Tidal power, sometimes called
tidal
energy, is a form of
hydropower
that converts the energy of
tides into
electricity or other useful forms of power.
Although not yet widely used, tidal power has potential for future
electricity generation. Tides
are more predictable than
wind energy
and
solar power. Historically,
tide mills have been used, both in Europe and on
the Atlantic coast of North America. The earliest occurrences date
from the
Middle Ages, or even from
Roman times.
Generation of tidal energy
Tidal power is the only form of energy which derives directly from
the relative motions of the
Earth–
Moon system, and to a lesser extent from the
Earth–
Sun system. The
tidal forces produced by the Moon and Sun, in
combination with Earth's
rotation, are
responsible for the generation of the
tides.
Other sources of energy originate directly or indirectly from the
Sun, including
fossil fuels,
conventional hydroelectric,
wind,
biofuels,
wave power and
solar.
Nuclear is derived using
radioactive material from the Earth,
geothermal power uses the Earth's
internal heat which comes from a combination
of
residual heat from
planetary accretion (about 20%) and heat produced through
radioactive decay (80%).

Variation of tides over a day
Tidal energy is generated by the relative motion of the Earth, Sun
and the Moon, which interact via
gravitational forces. Periodic changes of water
levels, and associated tidal currents, are due to the gravitational
attraction by the Sun and Moon. The magnitude of the tide at a
location is the result of the changing positions of the Moon and
Sun relative to the Earth, the
effects
of Earth rotation, and the local
shape of
the sea floor and coastlines.
Because the Earth's tides are caused by the tidal forces due to
gravitational interaction with the Moon and Sun, and the Earth's
rotation, tidal power is practically inexhaustible and classified
as a
renewable energy source.
A tidal energy generator uses this phenomenon to generate energy.
The stronger the tide, either in water level height or tidal
current velocities, the greater the potential for tidal energy
generation.
Tidal movement causes a
continual
loss of mechanical energy in the Earth–Moon system due to
pumping of water through the natural restrictions around
coastlines, and due to
viscous dissipation
at the
seabed and in
turbulence. This loss of energy has caused the
rotation of the Earth to slow in the 4.5 billion years since
formation. During the last 620 million years the period of rotation
has increased from 21.9 hours to the 24 hours we see now; in this
period the Earth has lost 17% of its rotational energy. While tidal
power may take additional energy from the system, increasing the
rate of slowdown, the effect would be noticeable over millions of
years only, thus being negligible.
Categories of tidal power
Tidal power can be classified into three main types:
- Tidal stream systems make use of the kinetic energy of moving water to power
turbines, in a similar way to windmills that use moving air. This
method is gaining in popularity because of the lower cost and lower
ecological impact compared to barrage.
- Barrages make use of the potential
energy in the difference in height (or head) between high and low tides.
Barrages are essentially dams across the full
width of a tidal estuary, and suffer from very high civil
infrastructure costs, a worldwide shortage of viable sites, and
environmental issues.
- Tidal lagoons, are similar to barrages,
but can be constructed as self contained structures, not fully
across an estuary, and are claimed to incur much lower cost and
impact overall. Furthermore they can be configured to generate
continuously which is not the case with barrages.
Modern advances in
turbine technology may
eventually see large amounts of power generated from the ocean,
especially tidal currents using the tidal stream designs but also
from the major thermal current systems such as the
Gulf Stream, which is covered by the more
general term
marine current
power.
Tidal stream turbines may be arrayed in
high-velocity areas where natural tidal current flows are
concentrated such as the west and east coasts of Canada, the
Strait of
Gibraltar
, the Bosporus
, and
numerous sites in Southeast Asia and
Australia. Such flows occur almost anywhere where there are
entrances to bays and rivers, or between land masses where water
currents are concentrated.
Tidal stream generators
A relatively new technology, though first conceived in the 1970s
during the oil crisis, tidal stream generators draw energy from
currents in much the same way as
wind
turbines. The higher density of water, 800 times the density of
air, means that a single generator can provide significant power at
low tidal flow velocities (compared with wind speed). Given that
power varies with the density of medium and the cube of velocity,
it is simple to see that water speeds of nearly one-tenth of the
speed of wind provide the same power for the same size of turbine
system. However this limits the application in practice to places
where the tide moves at speeds of at least 2 knots (1m/s) even
close to
neap tides.
Since tidal stream generators are an immature technology (no
commercial scale production facilities are yet routinely supplying
power), no standard technology has yet emerged as the clear winner,
but a large variety of designs are being experimented with, some
very close to large scale deployment. Several prototypes have shown
promise with many companies making bold claims, some of which are
yet to be independently verified, but they have not operated
commercially for extended periods to establish performances and
rates of return on investments.
Engineering approaches
The
European Marine
Energy Centre
categorises them under four heads although a number
of other approaches are also being tried.
Axial Turbines
These are close in concept to traditional windmills operating under
the sea and have the most prototypes currently operating. These
include:
Kvalsund
, south of
Hammerfest
, Norway.
Although still a prototype, a turbine with a reported capacity of
300 kW was connected to the grid on 13 November 2003.
A
300 kW Periodflow marine current propeller type turbine —
Seaflow — was installed by Marine Current Turbines off the
coast of Lynmouth
, Devon
, England, in
2003. The 11m diameter turbine generator was fitted to a
steel pile which was driven into the seabed. As a prototype, it was
connected to a dump load, not to the grid.
Since
April 2007 Verdant Power has been
running a prototype project in the East River
between Queens
and Roosevelt
Island
in New York City; it was the first major
tidal-power project in the United States. The strong
currents pose challenges to the design: the blades of the 2006 and
2007 prototypes broke off, and new reinforced turbines were
installed in September 2008.
Following
the Seaflow trial, a fullsize prototype, called SeaGen
, was
installed by Marine Current
Turbines in Strangford
Lough
in Northern Ireland in April 2008. The
turbine began to generate at full power of just over 1.2 MW in
December 2008 and was reported to have fed 150 kW into the
grid for the first time on 17 July 2008. It is currently the only
commercial scale device to have been installed anywhere in the
world. SeaGen is made up of two axial flow rotors, each of which
drive a generator. The turbines are capable of generating
electricity on both the ebb and flood tides because the rotor
blades can pitch through 180˚.Marine Current Turbines.
"Technology." Marine Current Turbines. Marine Current
Turbines, n.d. Web. 5 Oct. 2009. /www.marineturbines.com/21/
technology/>.
OpenHydro,
an Irish company exploiting the Open-Centre Turbine developed in
the U.S., has a prototype being tested at the European Marine
Energy Centre
(EMEC), in Orkney, Scotland.
A
prototype semi-submerged floating tethered tidal turbine called
Evopod
has been tested since June 2008 in Strangford
Lough
, Northern
Ireland
at 1/10th scale. The company developing
it is called Ocean Flow Energy Ltd, and they are based in the
UK
. The
advanced hull form maintains optimum heading into the tidal stream
and it is designed to operate in the peak flow of the water
column.
Vertical and horizontal axis crossflow turbines
Invented by
Georges Darreius in
1923 and Patented in 1929, these turbines that can be deployed
either vertically or horizontally.
The
Gorlov turbine is a
variant of the Darrieus design featuring a helical design which is
being commercially piloted on a large scale in S. Korea, starting
with a 1MW plant that started in May 2009 and expanding to 90MW by
2013. Neptune Renewable Energy has developed Proteus which uses a
barrage of vertical axis crossflow turbines for use mainly in
estuaries.
In late
April 2008, Ocean Renewable Power Company, LLC (ORPC) [41109]
successfully completed the testing of its proprietary
turbine-generator unit (TGU) prototype at ORPC’s Cobscook Bay
and Western Passage
tidal sites near Eastport,
Maine
. The TGU is the core of the OCGen technology
and utilizes advanced design cross-flow (ADCF) turbines to drive a
permanent magnet generator located between the turbines and mounted
on the same shaft. ORPC has developed TGU designs that can be used
for generating power from river, tidal and deep water ocean
currents.
Trials in
the Strait of
Messina
, Italy, started in 2001 of the Kobold concept.
Oscillating devices
Oscillating devices do not have a rotating component, instead
making use of
aerofoil sections which are
pushed sideways by the flow. Oscillating stream power extraction
was proven with the omni- or bi-directional Wing'd Pump windmill.
During 2003 a 150 kW oscillating hydroplane device, the
Stingray, was tested off the Scottish coast. The Stingray uses
hydrofoils to create oscillation, which allows it to create
hydraulic power. This hydraulic power is then used to power a
hydraulic motor, which then turns a generator.
Venturi effect
This uses a
shroud to increase the flow rate
through the turbine. These can be mounted horizontally or
vertically.
The Australian company Tidal Energy Pty Ltd undertook successful
commercial trials of highly efficient
shrouded tidal turbines on the
Gold Coast, Queensland in
2002. Tidal Energy has commenced a rollout of their shrouded
turbine for a remote Australian community in northern Australia
where there are some of the fastest flows ever recorded (11 m/s, 21
knots) – two small turbines will provide 3.5 MW. Another
larger 5 meter diameter turbine, capable of 800 kW in
4 m/s of flow, is planned for deployment as a tidal powered
desalination showcase near Brisbane Australia in October 2008.
Another device, the Hydro Venturi, is to be tested in San Francisco
Bay.
Commercial plans
RWE's npower announced that
it is in partnership with Marine Current Turbines to build a tidal
farm of SeaGen turbines off the coast of Anglesey
in Wales.
In November 2007, British company Lunar Energy announced that, in
conjunction with
E.ON, they would be building
the world's first tidal energy farm off the coast of Pembrokshire
in Wales. It will be the world's first deep-sea tidal-energy farm
and will provide electricity for 5,000 homes.Eight underwater
turbines, each 25 metres long and 15 metres high, are to be
installed on the sea bottom off St David's peninsula. Construction
is due to start in the summer of 2008 and the proposed tidal energy
turbines, described as "a wind farm under the sea", should be
operational by 2010.
British Columbia Tidal Energy Corp. plans to deploy at least three
1.2 MW turbines in the
Campbell
River or in the surrounding coastline of British Columbia by
2009.
An
organisation named Alderney Renewable Energy Ltd is planning
to use tidal turbines to extract power from the notoriously strong
tidal races around Alderney
in the Channel
Islands. It is estimated that up to 3GW could be
extracted. This would not only supply the island's needs but also
leave a considerable surplus for export.
Nova Scotia Power has selected
OpenHydro's turbine for a tidal energy demonstration project in the
Bay of Fundy, Nova Scotia, Canada and Alderney Renewable Energy Ltd
for the supply of tidal turbines in the Channel Islands.
Open Hydro
Energy calculations
Various turbine designs have varying efficiencies and therefore
varying power output. If the efficiency of the turbine "Cp" is
known the equation below can be used to determine the power
output.
The energy available from these kinetic systems can be expressed
as:
- P = Cp x 0.5 x ρ x A x V³
where:
- Cp = the turbine coefficient of performance
- P = the power generated (in watts)
- ρ = the density of the water (seawater is 1025 kg/m³)
- A = the sweep area of the turbine (in m²)
- V³ = the velocity of the flow cubed (i.e. V x V x V)
Relative to an open turbine in free stream, depending on the
geometry of the shroud shrouded turbines are capable of as much as
3 to 4 times the power of the same turbine rotor in open flow.
.
Potential sites
As with
wind power, selection of location
is critical for the tidal turbine. Tidal stream systems need to be
located in areas with fast currents where natural flows are
concentrated between obstructions, for example at the entrances to
bays and rivers, around rocky points, headlands, or between islands
or other land masses. The following potential sites are under
serious consideration:
Barrage tidal power

An artistic impression of a tidal
barrage, including embankments, a ship lock and caissons housing a
sluice and two turbines.
With only
a few operating plants globally, a large 240 MW plant on the
Rance
River
, and two small plants, one on the Bay of Fundy
and the other across a tiny inlet in Kislaya Guba, Russia
), and a
suggested Severn barrage across the
River Severn, from Brean Down
in England
to Lavernock Point
near Cardiff
in Wales
, the
barrage method of extracting tidal energy involves building a
barrage across a bay or river, as in the
case of the Rance tidal power plant
in France. Turbines installed in the barrage
wall generate power as water flows in and out of the estuary basin,
bay, or river. These systems are similar to a hydro dam that
produces Static Head or
pressure head
(a height of water pressure). When the water level outside of the
basin or lagoon changes relative to the water level inside, the
turbines are able to produce power.
The largest such installation
has been working on the Rance
river,
France, since 1966.
The basic elements of a barrage are
caisson, embankments,
sluices,
turbines, and
ship locks. Sluices, turbines, and ship locks are housed in
caissons (very large concrete blocks). Embankments seal a basin
where it is not sealed by caissons.
The sluice gates applicable to tidal power are the flap gate,
vertical rising gate, radial gate, and rising sector.
Barrage systems are affected by problems of high civil
infrastructure costs associated with what is in effect a dam being
placed across estuarine systems, and the environmental problems
associated with changing a large ecosystem.
Potentials for UK barrages are here.
Ebb generation
The basin is filled through the sluices until high tide. Then the
sluice gates are closed. (At this stage there may be "Pumping" to
raise the level further). The turbine gates are kept closed until
the sea level falls to create sufficient head across the barrage,
and then are opened so that the turbines generate until the head is
again low. Then the sluices are opened, turbines disconnected and
the basin is filled again. The cycle repeats itself. Ebb generation
(also known as outflow generation) takes its name because
generation occurs as the tide changes tidal direction.
Flood generation
The basin is filled through the turbines, which generate at tide
flood. This is generally much less efficient than ebb generation,
because the volume contained in the upper half of the basin (which
is where ebb generation operates) is greater than the volume of the
lower half (filled first during flood generation). Therefore the
available level difference — important for the turbine power
produced — between the basin side and the sea side of the barrage,
reduces more quickly than it would in ebb generation. Rivers
flowing into the basin may further reduce the energy potential,
instead of enhancing it as in ebb generation. Of course this is not
a problem with the "lagoon" model, without river inflow.
Pumping
Turbines are able to be powered in reverse by excess energy in the
grid to increase the water level in the basin at high tide (for ebb
generation). This energy is more than returned during generation,
because power output is strongly related to the head. If water is
raised 2 ft (61 cm) by pumping on a high tide of
10 ft (3 m), this will have been raised by 12 ft
(3.7 m) at low tide. The cost of a 2 ft rise is returned
by the benefits of a 12 ft rise. This is since the correlation
between the potential energy is not a linear relationship, rather,
is related by the square of the tidal height variation.
Two-basin schemes
Another form of energy barrage configuration is that of the dual
basin type. With two basins, one is filled at high tide and the
other is emptied at low tide. Turbines are placed between the
basins. Two-basin schemes offer advantages over normal schemes in
that generation time can be adjusted with high flexibility and it
is also possible to generate almost continuously. In normal
estuarine situations, however, two-basin schemes are very expensive
to construct due to the cost of the extra length of barrage. There
are some favourable geographies, however, which are well suited to
this type of scheme.
Environmental impact
The placement of a barrage into an estuary has a considerable
effect on the water inside the basin and on the ecosystem. Many
governments have been reluctant in recent times to grant approval
for tidal barrages. Through research conducted on tidal plants, it
has been found that tidal barrages constructed at the mouths of
estuaries pose similar environmental threats as large dams. The
construction of large tidal plants alters the flow of saltwater in
and out of estuaries, which changes the hydrology and salinity and
possibly negatively affects the marine mammals that use the
estuaries as their habitatThe La Rance plant, off the Brittany
coast of northern France, was the first and largest tidal barrage
plant in the world. It is also the only site where a full-scale
evaluation of the ecological impact of a tidal power system,
operating for 20 years, has been made
French researchers found that the isolation of the estuary during
the construction phases of the tidal barrage was detrimental to
flora and fauna, however; after ten years, there has been a
“variable degree of biological adjustment to the new environmental
conditions”
Some species lost their habitat due to La Rance’s construction, but
other species colonized the abandoned space, which caused a shift
in diversity. Also as a result of the construction, sandbanks
disappeared, the beach of St. Servan was badly damaged and
high-speed currents have developed near sluices, which are water
channels controlled by gates
Turbidity
Turbidity (the amount of matter in suspension in the water)
decreases as a result of smaller volume of water being exchanged
between the basin and the sea. This lets light from the Sun to
penetrate the water further, improving conditions for the
phytoplankton. The changes propagate up the
food chain, causing a general change in
the
ecosystem.
Tidal fences and turbines
Tidal
fences and turbines can have varying
environmental impacts depending on whether or not fences and
turbines are constructed with regard to the environment. The main
environmental impact of turbines is their impact on fish. If the
turbines are moving slowly enough, such as low velocities of 25-50
rpm, fish kill is minimalized and silt and other nutrients are able
to flow through the structures For example, a 20 kW tidal
turbine prototype built in the St. Lawrence Seaway in 1983 reported
no fish kills Tidal fences block off channels, which makes it
difficult for fish and wildlife to migrate through those channels.
In order to reduce fish kill, fences could be engineered so that
the spaces between the caisson wall and the rotor foil are large
enough to allow fish to pass through Larger marine mammals such as
seals or dolphins can be protected from the turbines by fences or a
sonar sensor auto-breaking system that automatically shuts the
turbines down when marine mammals are detectedOverall, many
researches have argued that while tidal barrages pose environmental
threats, tidal fences and tidal turbines, if constructed properly,
are likely to be more environmentally benign. Unlike barrages,
tidal fences and turbines do not block channels or estuarine
mouths, interrupt fish migration or alter hydrology, thus, these
options offer energy generating capacity without dire environmental
impacts
Salinity
As a result of less water exchange with the sea, the average
salinity inside the basin decreases, also affecting the ecosystem.
"Tidal Lagoons" do not suffer from this problem.
Sediment movements
Estuaries often have high volume of sediments moving through them,
from the rivers to the sea. The introduction of a barrage into an
estuary may result in sediment accumulation within the barrage,
affecting the ecosystem and also the operation of the
barrage.
Fish
Fish may move through sluices safely, but when these are closed,
fish will seek out turbines and attempt to swim through them. Also,
some fish will be unable to escape the water speed near a turbine
and will be sucked through. Even with the most fish-friendly
turbine design, fish mortality per pass is approximately 15% (from
pressure drop, contact with blades,
cavitation, etc.). Alternative passage
technologies (
fish ladders, fish lifts,
fish escalators etc.) have so far failed to solve this problem for
tidal barrages, either offering extremely expensive solutions, or
ones which are used by a small fraction of fish only. Research in
sonic guidance of fish is ongoing.The Open-Centre turbine reduces
this problem allowing fish to pass through the open centre of the
turbine.
Recently a run of the river type turbine has been developed in
France. This is a very large slow rotating Kaplan type turbine
mounted on an angle. Testing for fish mortality has indicated fish
mortality figures to be less than 5%. This concept also seems very
suitable for adaption to marine current/tidal turbines.
Energy calculations
The energy available from a barrage is dependent on the volume of
water. The
potential energy
contained in a volume of water is:
- E\, =\, \tfrac12\, A\, \rho\, g\, h^2
where:
- h is the vertical tidal
range,
- A is the horizontal area of the barrage basin,
- ρ is the density of water =
1025 kg per cubic meter (seawater varies between 1021 and
1030 kg per cubic meter) and
- g is the acceleration due to the Earth's gravity = 9.81 meters per second
squared.
The factor half is due to the fact, that as the basin flows empty
through the turbines, the
hydraulic
head over the dam reduces. The maximum head is only available
at the moment of low water, assuming the high water level is still
present in the basin.
Example calculation of tidal power generation
Assumptions:
- Let us assume that the tidal range of tide at a particular
place is 32 feet = 10 m (approx)
- The surface of the tidal energy harnessing plant is 9 km²
(3 km × 3 km)= 3000 m × 3000 m = 9 × 106
m2
- Density of sea water = 1025.18 kg/m3
Mass of the sea water = volume of sea water × density of sea water
- := (area × tidal range) of water × mass density
- := (9 × 106 m2 × 10 m) × 1025.18
kg/m3
- := 92 × 109 kg (approx)
Potential energy content of the water in the basin at high tide = ½
× area × density × gravitational acceleration × tidal range squared
- := ½ × 9 × 106 m2 × 1025 kg/m3
× 9.81 m/s2 × (10 m)2
- :=4.5 × 1012 J (approx)
Now we have 2 high tides and 2 low tides every day. At low tide the
potential energy is zero.Therefore the total energy potential per
day = Energy for a single high tide × 2
- := 4.5 × 1012 J × 2
- := 9 × 1012 J
Therefore, the mean power generation potential = Energy generation
potential / time in 1 day
- := 9 × 1012 J / 86400 s
- := 104 MW
Assuming the power conversion efficiency to be 30%:The
daily-average power generated = 104 MW * 30% / 100%
- := 31 MW (approx)
A barrage is best placed in a location with very high-amplitude
tides. Suitable locations are found in Russia, USA, Canada,
Australia, Korea, the UK.
Amplitudes of up to 17 m (56 ft)
occur for example in the Bay of Fundy
, where tidal
resonance amplifies the tidal range.
Economics
Tidal barrage power schemes have a high capital cost and a very low
running cost. As a result, a tidal power scheme may not produce
returns for many years, and investors may be reluctant to
participate in such projects.
Governments may be able to finance tidal barrage power, but many
are unwilling to do so also due to the lag time before investment
return and the high irreversible commitment. For example the
energy policy of the
United Kingdom recognizes the role of tidal energy and
expresses the need for local councils to understand the broader
national goals of renewable energy in approving tidal projects. The
UK government itself appreciates the technical viability and siting
options available, but has failed to provide meaningful incentives
to move these goals forward.
Mathematical modeling of tidal schemes
In mathematical modeling of a scheme design, the basin is broken
into segments, each maintaining its own set of variables. Time is
advanced in steps. Every step, neighbouring segments influence each
other and variables are updated.
The simplest type of model is the
flat estuary model, in
which the whole basin is represented by one segment. The surface of
the basin is assumed to be flat, hence the name. This model gives
rough results and is used to compare many designs at the start of
the design process.
In these models, the basin is broken into large segments (1D),
squares (2D) or cubes (3D). The complexity and accuracy increases
with dimension.
Mathematical modeling produces quantitative information for a range
of parameters, including:
- Water levels (during operation, construction, extreme
conditions, etc.)
- Currents
- Waves
- Power output
- Turbidity
- Salinity
- Sediment movements
Global environmental impact
A tidal power scheme is a long-term source of electricity. A
proposal for the
Severn Barrage, if
built, has been projected to save 18 million tonnes of
coal per year of operation. This decreases the output
of
greenhouse gases into the
atmosphere.
If fossil fuel resources decline during the 21st century, as
predicted by
Hubbert peak
theory, tidal power is one of the alternative sources of energy
that will need to be developed to satisfy the human demand for
energy.
Operating tidal power schemes
Tidal power schemes being considered
In the table, "-" indicates missing information, "?" indicates
information which has not been decided
| Country |
Place |
Mean tidal range (m) |
Area of basin (km²) |
Maximum capacity (MW) |
| United Kingdom and Channel Islands |
River Severn |
7.8 |
450 |
8640 |
| Russia |
Penzhinskaya Bay |
6.0 |
20,500 |
87,000 |
See also
References
- Baker, A. C. 1991, Tidal power, Peter Peregrinus Ltd.,
London.
- Baker, G. C., Wilson E. M., Miller, H., Gibson, R. A. &
Ball, M., 1980. "The Annapolis tidal power pilot project", in
Waterpower '79 Proceedings, ed. Anon, U.S. Government
Printing Office, Washington, pp 550–559.
- Hammons, T. J. 1993, "Tidal power", Proceedings of the
IEEE, [Online], v81, n3, pp 419–433. Available from: IEEE/IEEE
Xplore. [July 26, 2004].
- Lecomber, R. 1979, "The evaluation of tidal power projects", in
Tidal Power and Estuary Management, eds. Severn, R. T.,
Dineley, D. L. & Hawker, L. E., Henry Ling Ltd., Dorchester, pp
31–39.
Notes
- Spain, Rob: "A possible Roman Tide Mill", Paper submitted
to the Kent Archaeological Society
- George E. Williams. " Geological constraints on the Precambrian history of
Earth's rotation and the Moon's orbit". Reviews of
Geophysics '38' (2000), 37-60.
- Jones, Anthony T., and Adam Westwood. "Power from the oceans:
wind energy industries are growing, and as we look for alternative
power sources, the growth potential is through the roof. Two
industry watchers take a look at generating energy from wind and
wave action and the potential to alter." The Futurist 39.1 (2005):
37(5). GALE Expanded Academic ASAP. Web. 8 Oct. 2009.
- "Surfing Energy's New Wave" Time International 16 June 2003:
52+.
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,457348,00.html
- First power station to harness Moon opens -
September 22, 2003 - New Scientist
- REUK: "Read about the first open-sea tidal turbine
generator off Lynmouth, Devon"
- Verdant Power
- MIT Technology Review, April 2007 Accessed
August 24, 2008]
- http://www.marineturbines.com/3/news/
- First connection to the grid
- · Sea Generation Tidal Turbine
- OpenHydro
- [1] Ocean Flow Energy Ltd annouce the start of
their testing in Strangford Lough
- Ocean
Flow Energy company website
- Gorlov
Turbine
- Gorlov Turbines in Koreas
- Proteus
- A.D.A.Group
- Wing'd Pump Windmill
- Stingray
- San Francisco Bay Guardian News
- RWE plans 10.5 MW sea current power plant off
Welsh coast - Forbes.com
- Tidal Power Coming to West Coast of Canada
- Alderney Renewable Energy Ltd
- http://www.cyberiad.net/library/pdf/bk_tidal_paper25apr06.pdf
tidal paper on cyberiad.net
- Builder & Engineer - Pembrokeshire tidal
barrage moves forward
- Severn balancing act
- NZ: Chance to turn the tide of power supply |
EnergyBulletin.net | Peak Oil News Clearinghouse
- Harnessing the power of the sea Energy NZ,
Vol 1, No 1, Winter 2007.
- Bay of Fundy to get three test turbines |
Cleantech.com
- Verdant Power
-
http://deanzaemtp.googlepages.com/PGEbacksnewstudyofbaystidalpower.pdf
- Tidal power from Piscataqua River?
-
http://www.claverton-energy.com/tidal-barrage-potential-in-england.html
- Retiere, C. Tidal power and aquatic environment of
La Rance.
- Charlier, Roger. Forty candles for the Rance River
TPP tides provide renewable and sustainable power
generation
- Pelc, Robin and Fujita, Rob. Renewable energy from
the ocean.
- VLH
TURBINE
- §174, p. 260.
- [2] (see for example key principles 4 and 6
within Planning Policy Statement 22)
- L'Usine marémotrice de la Rance
- Nova Scotia Power - Environment - Green Power-
Tidal
- Race Rocks Demonstration Project
- Tidal Energy, Ocean Energy
- Information for media inquiries
- Korea's first tidal power plant built in Uldolmok,
Jindo
-
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/northern_ireland/7790494.stm
- http://www.elektropages.ru/article/4_2006_ELEKTRO.html
- Russian power plants soon to utilize tidal energy ::
Russia-InfoCentre
-
http://www.severnestuary.net/sep/pdfs/managingtidalchangeprojectreport-phase1final.pdf
- Sihwa Lake Tidal Power Plant targets completion by
late 2009
- China Endorses 300 MW Ocean Energy Project
External links