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A review of the UK and British Channel Islands practical tidal stream energy resource

This review provides a critical, multi-faceted assessment of the practical contribution tidal stream energy can make to the UK and British Channel Islands future energy mix. Evidence is presented that broadly supports the latest national-scale practical resource estimate, of 34 TWh/year, equivalent...

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Autores principales: Coles, Daniel, Angeloudis, Athanasios, Greaves, Deborah, Hastie, Gordon, Lewis, Matthew, Mackie, Lucas, McNaughton, James, Miles, Jon, Neill, Simon, Piggott, Matthew, Risch, Denise, Scott, Beth, Sparling, Carol, Stallard, Tim, Thies, Philipp, Walker, Stuart, White, David, Willden, Richard, Williamson, Benjamin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8564615/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35153596
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspa.2021.0469
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author Coles, Daniel
Angeloudis, Athanasios
Greaves, Deborah
Hastie, Gordon
Lewis, Matthew
Mackie, Lucas
McNaughton, James
Miles, Jon
Neill, Simon
Piggott, Matthew
Risch, Denise
Scott, Beth
Sparling, Carol
Stallard, Tim
Thies, Philipp
Walker, Stuart
White, David
Willden, Richard
Williamson, Benjamin
author_facet Coles, Daniel
Angeloudis, Athanasios
Greaves, Deborah
Hastie, Gordon
Lewis, Matthew
Mackie, Lucas
McNaughton, James
Miles, Jon
Neill, Simon
Piggott, Matthew
Risch, Denise
Scott, Beth
Sparling, Carol
Stallard, Tim
Thies, Philipp
Walker, Stuart
White, David
Willden, Richard
Williamson, Benjamin
author_sort Coles, Daniel
collection PubMed
description This review provides a critical, multi-faceted assessment of the practical contribution tidal stream energy can make to the UK and British Channel Islands future energy mix. Evidence is presented that broadly supports the latest national-scale practical resource estimate, of 34 TWh/year, equivalent to 11% of the UK’s current annual electricity demand. The size of the practical resource depends in part on the economic competitiveness of projects. In the UK, 124 MW of prospective tidal stream capacity is currently eligible to bid for subsidy support (MeyGen 1C, 80 MW; PTEC, 30 MW; and Morlais, 14 MW). It is estimated that the installation of this 124 MW would serve to drive down the levelized cost of energy (LCoE), through learning, from its current level of around [Formula: see text] to below [Formula: see text] , based on a mid-range technology learning rate of 17%. Doing so would make tidal stream cost competitive with technologies such as combined cycle gas turbines, biomass and anaerobic digestion. Installing this 124 MW by 2031 would put tidal stream on a trajectory to install the estimated 11.5 GW needed to generate 34 TWh/year by 2050. The cyclic, predictable nature of tidal stream power shows potential to provide additional, whole-system cost benefits. These include reductions in balancing expenditure that are not considered in conventional LCoE estimates. The practical resource is also dependent on environmental constraints. To date, no collisions between animals and turbines have been detected, and only small changes in habitat have been measured. The impacts of large arrays on stratification and predator–prey interaction are projected to be an order of magnitude less than those from climate change, highlighting opportunities for risk retirement. Ongoing field measurements will be important as arrays scale up, given the uncertainty in some environmental and ecological impact models. Based on the findings presented in this review, we recommend that an updated national-scale practical resource study is undertaken that implements high-fidelity, site-specific modelling, with improved model validation from the wide range of field measurements that are now available from the major sites. Quantifying the sensitivity of the practical resource to constraints will be important to establish opportunities for constraint retirement. Quantification of whole-system benefits is necessary to fully understand the value of tidal stream in the energy system.
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spelling pubmed-85646152022-02-11 A review of the UK and British Channel Islands practical tidal stream energy resource Coles, Daniel Angeloudis, Athanasios Greaves, Deborah Hastie, Gordon Lewis, Matthew Mackie, Lucas McNaughton, James Miles, Jon Neill, Simon Piggott, Matthew Risch, Denise Scott, Beth Sparling, Carol Stallard, Tim Thies, Philipp Walker, Stuart White, David Willden, Richard Williamson, Benjamin Proc Math Phys Eng Sci Review Articles This review provides a critical, multi-faceted assessment of the practical contribution tidal stream energy can make to the UK and British Channel Islands future energy mix. Evidence is presented that broadly supports the latest national-scale practical resource estimate, of 34 TWh/year, equivalent to 11% of the UK’s current annual electricity demand. The size of the practical resource depends in part on the economic competitiveness of projects. In the UK, 124 MW of prospective tidal stream capacity is currently eligible to bid for subsidy support (MeyGen 1C, 80 MW; PTEC, 30 MW; and Morlais, 14 MW). It is estimated that the installation of this 124 MW would serve to drive down the levelized cost of energy (LCoE), through learning, from its current level of around [Formula: see text] to below [Formula: see text] , based on a mid-range technology learning rate of 17%. Doing so would make tidal stream cost competitive with technologies such as combined cycle gas turbines, biomass and anaerobic digestion. Installing this 124 MW by 2031 would put tidal stream on a trajectory to install the estimated 11.5 GW needed to generate 34 TWh/year by 2050. The cyclic, predictable nature of tidal stream power shows potential to provide additional, whole-system cost benefits. These include reductions in balancing expenditure that are not considered in conventional LCoE estimates. The practical resource is also dependent on environmental constraints. To date, no collisions between animals and turbines have been detected, and only small changes in habitat have been measured. The impacts of large arrays on stratification and predator–prey interaction are projected to be an order of magnitude less than those from climate change, highlighting opportunities for risk retirement. Ongoing field measurements will be important as arrays scale up, given the uncertainty in some environmental and ecological impact models. Based on the findings presented in this review, we recommend that an updated national-scale practical resource study is undertaken that implements high-fidelity, site-specific modelling, with improved model validation from the wide range of field measurements that are now available from the major sites. Quantifying the sensitivity of the practical resource to constraints will be important to establish opportunities for constraint retirement. Quantification of whole-system benefits is necessary to fully understand the value of tidal stream in the energy system. The Royal Society 2021-11 2021-11-03 /pmc/articles/PMC8564615/ /pubmed/35153596 http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspa.2021.0469 Text en © 2021 The Authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Published by the Royal Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Review Articles
Coles, Daniel
Angeloudis, Athanasios
Greaves, Deborah
Hastie, Gordon
Lewis, Matthew
Mackie, Lucas
McNaughton, James
Miles, Jon
Neill, Simon
Piggott, Matthew
Risch, Denise
Scott, Beth
Sparling, Carol
Stallard, Tim
Thies, Philipp
Walker, Stuart
White, David
Willden, Richard
Williamson, Benjamin
A review of the UK and British Channel Islands practical tidal stream energy resource
title A review of the UK and British Channel Islands practical tidal stream energy resource
title_full A review of the UK and British Channel Islands practical tidal stream energy resource
title_fullStr A review of the UK and British Channel Islands practical tidal stream energy resource
title_full_unstemmed A review of the UK and British Channel Islands practical tidal stream energy resource
title_short A review of the UK and British Channel Islands practical tidal stream energy resource
title_sort review of the uk and british channel islands practical tidal stream energy resource
topic Review Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8564615/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35153596
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspa.2021.0469
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