafloor.
- Phased project development with robust monitoring and adaptation: given the innovative nature of ocean energy technology, scaling up a project gradually, with monitoring of environmental impacts from the start, can help gather the knowledge needed to reduce such impacts and inform adaptation of the project design. Based on available information, steps taken by OPRC to date — such as its use of slow moving, blunt blade turbines, its phased implementation plan and its commitment to ongoing monitoring — are encouraging.
With careful planning to protect the marine environment, test projects like these can pave the way for clean, renewable energy resources to meet this potential, while creating jobs, investment opportunities, and a multitude of environmental benefits.
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2012/07/first-u-s-tidal-power-project-launches-in-maine
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