Seite - 126 - in Water, Energy, and Environment - A Primer
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markets for their outputs (note: 50%ofAmericans livewithin50
milesofaUScoast).Oceansitesalsoallowdeploymentof larger
wind turbines (improving theeconomicsofpowergeneration), as
wellas reducedonshorevisualandnoise impacts.Thetrade-off is
thatOSWfarms, subject to harsh ocean conditions, canbemore
expensive, difficult to build, and maintain than onshore
wind farms.
Offshore wind resources are abundant, many countries are
exploring its potential, and by the end of 2017 nearly 19,000
MW of capacity had been installed in 17 markets around the
world. Almost 16,000MW (84%) were installed in the waters
off the coasts of 11 European countries. The remaining 16%
was located largely in the waters off China, followed by
Vietnam, Japan, South Korea, the US and Taiwan. The US,
which is today far behind other countries in deploying offshore
wind, sited its first offshore wind turbines in the waters off
Rhode Island in 2016. Nevertheless, on a global basis, the
potentialUSOSWenergy resources are second only to those of
China. China has a very long coastline and the US has a
broadly distributed OSW resource associated with four coastal
regions (East Coast,West Coast, Gulf Coast, Great Lakes), and
thirtyUSstates border anoceanor aGreatLake.
In its report ‘2016 Offshore Wind Energy Resource
Assessment for theUnited States’ (49) theNREL estimated the
US potential ‘net technical resource capacity’ to be 2058GW.
This was calculated by estimating the US’s potential gross
OSWenergy capacity out to 200nautical miles (the outer edge
of the US Exclusive Economic Zone), excluding ocean areas
with water depths greater than 1000m and wind speeds less
than 7m/sec (15.7miles per hour), water deeper than 60m in
the Great Lakes (to avoid damage from winter ice), and other
exclusions for shipping lanes and marine protected areas. The
net resultwas that the gross resource potential areawas reduced
by 75% to arrive at the technical resource potential area (after
exclusions), and the gross energy resource numberwas reduced
Water,Energy,
andEnvironment–APrimer126
Water, Energy, and Environment
A Primer
- Titel
- Water, Energy, and Environment
- Untertitel
- A Primer
- Autor
- Allan R. Hoffman
- Verlag
- IWA Publishing
- Datum
- 2019
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
- ISBN
- 9781780409665
- Abmessungen
- 14.0 x 21.0 cm
- Seiten
- 218
- Schlagwörter
- Environmental Sciences, Water, Renewable Energy, Environmental Technology
- Kategorie
- Technik