Image Place Holder right
Anyone
who has visited a beach can understand the importance of tides. At low
tide, beach-goers can walk along the exposed shoreline or construct sandcastles;
high tide brings water further up the beach, washing away the castles
and forcing people to higher ground. When considering the use of the ocean
for energy purposes, the ocean can produce two types of energy: thermal
energy from the sun's heat, and mechanical energy from the tides and waves.
With
renewables such as solar, hydro, geothermal, biomass, wind and tidal power,
however, account for only about 13 per cent of global energy supplies
with waves and tides barely measurable, according to the International
Energy Agency, after oil, coal, gas and nuclear generation. The pioneering
use of energy from the sea is a viable idea for those few areas which
can utilize it.
Energy
analysts have been taking a closer look at this form of energy supply
and they believe that tidal power can only make a tiny contribution to
the world's energy supply, because of the few suitable sites, the high
construction costs and the risk of equipment destruction by saltwater
corrosion. However, there are a few areas with the right conditions to
produce tidal power. As of 2003, France and Canada own the largest tidal
energy facilities.
Ocean
mechanical energy is quite different from ocean thermal energy. Even though
the sun affects all ocean activity, tides are driven primarily by the
gravitational pull of the moon, and waves are driven primarily by the
winds. As a result, tides and waves are intermittent sources of energy,
while ocean thermal energy is fairly constant. Also, unlike thermal energy,
the electricity conversion of both tidal and wave energy usually involves
mechanical devices. A barrage (dam) is typically used to convert tidal
energy into electricity by forcing the water through turbines, activating
a generator.
For
wave energy conversion, there are three basic systems:
- channel systems
that funnel the waves into reservoirs;
- float systems that drive hydraulic
pumps; and
- oscillating water column systems that use the waves to compress
air within a container.
The mechanical power created from these systems
either directly activates a generator or transfers to a working fluid,
water, or air, which then drives a turbine/generator.
The
most likely type of energy the ocean can produce is likely to be thermal
energy from the sun's heat. Oceans cover more than 70% of Earth's surface,
making them the world's largest solar collectors. The sun's heat warms
the surface water a lot more than the deep ocean water, and this temperature
difference creates thermal energy. Just a small portion of the heat trapped
in the ocean could power the world.
Ocean
thermal energy is used for many applications, including electricity generation.
There are three types of electricity conversion systems: closed-cycle,
open-cycle, and hybrid. Closed-cycle systems use the ocean's warm surface
water to vaporize a working fluid, which has a low-boiling point, such
as ammonia. The vapor expands and turns a turbine. The turbine then activates
a generator to produce electricity. Open-cycle systems actually boil the
seawater by operating at low pressures. This produces steam that passes
through a turbine/generator. And hybrid systems combine both closed-cycle
and open-cycle systems.
Marine
power from tides and waves is an infant industry aiming to take advantage
of the growing demand for clean renewable energy that reduces dependence
on fossil fuels. As more research is done and new methods instituted for
thermal and mechanical wave energy, it remains likely marine power generation
could play a role, at the very least, in regional power production. |