Offshore Energy in Portugal

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Offshore Energy in PortugalOffshore Energy in PortugalWavEC Seminar, May 14, 2010

António Sarmento

What is Offshore Energy?

The ENERGYIN

How to progress

Status of Offshore Energy technology

p g

Offshore Energy in Portugal

Conclusions

Ocean EnergyOcean Energy

Conclusions

Ocean EnergyOcean Energyantonio.sarmento@ist.utl.ptantonio.sarmento@ist.utl.pt

The Offshore Energy Concept

• Energies sharing:– ocean space– technology– players– legislation and regulations

i ti– innovation

Algae for biocombustibles

ENERGYIN – Pole for Energy Competitiveness & Technology

Funding

gy

Members

ENERGYIN is a private non-profit Association to foster Energy Technology Development Innovation and

ENERGYENERGYININ Mi iMi i

Energy Technology Development, Innovation and Entrepreneurship in Portugal

• 1. To cooperate with Portuguese companies interested in Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency to increase their

ENERGYENERGYIN IN MissionMission:

Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency to increase their competitiveness by investing in Technology and Innovation.

• 2. To encourage Innovative Entrepreneurship.

4

ENERGYIN – Pole for Energy Competitiveness & Technology

• Offshore• Rational: to built internationally competitive

industrial capabilities in less mature technologies by

gy

• Offshore Energy

industrial capabilities in less mature technologies by taking advantage of the natural and man-made conditions at the Portuguese coast and continental platform.

• Solar Energy

p• Anchor project: creation of Institute of Offshore

Energy based on the Wave Energy Centre• 2010: Develop a vision for offshore energy and2010: Develop a vision for offshore energy and

identify partners• Energy

Efficiency

• Smart Grids

y

• Sustainable Mobility

Portuguese targets on R.E. for 2020

• 25,5 to 31% of renewable in the total energy mix• 41 to 60% of renewable energy in electricity gy y

production:– Hydroelectricity: 5,000 to 7,000 MWy y– Wind:

• Onshore: 5,000 to 8,000 MW5 000 MW O h Wi d• Offshore: 0 to 500 MW

– Wave: 0,4 to 300 MW 3,800 MW – Wave & Offshore Wind

5,000 MW – Onshore Wind

– PV: 170 to 1,745 MW– Biomass: 474 to 850 MW Offshore Energy

( ff h i d l )(offshore wind, wave, algae)

Floating Offshore Wind: status of the technologyFloating Offshore Wind: status of the technology

Floating:gPrototype demo at sea

Commercial

Waves: Status of the technologyWaves: Status of the technology

Overtopping Oscillating plate OWCg p

Submerged point absorber

Articulated systems Point absorberabsorber

• Significant progress in the last 5 years, in spite of the small investment done (€ 300M / 10 years) but need to deliver in 5 years

Benefits of world leading EU O.E. Industry

I t ll d C it Di t J b T t l J b CO avoided I t tInstalled Capacity in EU / GW

Direct Jobs Total Jobs CO2 avoided Mt / Year

Investment €m

3 6 (i 2020) 26 000 40 000 2 61 8 5443.6 (in 2020) 26.000 40.000 2,61 8,544188 (in 2050) 314.213 471.320 136,3 451,104

Source: Oceans of Energy – European Ocean Energy Roadmap 2010 – 2050, European Ocean Energy Association (EU-OEA), May 2010.European Ocean Energy Association (EU OEA), May 2010.

Offshore test centres for wave energy

EMEC - European Maritime Energy CentreOrkney Scotland | 2003 R dOrkney, Scotland | 2003 Runde

West-coast of Norway | 2009...

Mayo Full-Scale Test SiteI l d | 2008

Galway Bay 1:4 Test SiteI l d | 2004

Nissum Bredning Wave Energy Test SiteNorth western corner of Denmark | 2003

Ireland | 2008…

Wave HubSouth West of Cornwall | 2007 / 2010

Ireland | 2004

SEMREV

Bimep - Biscay Marine Energy PlatformBilbao, Spain | 2008…

SEMREV Le Croisic/Bretagne | 2008…

Scale testing

Portuguese Pilot ZoneSão Pedro de Moel | 2008

Scale testingDemonstrationPré-commercial

São Pedro de Moel | 2008…

How to progress– Increase demonstration at sea

(Only real sea operation will allow to identify the best(Only real sea operation will allow to identify the best solutions - reliability and costs)

– Improve materials, components and power take-offImprove materials, components and power take off equipment(Failures to date are related to components and not the basic concept)

– Improve design, monitoring and control methods and tools for single devices and farmstools for single devices and farms(Demonstration at sea is very expensive and risky)

– Improve fabrication deployment O&M methods andImprove fabrication, deployment, O&M methods and tools, including support vessels(Cost reductions by a factor of 3 are to be attained)

11

Projects in PT (ongoing)

– Offshore wind energygy• Demonstration of a 2 MW offshore wind prototype at

Aguçadoura in 2011 (€ 19 M) – EDP, WavEC/IST, others

– Wave energy• Demonstration of the Wavebob prototype in 2011 –

2012 (€ 8 M) – Generg, Wavebob, WavEC• Demonstration of the Waveroller prototype in 2011 –

2012 (€ 5 M) – AE Energy, Eneólica, WavEC

Projects in PT (Pipeline)

– Offshore WindOffshore Wind• Improved components and monitoring and control

methods and tools• Mapping of the continental Portuguese platform for

offshore wind and wave energy utilization (2010, € 1,5 M) – EDP, Galp, WavEC/IST, others

– Wave Energy• Demonstration of the Martifer prototype in 2012 –

2013 (€ 15 M)• Demonstration of a 1:10 scale of the Kymaner pilot

plant in 2011 (€ 3 M)

Infrastructures in PT: the Pilot ZoneInfrastructures in PT: the Pilot Zone

22 kmPortugal

• Pilot Zone

18,3 km20 kmE

Pilot Zone– 400 km2 offshore area (30m

to 90 m water depth)14,9 km– Up to 250 MW of electrical

connection (18 MW; 80 MW; 250 MW)250 MW)

– Simplified licensing– Managed by REN (PT TSO)Managed by REN (PT TSO)

Infrastructures: Aguçadoura test site

• EDP, EFACEC, PWP• 4 miles offshore Porto

• 45 m water depth• 3 berths• 4 MW electrical

connection to shore• Onshore monitoring

& electrical station• Offshore Wind &

Wave

15

Infrastructures: Pico wave energy plant

40,0

45,0

(kW

) Numerical simulationMeasured at Pico

400 KW – built in 1999 20,0

25,0

30,0

35,0

éctr

ica

méd

ia (

400 KW built in 1999

Demo – EU OE R&D infra-structure2nd test rig for air turbines 0,0

5,0

10,0

15,0

Potê

ncia

el

16

g0,0 0,5 1,0 1,5 2,0 2,5 3,0 3,5

Air chamber rms pressure (kPa)

Infrastructures: Institute of Offshore Energy

Board

Ob t N i l W t kT t it M k tObservatory:TechnologyMarket

Numerical modelling centre

Wave tank test centre

Test site:Temporary test of grid-connected

Market support unitSite selection & charactLegislation

EnvironmentSocio-Econ.

connected full-scale prototypes.

& charact., licensing, etc.

1:4 scale test siteno grid-connectionPromotion and

11 M€ in 3 to 5Pico plant

no grid connectionPromotion and management of a R&D network

11 M€ in 3 to 5 years

Support public policies in PT

• Feed-in tariff for wave energy (offshore wind?)– High tariff for demonstration (260 €/MWh)– Reduces with installed power progressively to 75Reduces with installed power progressively to 75

€/MWh. World Power (MW)300 600

0,25

0,3300 600

DEMO (< 4MW per technology)

0,15

0,2

€/kW

h

PRE-COMMERCIAL (< 20 MW per technology)

COMMERCIAL0,075

0,05

0,10,075

01 10 100 1000

National Power (MW)

20 250

ConclusionsConclusions

• Significant progress in the last 5 years in spite of the small• Significant progress in the last 5 years, in spite of the small investment done (€ 300M / 10 years) but need to deliver in 5 years

• Development of Ocean Energy is taking longer, being harder and more expensive than anticipated, with the technology possibly

bili i i 201stabilizing in 2015.

• EU MS targets for Ocean Energy are very ambitious

• Portugal needs to consolidate a persistent and consistent approach to Offshore Energy