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PRESS RELEASE: Seagen passes 1000 operational hours of tidal current energy at Strangford Lough

15 February 2010

SeaGen, the world-leading prototype tidal energy turbine designed and deployed by Marine Current Turbines Ltd (MCT) has exceeded 1000 hours of operation in Northern Ireland’s Strangford Lough.  It is the first tidal current or wave energy system in the world to have achieved this milestone.

The 1.2MW tidal current turbine, the largest megawatt scale grid-connected marine renewable energy system in the world, has achieved a capacity factor of 66% and so far delivered 800MWh into the National Grid. 

This high capacity factor means that the tidal turbine delivers energy on average at the same rate to be expected from a wind turbine of approximately twice the rated power.  Furthermore, the output is totally predictable.  This performance has exceeded expectations largely thanks to the intensity of the Strangford Lough tide race and MCT’s own conservative design predictions.

Martin Wright, Managing Director of Marine Current Turbines said: “We are delighted with SeaGen’s performance. Passing the 1000 hours mark is a great milestone which not only demonstrates the potential for tidal power, but will also help to reinforce confidence in extracting energy from the seas in the future.”

Since starting operation in late 2008, SeaGen’s operation has been limited by its licence conditions to daylight hours, and it is only since the autumn (2009) that SeaGen has operated automatically and without the presence of “marine mammal observers” on board.  It was this change that has allowed a considerable increase in SeaGen’s operational hours.

The company is now preparing SeaGen for more intensive operation and it is hoped to gain consent for continuous “24/7” operation before the summer. In the next few weeks, MCT’s also plans to run SeaGen under supervision of specialists from DNV (Det Norsk Veritas), one of the world’s leading marine classification societies, to obtain independent verification of its performance.

Martin Wright added: “SeaGen is operating as it was designed to do. Crucially, the operational experience and data that we are gaining every day is hugely valuable as we work towards deploying the UK’s first tidal farm within the next two years.  SeaGen is a commercial scale prototype and already we are incorporating into the design of the next machines subtle changes to improve maintainability and reliability which are vital for commercial generation.”

Last week (February 2nd), MCT secured £2.7m from the Carbon Trust’s Marine Renewables Proving Fund to support the company’s evaluation and operation of SeaGen as a precursor to the deployment of a tidal farm by MCT in UK waters.

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Comment on this Story

Greenheatman (not verified) says ...
Sound good doesn't it? This article makes no mention of the raw power that is routinely discarded during Spring tides. The 66% 'capacity factor' is just pure spin. Tidal machines are designed to run on mean Neap tide velocities so that 7/8ths of the power available during Spring tides is discarded and discounted from the calculation. The honest approach would be to include Spring tides' power so that the true capacity factor calculation is 66%*1/8 = 8.25%. The same principle applies to wind turbines where only 1/10th of the raw resource is converted to electricity. Call me old-fashioned but isn't this just bad engineering? We can continue to kid ourselves that intermittent, albeit predictable, electricity from tidal stream is a good idea provided you burn coal to provide backup for all the slack waters every 6hr 25mins or so!