Renewables Hit the Big Time
A review of the world's biggest existing and planned renewable energy projects in the solar, wind, tidal, geothermal and wave energy sectors.
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California, United States – Once upon a time, not too long ago, renewable-energy projects sized in kilowatts (kW) were considered large. The biggest solar array in 1963 had a mere 242 watts of capacity, and was installed on a lighthouse in Japan. Wind power, which took off more quickly, reached its first 100-kilowatt system in 1931, in Yalta, then part of the Soviet Union. And at that time, wave and tidal power plants were still twinkles in researchers' eyes.
FUN FACT: The largest photovoltaic project in the works today is a 10-GW solar farm – combined with a 3-GW wind farm – slated for the Karnataka region of India. Airvoice Group is partnering with power company Satluj Jal Vidyut Nigam to build the project, of which the solar part is expected to cost $45 billion. But the companies have projected no target date for the project's completion.
But renewable-energy projects have grown inexorably larger, from kW-size systems to megawatt-size systems and now to gigawatt-size systems. “It’s just the natural progression of what’s happened to renewable energy,” said Clean Edge principal Ron Pernick, a firm that picked “megaprojects” as one of its top five trends for 2010. Starting with 150-kW wind turbines at Altamont Pass in California, one of the first U.S. wind projects, turbines have grown to 3.5 MW and even 5 MW today, he said, and solar projects have expanded from off-grid homes to commercial and industrial buildings and now to utility-scale solar farms. The gigantic renewable systems in the works today match – and in some cases even exceed – the size and scope of some conventional fossil-fuel power plants. If they materialize, these projects will represent a major turning point, as renewable energy becomes just, well…energy. The Reason for Growth Why do renewable energy projects seem to get bigger and bigger? The most obvious answer is cost, said Marianne Boust, a senior analyst at IHS Emerging Energy Research (EER). “When you start a project, you have to do a lot of studies [and paperwork], so companies are looking at larger projects to amortize those upfront costs,” she said. In addition, the high cost of building transmission to ferry power from a wind farm to the grid, for example, works out more cheaply, compared to revenues, if the project is bigger, she added. Another big reason for the growth has been government policies. As federal, state and local governments set ambitious renewable-energy goals and create incentives to encourage them, larger utility-scale projects are cropping up, Pernick said. China is a critical player, aggressively developing very large projects – many in the GW size – projected to go online in the next few years, he added. And in the United States, utilities are getting involved in creating huge projects to meet state renewable portfolio standards while innovative financing models also are helping push larger projects. Of course, not every proposed project will get completed — far from it. Transmission has been a major obstacle for many big projects, with one of the most public transmission-related failures being T. Boone Picken’s plans to build the largest U.S. wind farm in Texas earlier this year. Financing has been another daunting challenge in the recession, and large projects have large upfront costs, even if the cost per kW-hour ends up being cheaper. New technologies tend to have a tougher time than more-proven technologies in today’s risk-averse climate. “There are clearly financial challenges — we’re not out of the woods — but we’re certainly seeing some projects get done and we expect to see quite a few more happen in the next few years,” Pernick said. “The fact that there are some wind farms and solar PV installations approaching the gigawatt scale shows that it’s not just pie in the sky; it will be possible to get there.” The Biggest of the Big We’ve sifted through announcements, spoken with experts and rounded up the hugest of the huge: the largest dream projects that developers have proposed in five different categories: solar, wind, geothermal, wave and tidal. While we’ve focused on projects with evidence of at least some chance of success, it’s unlikely that all of these biggest planned projects will succeed. Their very massiveness makes them challenging, but their vision and audacity also makes them inspiring — and potentially important milestones to launch renewables into their next phase. And in cases where they fail big, they will also illustrate — and underline — the remaining challenges in a way that smaller projects couldn’t. Take a look at five visions of what the future could look like for the renewable energy industry. SOLAR: Desertec, North Africa and the Middle East — 100 GW
But putting together such a vast project, really made up of dozens (or even hundreds) of separate projects connected by the all-encompassing intercontinental transmission lines, is anything but simple. The challenges can hardly be overstated. Creating such a large grid — agreeing on electricity standards across, not only cities and provinces, but different countries and even continents — and hashing out how to share the costs and benefits of building, maintaining and managing it is a gargantuan task rife with political landmines. Issues of national energy security are involved. The logistics of building so much solar power, of getting the materials, the people and the planning in place, is nearly unfathomable. And then there’s the cost: an estimated $555 billion. The project might sound like nothing but a hazy dream, unlikely to materialize, except for the fact that a consortium of a dozen big companies, including Siemens, Munich Re, E.ON, RWE and Deutsche Bank, last year signed an agreement to try to raise the money. That’s not money in the bank, however. Aside from an expected 1 billion euros from the European Union, it will take plenty of government and private funding to make the project happen, and the donation buttons on the website make it clear the Desertec foundation is collecting wherever it can. The consortium doesn’t even plan to complete the plan to raise the money until 2012. And even with the funding, the project is expected to take decades, with the goal of completion by 2050. WIND: Dogger Bank, UK — 9 GW Moving wind-power projects offshore opens up vast amounts of space and also the potential to take advantage of steadier, faster-moving wind. The largest such project in the pipeline today is the Dogger Bank development, which is part of the United Kingdom’s third round of offshore wind licensing, according to EER. The project, with a whopping target installation capacity of 9 GW — and the potential for some 13 GW — blows away the current largest wind farm, a 782-megawatt onshore farm in Roscoe, Texas, that was completed in October 2009. Forewind, a consortium of major energy companies including Scottish and Southern Energy, RWE Innogy’s RWE npower Renewables subsidiary, Statoil and Statkraft, won the license to develop the Dogger Bank zone in January. The site is 3343 square miles large, 77 to 150 miles from shore, with depths of between 59 and 206 feet, and its unparalleled size, distance and depth create a number of logistical challenges in constructing the project and connecting it to the grid. Make no mistake, this project is years away from completion. Forewind hasn’t had set a target opening date, but has said it plans to make initial investment decisions about the project in 2014. TIDAL: Incheon, South Korea — 1.32 GW Completed in 1966, the first tidal power plant in the world, France’s 240-MW Rance plant, remains the largest today. Now South Korea is planning a project more than five times as large in the Incheon Bay. GS Engineering and Construction Corp. (GS E&C), a publicly traded company based in nearby Seoul, said in January that it plans to begin building the Incheon tidal plant in the second half of next year, if regulators approve the project. Korea Hydro & Nuclear Power Co. will run the plant, expected to cost $3.4 billion and start operations in 2017. The project involves a barrage, or an ocean dam, which traps water in a basin and uses turbines to make electricity from the water-level difference created by the tides. As countries aim to get more electricity from renewable sources, it’s possible that another project, the U.K.’s proposed Severn Barrage, could surpass the South Korean plant. The project, which could install up to 10 miles of dams and sluice gates across the Severn Estuary, has been bandied about for nearly 30 years and a timeline remains uncertain. The government is considering five different ideas for the barrage, ranging from 1.05 to 8.6 GW in capacity, as well as three alternate concepts. Tidal power interests utilities because it is reliable – the tides occur twice a day without fail — and although it is not considered constant, or baseload, power. But both the Incheon and Severn projects face significant environmental concerns and opposition. Like river dams, these tidal barrages have caused some unintended environmental and ecological consequences, making them unpopular with environmentalists. For one thing, they reduce the flow of water from the tides and the exchange of water from the basins, which impacts the water, the surrounding wetlands and the wildlife that lives in them. Other types of tidal-power technologies — including underwater turbines that operate like wind turbines, using the current itself to generate electricity without needing a barrage — could help avoid those issues, but such technologies are still under development. Three 200-MW projects are racing for the title of the largest tidal-current project. Utility SSE Renewables in March won a bid to develop two such projects in the UK’s Pentland Firth off Scotland’s northern coast: one on what’s called the Westray South site and the other, in partnership with Irish tidal-energy company OpenHydro, on the Cantick Head site. SSE’s already raised some £3.8 billion in bonds, loans and stock offering proceeds to support all its renewable projects. Meanwhile, Crest Energy has applied for approval to install up to 200 submerged turbines near the entrance of the Kaipara Harbour, on the northwestern site of New Zealand’s North Island.
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Jennifer Kho
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"Why do renewable energy projects seem to get bigger and bigger? The most obvious answer is cost, said Marianne Boust,"
I say, the most obvious answer is corperate greed.
If you could find a way to convince one million people to give you just one penny each you would have a total of $10,000.00 daollars.
(The big question is). But why stop there?
If you have the resource and the talent why not convince the entire world people as a whole that you have what they need to stay alive to a ripe old age and then charge them a monthly fee for the rest of that life?
Why not? What are they going to do? Call you a liar? Doubtful. As a whole, the human race on planet Earth is to caught up in a "whirlwinf" of energy to be aware of one simple fact, all of us do not need all of this energy to stay alive on Earth. Only 5 billion out 7 billion people need all of this energy. 2 billion people on planet Earth could live just fine without all of these energies. Better if it hadn't been for all of the polution created over the last 100 years because of energy.
What would they do, if what you had wasn't there anymore?
You could pretend that what you had was in scarce supply and demand even more for it?
What will be the cost of energy before its all over?
Will we be sacraficing virgins or what?
"All praise be to energy, or most powerful, the giver and sustainer of life..."
Pity about Earth.