Abstract

As part of ongoing commitments to produce electricity from renewable energy sources in Scotland, Orkney waters have been targeted for potential large-scale deployment of wave and tidal energy converting devices. Orkney has a well-developed infrastructure supporting the marine energy industry; recently enhanced by the construction of additional piers. A major concern to marine industries is biofouling on submerged structures, including energy converters and measurement instrumentation. In this study, the marine energy infrastructure and instrumentation were surveyed to characterise the biofouling. Fouling communities varied between deployment habitats; key species were identified allowing recommendations for scheduling device maintenance and preventing spread of invasive organisms. A method to measure the impact of biofouling on hydrodynamic response is described and applied to data from a wave-monitoring buoy deployed at a test site in Orkney. The results are discussed in relation to the accuracy of the measurement resources for power generation. Further applications are suggested for future testing in other scenarios, including tidal energy.

Highlights

  • The Scottish Government has set the objective of delivering the equivalent of 100% of electricity from renewable sources by 2020 (Scottish Government 2013)

  • The aim of the study was to provide baseline information regarding community composition and the degree of biofouling on marine renewable energy devices (MREDs) and supporting infrastructure, and to illustrate, using a case study, how an understanding of these data can be applied to assess the performance of data buoys in deployed settings

  • For example: in more sheltered shores, where marinas and harbours are sited, major fouling species include Semibalanus balanoides, Fucus spiralis, and Mytilus edulis; in extreme wave exposure conditions off West Mainland, Orkney, shallow depth fouling is dominated by Alaria

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Summary

Introduction

The Scottish Government has set the objective of delivering the equivalent of 100% of electricity from renewable sources by 2020 (Scottish Government 2013). The assessment of the potential for electricity generation from these sources has created significant interest in Orkney as being highly suitable for large-scale deployment of wave and tidal energy converting devices. The European Marine Energy Centre (EMEC) was established in Stromness in 2003, to test marine renewable energy devices (MREDs) in the resource-rich waters around Orkney (EMEC 2016). EMEC has hosted over 17 wave and tidal developers testing 27 subsea and surface energy converters (EMEC 2016). Through the establishment of grid-connected and scale test sites for both wave and tidal energy, EMEC has helped develop marine infrastructure to support device testing including subsea electrical cables, surface buoys, moorings, and an environmental monitoring pod used for integrating environmental sensor data gathering

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