Oceans Stand to Deliver Abundant Carbon-free Energy Published: - TopicsExpress



          

Oceans Stand to Deliver Abundant Carbon-free Energy Published: March 17th, 2014 By Justin Gerdes, Ensia Image: Credit: Daniel Palmer/flickr Long before humans got hooked on fossil fuels, we learned how to harness the power of water to do work. Rivers ran mills that ground flour, sawed logs or spun looms that transformed fibers into textiles. Later generations realized that moving water could also be used to turn electricity-generating turbines. But dams erected with electrical turbines blocked waterways, compromising riverine ecosystems to deliver power to growing cities. Devices now under development in the United Kingdom, the United States and elsewhere generate electricity by tapping the movement of ocean waves and tides or the differences in temperature of water between an ocean’s surface and its depths. The sector is ripe with promise, but to reach its potential, the engineers, entrepreneurs and policy-makers working to wring carbon-free electricity from moving water and thermal gradients must overcome formidable regulatory and financial barriers. High Potential Proponents of marine hydrokinetics or ocean thermal energy conversion often note that the technologies deliver electricity that is both dependable and in the right place. After all, waves and tides can be predicted. And humans tend to cluster near water: Nearly 40 percent of Americans live in counties directly on a shoreline, and more than half the world’s population lives within 125 miles of a coast. Government and academic estimates project that marine renewable energy could supply a significant share of the electricity used in coastal areas. Assessments commissioned by the U.S. Department of Energy found that “the maximum of theoretical electric generation” that could be produced from waves, tidal and riverine currents, and ocean thermal gradients in U.S. waters is 2,116 terawatt-hours annually, a little over half of the electricity consumed in the country each year. One TWh of electricity can power 85,000 homes. According to the California Energy Commission, the exploitable ocean wave energy generation potential of the state is about 7,400 megawatts, equivalent to 17 percent of the peak load managed by the California grid operator in recent years. Read more: climatecentral.org/news/oceans-stand-to-deliver-abundant-carbon-free-energy-17185
Posted on: Tue, 18 Mar 2014 02:20:21 +0000

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