Abstract

Coastal areas committed to the development of affordable and clean energy sources can find significant means to achieve their decarbonization objectives in offshore wind technology for power generation. However, the development of this technology in island territories with small-scale isolated electrical systems faces technical constraints that, in turn, translate into economic limitations. The objective of this study is to determine offshore wind energy curtailment and its impact on the LCOE in island territories with small-scale isolated electrical systems. To accomplish this, the data of electrical energy demand and generation of onshore renewable energy and conventional energy over a year have been used, with the Canary Islands (Spain-EU) adopted as a case study. The regional government there has established total decarbonization of its economy by 2040 as the central axis of its energy policy. The results show percentages of offshore wind energy curtailment exceeding 35% and an increase in the LCOE of up to 17%. One of the conclusions highlights the need for governmental action to neutralize this increase in the LCOE. This study sheds light on the technical and economic implications for government energy plans promoting the large-scale deployment of floating offshore wind facilities in island territories.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call