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European Marine Energy Centre

Coordinates: 58°57′51″N 3°17′57″W / 58.96417°N 3.29917°W / 58.96417; -3.29917
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(Redirected from Orkney Wave Power Station)

The European Marine Energy Centre (EMEC) Ltd. is a UKAS accredited test and research centre focused on wave and tidal power development, based in the Orkney Islands, UK. The centre provides developers with the opportunity to test full-scale grid-connected prototype devices in wave and tidal conditions, at pre-consented test sites. EMEC also has sites for testing smaller-scale prototypes in more sheltered conditions.

In addition to EMEC's wave and tidal sites, EMEC has an onshore hydrogen production plant in Eday where green hydrogen is generated from surplus tidal and wind energy with a view to developing a hydrogen economy in Orkney.

EMEC was established in 2003 by a grouping of public sector organisations following a recommendation by the House of Commons Science and Technology Committee in 2001. In addition to providing access to areas of the sea with high wave and tidal energy potential, the centre also offers various kinds of support regarding regulatory issues, grid connection, and meteorological monitoring, as well as local research and engineering support.

EMEC Sites

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A map of Orkney with the six sites of the European Marine Energy Centre marked

The operations are spread over six sites across Orkney:

  • Billia Croo wave energy test site, off the west coast of the Orkney Mainland (wave power).
  • Fall of Warness tidal energy test site, off the island of Eday (tidal power).
  • Caldale Hydrogen Production Plant, on Eday, next to the Fall of Warness site.
  • Scale wave test site at Scapa Flow, off St. Mary's Bay.
  • Scale tidal test site at Shapinsay Sound, off the Head of Holland.
  • The main office and data facilities are located in Stromness, in The Charles Clouston Building, part of the Orkney Research and Innovation Campus.

Wave power testing at EMEC, Billia Croo

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EMEC Billia Croo
Pelamis wave energy converter on site at EMEC
Map
Country
  • United Kingdom
LocationOrkney, Scotland
Coordinates58°58′9.48″N 3°21′46.8″W / 58.9693000°N 3.363000°W / 58.9693000; -3.363000
StatusWave energy test site
OperatorEMEC
Power generation
Make and modelNone at present
External links
Websitewww.emec.org.uk
CommonsRelated media on Commons

EMEC's wave test facility is situated on the western edge of the Orkney mainland, in an area with high wave energy potentials in Europe. The exposed North Sea location means the island group is subjected to the powerful dynamic forces of the North Atlantic Ocean, with the highest wave recorded by EMEC reaching over 18 meters. Construction of the wave test facility was completed in October 2003, and operational activities commenced shortly thereafter. The centre's facilities consist of five cabled test berths, ranging from 50 to 70 m water depth off Billia Croo, Stromness on the Orkney mainland (some 2 km offshore), and two shallow water berths situated close to EMEC's onshore substation.

The following technologies have been installed and tested at the Billia Croo wave test site:

  • Pelamis Wave Power (PWP) installed its prototype Pelamis 750 device on site for full-scale testing in August 2004. This wave energy conversion machine was the first in the world to generate electricity for a grid system from offshore wave energy.
  • AW-Energy from Finland undertook stand-alone mechanical testing in 2005 in the shallower waters at the test site.[1]
  • Aquamarine Power Ltd. installed its Oyster wave power device on the seabed in August 2009 and generated electricity for the first time in November of the same year. [2]
  • Scottish Power and Pelamis Wave Power tested a second-generation Pelamis P2 device in conjunction with a second P2 device previously owned by E.on in 2010,[3] but it was transferred to Pelamis Wave Power in 2013.
  • Aquamarine installed its Oyster 2 800 kW wave energy converter in the summer of 2011.[4]
  • Wello, a Finnish-based company, first tested its Penguin wave energy converter at the EMEC site throughout 2012/2013. [5] The Penguin was reinstalled at EMEC in March 2017 as part of a Horizon 2020 research and innovation project, however it sank in March 2019.[6]
  • Seatricity, an Antigua-based company, tested its technology at EMEC in 2014. The wave converter adopted a similar method to Aquamarine Power by using its device to pump water ashore to a standard hydro-electric power take-off system.

Tidal power testing at EMEC, Fall of Warness

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EMEC Fall of Warness
OpenHydro Open-Centre turbine being tested at the Eday site.
Map
Country
  • United Kingdom
LocationOrkney Islands, Scotland
Coordinates59°9′7.92″N 2°49′2.28″W / 59.1522000°N 2.8173000°W / 59.1522000; -2.8173000
StatusOperational test site
Tidal power station
TypeTidal stream generator
Power generation
Make and model
External links
Websitewww.emec.org.uk
CommonsRelated media on Commons

The tidal power test site is located in the Fall of Warness, to the west of the island of Eday. It was chosen for its high-velocity marine currents, which reach almost 4 m/s (7.8 knots) at spring tides. The facility offers eight test berths at depths ranging from 25 m to 50 m in an area 2 km across and approximately 4 km in length.

The site is grid-connected, delivering power to the island of Eday at Caldale. EMEC was granted a license for up to 10 MW of tidal generation in March 2016.[7] From each developer berth, the subsea cables follow back along the seabed and then pass under the beach and into an onshore substation. An adjacent laydown area then provides an optional area for developers to use conditioning equipment for converting from the level at which they generate to grid-compliant electricity. The substation building has four separate areas: the HV switchroom, communications room, personnel room, and standby generator room.

To balance the fluctuating tidal power and supply the 670 kW hydrogen electrolyser, a 1.8 MWh vanadium redox battery was installed in 2022. [8] This is located alongside the substation.

The test site was officially opened by Alex Salmond, then Scotland's First Minister, in September 2007.[9]

The following tidal developers have installed and tested technologies at EMEC's Fall of Warness tidal test sit

  • OpenHydro was the first developer to use the site. Dublin-based OpenHydro began the installation of their open-centred turbine in 2006. OpenHydro became the first tidal technology to be grid-connected in Scotland and, subsequently, the first tidal stream generator to successfully generate electricity for the national grid in the UK. [10] OpenHydro has also placed a blank turbine on the seabed adjoining their installed device, using the specially commissioned "OpenHydro Installer,"  and in January 2016, they were testing their 7th generation tidal technology at EMEC.
  • Scotrenewables (now Orbital Marine Power) deployed the SR250 floating tidal turbine for the first time in 2011. Their 2 MW SR2000 was installed at the site for the first time in 2016. In 12 months of continuous generation into the Orkney grid, the SR2000 exported over 3 GWh of renewable electricity into the grid. The SR2000 was removed from the site in September 2018 to make way for the build and installation of their optimised 2 MW floating tidal turbine, the Orbital O2, which was installed at EMEC in 2021.
  • Magallanes Renovables has tested two prototypes at EMEC: a tenth-scale version at the Shapinsay site, and a full-scale 1.5 MW floating tidal turbine at the Fall of Warness since 2019.[11]
  • Atlantis Resources Corporation installed two tidal turbines: the AK-1000 tidal turbine, which was subsequently replaced by the AR-1000. Following prototype testing at EMEC, the company progressed with the development of the next generation turbine, the AR1500, which is deployed as part of the MeyGen project.
  • Alstom (formerly Tidal Generation Ltd): TGL deployed their 500 kW DeepGen tidal turbine at EMEC in 2009 and began generating for the grid the following year. They subsequently replaced the 500 kW device with a 1 MW version of the technology at EMEC.
  • ANDRITZ HYDRO Hammerfest installed their 1 MW HS1000 tidal energy converter in 2011. The technology was then further developed into a 1.5 MW device, which has been installed at MeyGen off the coast of Caithness.
  • Voith deployed their Hy-Tide 1MW turbine at the Fall of Warness in 2013.
  • Sustainable Marine Energy (SME), December 15, brought its PLAT-O 1 MW tidal system, a moored buoyant platform that is positioned mid-water column, to test at EMEC in April 2016.[12]
  • Tocardo demonstrated its T2 tidal turbine at EMEC in 2017.

As of December 2023, Orbital Marine Power occupy berths 3,5, 6 and 8, Magallanes Renovables have berth 1, Open Hydro are still listed as occupying berth 4, and EMEC have berth 7.[13]

For the most up-to-date information regarding technologies testing at EMEC, visit: EMEC tidal clients and EMEC wave clients

Non-grid connected test sites

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EMEC has also worked to ease the path to market for marine renewable developers by developing test sites in less challenging conditions, helping to close the gap between testing in a wave or tidal tank and bringing full-scale prototypes to trial in real sea conditions. These non-grid-connected test sites, situated at Shapinsay Sound and Scapa Flow, provide a more flexible sea space for use by smaller-scale technologies, supply chain companies, and equipment manufacturers. Such accessible real-sea testing enables marine energy developers and suppliers to learn lessons more cheaply by reducing the need for big vessels or large plants. At these sites, multi-point anchoring systems provide developers with a fully functional alternative to either bringing their own gravity base or having to drill and install anchor chains and mooring blocks. Bespoke test support buoys allow developers to dissipate the electricity generated by their devices in an environmentally conscious way while transferring wave and tidal data back to the control centre. An area of seabed is also available for rehearsal of deployment techniques.

Technologies that have been tested at EMEC's non-grid-connected sites include:

Shapinsay Sound Tidal Site

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  • Flumill tested a twin helical-screw turbine from November 2011.[14]
  • Nautricity deployed a 500 kW prototype in May 2014.[15]
  • Magallanes, tested a 1:10 scale prototype from November 2014.[16]
  • East Coast Oil and Gas Engineering (EC-OG) tested a Subsea Power Hub between April and September 2017.[17] The device was designed to convert ocean currents into power for remote subsea locations

Scapa Flow Wave Site

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  • CorPower Ocean tested a half-scale 25 kW C3 device from January 2018 to March 2019.[18][19]
  • Mocean Energy tested a 10 kW prototype Blue-X at Scapa Flow from June to November 2021. [20] This device was redeployed as part of the Renewables for Subsea Power project, 5 kilometres east of Orkney, in March 2023. [21]
  • AWS Ocean Energy tested a 10 kW prototype Wave Swing in 2022.[22]

Other Activities

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Performance Assessment

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EMEC is accredited to test laboratory standards (ISO 17025) and can test the performance of wave and tidal energy devices against IEC Technical Specifications. Technical Verification EMEC can provide independent verification in accordance with ISO 17020 to confirm that a wave energy converter satisfies its conceptual reliability, survivability, and performance targets. Marine industry standards EMEC has coordinated the development of a suite of standards on behalf of the marine renewable energy industry. Each document has been progressed by a working group with individuals representing technology developers, regulators, academia, utilities, and project developers. These standards were launched in 2009. In March 2014, EMEC, in collaboration with the Offshore Renewable Energy Catapult (ORE Catapult), facilitated a workshop to review the existing suite of EMEC standards and identify areas where new standards needed to be developed.

Research and monitoring

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For most developers coming to deploy at EMEC, installation at these facilities will be the first time their device has been in the open sea and grid connected. They typically will not have a track record which indicates the type and extent of interactions between the device and the receiving environment. Therefore, whilst the central purpose of EMEC is to provide an operational test facility, there is also a key role in establishing and facilitating monitoring of devices in relation to their impacts on the receiving environment. The main driver to this has been through the consenting process, which requires developers to consider environmental issues prior to testing at EMEC and to mitigate against any potential for negative impact.

The involvement within the research field has led EMEC to occupy a unique position, having links with a range of different developers and devices, as well as academic institutions and regulatory bodies. EMEC is independent of any developer or device, as EMEC aims to ensure that different devices are monitored in a consistent way, using the best available methods. Independence of EMEC also encourages the dissemination of monitoring information can be carried out throughout the industry.

A 450 kW submerged Microsoft data center was tested at EMEC's wave test site in 2018. The project was part of Microsoft's ongoing quest for cloud data center solutions that are less resource intensive and offer rapid provisioning, lower costs, and high agility to meet the needs of cloud users around the world. Deepwater deployment offers ready access to cooling, a controlled environment, and has the potential to be powered by co-located renewable power sources.[23]

Power Purchase Agreement

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SmartestEnergy has signed a Power Purchase Agreement with the EMEC, for the power generated from their wave and tidal devices in the Orkney Islands.[24]

Green hydrogen

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EMEC's hydrogen production plant is located onshore at EMEC's Caldale site on Eday in close proximity to EMEC's grid-connected tidal test site at the Fall of Warness. Producing hydrogen and using it as an energy storage medium is a solution to overcome local grid constraints, enabling large scale renewable integration. Orkney has become an example of a developing hydrogen economy and offers a demonstration site for new hydrogen technologies with EMEC supporting and actively collaborating on hydrogen research projects.[citation needed]

In 2016, EMEC installed a 0.5 MW rapid response PEM (Proton Exchange Membrane) electrolyser in the laydown area adjacent to the substation to produce ‘green’ hydrogen from excess renewable energy produced by tidal energy converters testing at the Fall of Warness and from the 900 kW Eday community wind turbine.[citation needed]

In 2017 EMEC achieved the world's first tidal generated hydrogen using power from tidal energy clients, Orbital and Tocardo, which were testing tidal energy devices on site.[citation needed]

Energy systems

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EMEC is also involved in wider energy systems demonstration projects. EMEC led a £28.5m project called ReFLEX Orkney looking to decarbonise the wider energy system. The ReFLEX project, short for "responsive flexibility", ran from April 2019 to March 2023. It aimed to integrate electricity, transport and heat systems in Orkney using clever software coupled with an increase of flexible demand assets like batteries and electric vehicles. This will help Orkney maximize the potential of its renewable energy resource, provide more affordable energy services, and lower the county's carbon footprint by decreasing reliance on imported carbon-intensive grid electricity from the UK mainland.[25][26]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Independent on Sunday (London) 29 May 2005, Sunday, Tim Webb, "Sandals and beards are banished in a quest to find 20,000 volts under the sea. Tim Webb travels to the Orkneys to discover a source of clean power." First Edition; BUSINESS; Pg. 15
  2. ^ "Oyster wave power in operation". Archived from the original on 29 November 2010. Retrieved 3 December 2010.
  3. ^ "E.ON announce world first for its P2 wave energy device". Archived from the original on 10 July 2011. Retrieved 3 December 2010.
  4. ^ "Aquamarine Power - How Oyster wave power works". Archived from the original on 17 July 2011. Retrieved 27 June 2011.
  5. ^ "Penguin's safe arrival after 10 day voyage". Retrieved 27 June 2011.
  6. ^ "Penguin device goes under". The Orcadian. 25 March 2019. Retrieved 12 October 2024.
  7. ^ "Section 36 consent - Fall of Warness Tidal Test Site, EMEC | Marine Scotland Information". marine.gov.scot. Retrieved 9 December 2023.
  8. ^ "Invinity flow battery energised at Orkney tidal power and hydrogen research project". Current. 19 August 2022.
  9. ^ "Island is current leader on marine energy". The Herald. 29 September 2007. Retrieved 9 December 2023.
  10. ^ "OpenHydro becomes the first Tidal Energy company to generate electricity onto the UK National Grid" (PDF). 27 May 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 September 2008. Retrieved 16 August 2008.
  11. ^ "Magallanes Renovables ATIR at EMEC | Tethys". tethys.pnnl.gov. Retrieved 20 October 2024.
  12. ^ "Sustainable Marine Energy". EMEC. Archived from the original on 15 December 2020. Retrieved 3 July 2024.
  13. ^ "European Marine Energy Centre (EMEC) Ltd - Fall of Warness Tidal Test Site | Marine Scotland Information". marine.gov.scot. Retrieved 9 December 2023.
  14. ^ Snieckus, Darius (23 November 2011). "In Depth: Turning a twin-corkscrew turbine into 'beautiful' reality". Recharge | Latest renewable energy news. Retrieved 3 July 2024.
  15. ^ annevisser (9 May 2014). "Nautricity Deploys Its Tidal Device at EMEC". Offshore Wind. Retrieved 3 July 2024.
  16. ^ "Spanish tidal turbine firm Magallanes deploys prototype". BBC News. 28 November 2014. Retrieved 3 July 2024.
  17. ^ "EC-OG to Begin Testing of Subsea Power Hub at EMEC". Offshore Energy. 6 April 2017. Retrieved 3 July 2024.
  18. ^ "New wave energy device installed in Orkney". Orkney.com. 17 January 2018. Retrieved 9 December 2023.
  19. ^ "CorPower HiWave-3 at EMEC | Tethys". tethys.pnnl.gov. Retrieved 9 December 2023.
  20. ^ McNatt, Marisa (17 November 2021). "Mocean Energy Blue X wave machine completes sea trials". Mocean Energy. Retrieved 9 December 2023.
  21. ^ Garanovic, Amir (6 March 2023). "Wave power for subsea equipment demo starts off Orkney". Offshore Energy. Retrieved 9 December 2023.
  22. ^ International, Power Engineering (2 November 2022). "Sea trials show promising results for AWS wave energy device". Power Engineering International. Retrieved 9 December 2023.
  23. ^ "Microsoft: undersea datacentres at offshore wind farms could boost web for billions | Recharge". Recharge | Latest renewable energy news. 15 September 2020.
  24. ^ http://www.smartestenergy.com/News-and-Events/Latest-News/News-Article.aspx?id=102[permanent dead link]
  25. ^ "ReFLEX Orkney". Orkney.com. Retrieved 3 July 2024.
  26. ^ "ReFLEX Orkney - Innovate UK Business Connect". Retrieved 3 July 2024.
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58°57′51″N 3°17′57″W / 58.96417°N 3.29917°W / 58.96417; -3.29917