December 18, 2008
Deepwater Offshore Wind Power Generation Using Oil and Gas
Platform Technology
by Emily Balogh, Contributing Writer
Oregon, United States [RenewableEnergyWorld.com]
Previously confined to shallow water installations or land, deep water wind
power may be the next frontier for wind developers.
The key to this future source of energy may come from the technology that
originated with fossil fuels. The technology that keeps deep-sea oil and gas
rigs stable and running may unlock deep-sea wind power as well. Though it is
far from proven or even practical testing, the idea is under hot pursuit by
entrepreneurs and engineers using principles from oil and gas platform rigs.
Challenges ahead lie in permitting, testing and transmission.
Principle Power, a developer of offshore wind projects, has licensed
technology from Marine Innovation and Technology, a firm comprised of former
oil and gas platform engineers, for development of a semi-submersible
floating wind generation system. The patented WindFloat platform is a
floating foundation for very large wind turbines that floats on the surface
of the water, but is partially submerged.
Intended for use in waters greater than 50-meters deep and ten miles or more
from shore, WindFloat's design is intended to provide physical stability for
wind turbines so that existing offshore wind turbines can be used with very
few modifications, according to Dominique Roddier of Marine Innovation and
Technology.
"There are a lot of synergies between engineering for an oil or gas platform
and engineering a platform for wind energy generation," said Roddier.
Namely, deepwater installations for oil, gas, and wind should be stable,
cheap and simple. However, while the oil and gas industry is established and
has deep expertise in creating floating platforms for energy generation,
"we're making a product in an industry that doesn't exist yet and we have to
create the industry that goes along with the product," he said.
Roddier, whose background includes designing offshore oil and gas rigs,
highlighted the importance of technical peer review when designing and
testing new technology along with government involvement, both of which may
lead to the creating of "best practices" in this emerging field.
Similarities and Differences
One major engineering difference that must be accounted for is the kind of
motion these floating platforms attempt to minimize. In the oil and gas
industry, minimizing vertical motion, or heave, is critical because the
vertical steel tubes, called "risers" that bring the hydrocarbons from
beneath the sea bed to the surface cannot be stretched. Platforms are
accordingly engineered to minimize vertical motion, with less attention paid
to angular motions.
With wind turbines, however, it is quite the opposite. Minimizing pitch and
roll is critical in order for the turbine to function optimally.
This consideration guided Marine Innovation and Technology to create a
three-columned triangular design for WindFloats. The turbine is placed on
top of one of the columns, and the other two columns are given more ballast
to stabilize the entire platform. The ballast from the other two columns
stabilizes the weight distribution and allows the turbine to stand upright.
"The stability of the platform is achieved through the columns, which are
spread out in order to increase stability and reduce motion," said Roddier.
Furthermore, the WindFloat is moored with 6 lines, 4 of which are connected
to the column stabilizing the turbine thus creating an asymmetric design.
Oil and gas platforms also have multiple mooring lines, but the asymmetrical
design was chosen in order to support the additional forces placed on the
column supporting the wind turbine.
At the base of each column, water entrapment plates resist the water around
them, effectively making the platform move less in waves. A type of oil and
gas platforms, called "truss spars" by contrast, stack similar water
entrapment plates vertically, rather than spreading them horizontally.
The Case for Offshore Wind Development
Technical challenges aside, numerous advantages exist for large-scale
deepwater offshore wind power. First, wind turbines located many miles out
into the open ocean reduce the incidence of NIMBY (not in my backyard )
concerns, as they cannot be seen from land.
Second, wind resources are generally higher offshore, particularly in deeper
waters. "We're targeting the Great Lakes, the coast of Maine and New
Hampshire and the west coast," said Alla Weinstein, CEO of Principle Power.
Weinstein noted that the company has made some site selections based on an
NREL (National Renewable Energy Lab) study that showed areas with
significant untapped potential wind power that have previously not been
explored due to the difficulty of engineering deepwater wind.
The idea is getting some traction. Oregon-based Tillamook PUD earlier this
year issued a request for proposals for wave energy installations. In
response, Principle Power submitted a proposal for an offshore wind
installation, which resulted in a memorandum of understanding between
Principle Power and Tillamook.
Principle Power is planning to launch a project off the coast of Netarts and
Garibaldi, Oregon. Extensive stakeholder consultations with those
communities are due to begin shortly.
Weinstein expects that Tillamook is just the first of many utilities that
may be interested in Principle Power's technology. States with RPS
obligations will be particularly interested, she said. "They have already
identified the need and are actively looking for offshore renewable
projects," Weinstein said.
Other Hurdles: Permitting, Not Transmission
Aside from proving the technology, a major hurdle awaiting Principle Power
is the application process for a permit to begin the project off of the
Oregon coast. The Minerals Management Service (MMS) was given the authority
under the EPAct 2005 to grant licenses for deep offshore wind energy
development, but will not release the rules for how to develop a project
until early 2009. Principle Power's target installations all take place in
federal waters, since they are miles offshore, bringing the projects under
the jurisdiction of many different federal agencies.
The process to acquire an OCS Lease Nomination, the permit granting
permission to pursue a deepwater wind project, can take up to two years. If
there are other applicants for a specific site, MMS grants the application
to the team more qualified for what is being proposed and then goes through
the same environmental permitting exercise.
"Our impacts are going to be minimal," said Weinstein. She believes the
project will be found to have an acceptable level of environmental impacts,
because there is minimal impact to the ocean floor and therefore to
wildlife. The mooring structures that tie the structure to the ocean floor
are relatively thick, so that dolphins and whales can sense the structure
and avoid injury, she explained.
Weinstein doesn't see transmission as an insurmountable obstacle.
"Connections to the grid have been done. It's just a matter of designing it
and putting it in place. This is not where the technical challenges are
going to be," she said.
When the system is fully operational, she plans to bring the power from
multiple WindFloats to one WindFloat location and then send one cable back
to the shore. Furthermore, the transmission issue is addressed in the
permitting. "The challenges are going to be in the time that it is going to
take us to permit and demonstrate the operation of the WindFloat," she
added.
"We aren't going to test this in the open ocean until we know that we have
something that works," said Roddier. The company is currently conducting
numerical model studies, with tools that have been validated in a wave tank,
and will eventually re-test the final design in the lab. Each WindFloat
requires site-specific engineering to address differences in water movement
at various sites.
Marine Innovation and Technology and Principle Power are working together to
ensure integration with the turbine and the float. Although it is still too
early for Principle Power to secure deals for turbine supply, each float
will is expected to be able to support a 5-MW turbine.
Once they have proven the concept, they plan to reach out to project
developers, including utilities and IPPs to develop viable projects.
Principle Power is also on the lookout for equity investors with 6-7 year
horizons.
Emily Balogh is a contributing writer based in Washington, DC.
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