Hawai’i National Marine Renewable Energy Center (HINMREC)

13
Hawai’i National Marine Renewable Energy Center (HINMREC) Hawai’i Natural Energy Institute (HNEI) School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology (SOEST) University of Hawai’i (UH) http://hinmrec.hnei.hawaii.edu September 16, 2011

description

Hawai’i National Marine Renewable Energy Center (HINMREC) Hawai’i Natural Energy Institute (HNEI) School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology (SOEST) University of Hawai’i (UH) http://hinmrec.hnei.hawaii.edu September 16, 2011. Hawaii National Marine Renewable Energy Center. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Hawai’i National Marine Renewable Energy Center (HINMREC)

Page 1: Hawai’i National Marine Renewable Energy Center (HINMREC)

Hawai’i National Marine Renewable Energy Center (HINMREC)

Hawai’i Natural Energy Institute (HNEI)School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology (SOEST)

University of Hawai’i (UH)

http://hinmrec.hnei.hawaii.edu

September 16, 2011

Page 2: Hawai’i National Marine Renewable Energy Center (HINMREC)

Hawaii National Marine Renewable Energy Center

Facilitate development of wave energy Conversion (WEC) systems;

Support Development of Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion (OTEC) technologies

2

Page 3: Hawai’i National Marine Renewable Energy Center (HINMREC)

Hawaii Electricity Demand: Contribution Potential

Island Wave Farm Challenge OTEC Challenge

Oahu < 17% Siting: requires all shoreline segments;

Storage: intermittent resource

>> 100% No prototype operational data

Maui < 75% “ >> 100% “

Hawaii < 150% “ >> 100% “

Kauai < 300% Siting: requires 30% shoreline segments;

Storage: intermittent resource

>> 100% “

Molokai < 2000% Storage: intermittent resource

>> 100% “

3

Page 4: Hawai’i National Marine Renewable Energy Center (HINMREC)

Environmental Impact Studies

Goal: inputs to EISs required for permitting and licensing of WEC & OTECWorked with federal regulatory agencies (FERC, BOEM,

and NOAA) to define differences between ocean energy systems and already established regulated industrial activities:

OTEC key differentiator: return of large amounts of deep seawater (“plume”) below the photic zone

4

Page 5: Hawai’i National Marine Renewable Energy Center (HINMREC)

Environmental Impact Studies

OTEC plume impact can not be determined a priori;

Must monitor operations through an “Adaptive Management” Protocol;

UH greatest contribution would be to design such Protocol.

5

Page 6: Hawai’i National Marine Renewable Energy Center (HINMREC)

OTEC Operations: Environmental Parameters

Nutrients & Biological CTD Carbonate Cycle

Nitrate *Temperature Dissolved Inorganic Carbon

Phosphate *Salinity *pH

Silicate *Dissolved Oxygen Alkalinity

*Chlorophyll a

6

*Monitor at: (i)Plume Neutral Buoyancy Depth (“known”); (ii)Far Field (TBD)

Page 7: Hawai’i National Marine Renewable Energy Center (HINMREC)

7

\ Seasonal Concentrations of Nitrate + Nitrite, Measured at Station Kahe, Oahu, 1989-2001

-0.5

0

0.5

1

1.5

2

2.5

3

3.5

4

4.5

5

Spring Summer Fall Winter Spring Summer Fall Winter Spring Summer Fall Winter

50-75 100-150 150-200

Depth (m)

Co

nce

ntr

atio

n (

ug

/m3)

Mean Seasonal Chlorophyll a, Measured at Kahe Point, Oahu, 1989-2009

0

0.05

0.1

0.15

0.2

0.25

0.3

Spr

ing

Sum

mer

Fal

l

Win

ter

Spr

ing

Sum

mer

Fal

l

Win

ter

Spr

ing

Sum

mer

Fal

l

Win

ter

Spr

ing

Sum

mer

Fal

l

Win

ter

0-50 50-75 100-150 150-200

Depth (m)

Co

nce

ntr

atio

n (

ug

/l)

Page 8: Hawai’i National Marine Renewable Energy Center (HINMREC)

Annex

8

Page 9: Hawai’i National Marine Renewable Energy Center (HINMREC)

9

RREESSOOUURRCCEE PPRROODDUUCCTT

RREESSOOUURRCCEE Transfer Function PPRROODDUUCCTT

T (C)=T 20m–T 1000m Public Domain kWh; H2O, AC

Ocean Volume 24/ 7

Transfer Function

Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion

Page 10: Hawai’i National Marine Renewable Energy Center (HINMREC)

Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion (OTEC)

10

Resource: Baseload energy production potential of at least 30% world wide consumption in tropical oceans around the world. Ninety-eight (98) nations have adequate OTEC resource within EEZ with direct application in Hawai’i and 5 US Trust Territories

Technology: Uses temperature difference between warm surface water and cold deep water (1,000m) to generate electricity

Technology status: - Electricity generation and simultaneous desalinated water

production has been demonstrated 24/7 at experimental scale (~ 250kW)

Industry technology development needs: Economic models indicate scale of > 50 MW needed in USA to be economically

viable; Low cost manufacture and long-term testing of critical components, such as heat

exchangers (HXs); Deployment and testing of a pre-commercial OTEC plant (5 to 10 MW) to determine

realistic costs, survivability, and environmental impact; Sustained and substantial government support through pre-commercial

demonstration is a critical requirement.

Page 11: Hawai’i National Marine Renewable Energy Center (HINMREC)

Two Year (July 2007-June 2009) Average Temp. Difference {T20m – T1000m}

Page 12: Hawai’i National Marine Renewable Energy Center (HINMREC)

Hawaii Ocean Time Series Kahe Station : T Daily Averages Change 1°C in T 15% change in Pnet.

12

Page 13: Hawai’i National Marine Renewable Energy Center (HINMREC)

98 nations with adequate OTEC resource within EEZ

Theoretical Energy Production > 1/3 World Wide Consumption

Source: http://hinmrec.hnei.hawaii.edu