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Marine RE
Citation preview
Realising the Potential for Renewable Energy
in the Marine EnvironmentShared expertise and experience between the UK and Shared expertise and experience between the UK and
Caribbean
10-11 February 2014
Courtyard by Marriot, Bridgetown, Barbados
Carbon Trust
Laura Fidao, Charlie Blair
Day 1 Introduction and objectives
Structure of the workshop and seminar
Brief round table introduction of all participants
Agenda
2
Day 1 - Agenda
Start End Activity Who
08:00 08:30 Arrival - coffee and registration
08:30 09:00 Welcome
Victoria Dean, British High Commissioner in Barbados
Hon Darcy Boyce, Minister with responsibility for
Energy in Barbados
09:00 09:35
Intro to seminar and objectives
Overview of global marine energy and UK role
Laura Fidao, Carbon Trust
Charlie Blair, Carbon Trust
3
09:35 09:55
Opportunities and challenges in the development of marine
renewable energy in the Caribbean Joseph Williams, CARICOM
09:55 10:05 Q&A
Panel 1: Policy & Markets
10:05 10:25 UK renewable energy policy incentives
Dr Stephanie Merrie, Renewable Energy Association
(REA)
10:25 10:45 Considerations for an effective marine energy industry
John McGinnes, Scottish Development International
(SDI)
10:45 11:05
Understanding environmental impact and developing
environmental regulation for site development Gareth Davies, Aquatera
11:05 11:25 Q&A
11:25 11:40 Break
Day 1 - Agenda
Start End Activity Who
Panel 2: Site development
11:40 12:00
Site development: lessons learned from European
Marine Energy Centre Oliver Wragg, European Marine Energy Centre (EMEC)
12:00 12:20 Grid solutions and renewable energy Lawrence Mott, SgurrEnergy
4
12:20 12:40
Small scale wave energy projects in an island
community David Findlay, AlbaTERN
12:40 13:00 Q&A
13:00 14:00 Lunch
Workshop 1
14:00 15:50
How to create the environment for marine renewables
investment in the Caribbean Facilitated by Laura Fidao and Charlie Blair, Carbon Trust
Break (during workshop)
15:50 16:00 Feedback & Day 1 closing remarks
Day 2 - Agenda
Start End Activity Who
08:00 08:30 Arrival coffee and welcome
08:30 09:00 Introduction to the day and re-cap of Day 1 Laura Fidao & Charlie Blair, Carbon Trust
Panel 3: Technology & supply chain
09:00 09:20 Creating a marine renewables supply chain in an island community Gareth Davies, Aquatera
09:20 09:40 Wave technology, commercialisation journey and financing solutions Max Carcas, Caelulum
09:40 10:00 Use of wave energy converters for desalination in an island setting Bob Tillotson, Seatricity
10:00 10:20 Floating offshore wind in the UK Cathryn Hooper, Source Low Carbon
5
10:00 10:20 Floating offshore wind in the UK Cathryn Hooper, Source Low Carbon
10:20 10:40 Q&A
10:40 11:00 Break
Panel 4: Caribbean context panel
11:00 11:20 Prospects for marine energy in the Caribbean John McGlynn, Inter-American Development Bank
11:20 11:40
Caribbean Investment Facility and EDF support for renewables
projects in the next programme
Jannick Vaa, European Union delegation to the
Caribbean
11:40 12:00 Marine governance in the Caribbean Patrick McConney, CERMES
12:00 12:20 Q&A
12:20 13:30 Lunch and networking
Workshop 2
13:30 15:40
Roadmap for creating an environment for marine renewables
investment in the Caribbean Facilitated by Laura Fidao and Charlie Blair, Carbon Trust
Break (during workshop)
15:40 16:00 Closing remarks Angela Francis, FCO
Marine Energy in the World
- Overview of global marine energy and the UK role
FCO Marine Energy in the Caribbean. February 2014
Charlie Blair, Marine Energy Technology Acceleration Manager
Global Potential
Marine Energy Technology
Wave
Tidal
Offshore Wind
7
UK Experience to date
Theme: Things the UK has done to enable the industry not just technology development
Our mission:
To accelerate the move to a low carbon economy
What we do:
We advise businesses and governments on their opportunities in a sustainable, low carbon
world
We measure and certify the environmental impact of organisations, supply chains and
products
The Carbon Trust has a 10-year history of
accelerating low carbon businesses
products
We help develop and deploy low carbon technologies and solutions, from energy efficiency to
renewable power
What we have achieved:
Helped our customers to save 3.7 billion
Helped our customers to save 38m tons of CO2
Catalysed over 300m of investment into clean technologies
We have developed a wealth of experience
over the past ten years
Example customers:
Prioritising innovation
areas
Designing innovation
initiatives
Delivering innovative
solutions
Delivering different solutions for different customers along the innovation journey
Example customers:
Confidential: oil and gas major
Example from OWA: FoundationsCompetition to reduce foundation costs by up to 30% in 30-60m depths.
Fabrication
Shortlist Finalists
Keystone
Gifford / BMT /
Freyssinet
Airbus
A320
Stage II focus
Installation
10
Freyssinet
SPT Offshore
MBD
A320
Source: Carbon Trust Offshore Wind Accelerator 2010, IHC
IHC
Installation
Demonstration
Global Potential
11
There is a LOT of kinetic energy in, and on,
the worlds oceans
12
Image: AW ENERGY www
BUT its difficult to work out how much
could be captured
Global estimates vary massively: 10s to
100s of GW capacity for wave.
In any case, its a material amount of
13
Image: AW ENERGY www
In any case, its a material amount of
energy in relevant coastal and island areas.
Marine Energy Resource in the UKRaw Energy
Wave energy Tidal stream energy
Distribution of wave energy around UK
Distribution of tidal stream energy around UK
Marine Energy Resource in the UKExtractable Energy
Tidal stream energy
Carbon Trust Estimate:
21 TWh/yr Practical Resource
Carbon Trust Estimate:
40-50 TWh/yr Practical Resource
Total UK accessible resource equivalent to around 20%
of UK Electricity Demand
~20 GW
~10 20 Large power stations
Marine Energy Resource in the UKExtractable Energy
~10 20 Large power stations
Understanding the size of the prize
allows governments to justify and
target support spend
Marine Energy Technology
Marine Energy Technologies.
WAVE TIDAL (stream) OFF SHORE WIND
NEAR SHORE /
NEAR SHORE /
FAR
OFFSHORE
BOTTOM
MOUNTED /
FIXED /
DYNAMIC
NEAR SHORE /
AT SHORE /
FLOATING
FLOATING /
BOTTOM
MOUNTED
UK Experience to date Understanding resource and leasing Understanding resource and leasing
Environmental consenting
Technology development
UK Understanding Resource and Leasing (Marine Spatial Planning)
20
Atlas of Ocean Energy (2008). To be updated soon
UK Environmental consenting
21Photos: Tidal Energy Ltd
UK - Technology development
Technologyjourney
Basic research
(Proof of principle)
Applied research
(Proof of Concept)
Early demon-stration (~1/3 scale)
(Proof of viability)
Market diffusion
(Proof of value)
~10k ~100-500k ~1-3m ~10-40m ~40m+
Full scale demon-stration
(Proof of scalability)
First farms
(Proof of durability)
UK is WORLD LEADER
22
Marine Energy
Challenge 2003-2006Marine Energy
Accelerator 2007-2010
Marine Renewables
Proving Fund
2009-2011
Founding Funder since 2005
Understanding the challenge
Accelerating cost reduction
Proving the technology
Facilitating development
Marine Renewables Commercialisation Fund 2012-
Demonstrating at scale
Marine Energy in the World
- Overview of global marine energy and the UK role
FCO Marine Energy in the Caribbean. February 2014
Charlie Blair, Marine Energy Technology Acceleration Manager