Surveying for Offshore Wind01/09/2009 |
| Developing the Third Market |
| Many giants are drilling for oil and gas: the gold of the sea. Since the beginning of the new millennium, however, a new kind of energy potential of the sea has been discovered: wind energy. The fastest way to create substantial amounts of this green energy is to build offshore wind farms. The seas have space enough, the wind yield is higher than on shore and the visual impact, which is so often a difficult hurdle to pass on shore, is not an issue at sea. Wind energy is characterised by renewability and sustainability. Not unimportant issues, as we need to anticipate future times when oil and gas reserves will be gone. The mission for the future is to supply all of us with sustainable energy. |
| Mattijs de Lange, Albert van der Hem |
View Larger Map Governments are looking,on the one hand, for CO2 reduction because of Kyoto Protocol agreements and, on the other hand, they are interested in becoming less dependent on imports of oil and gas. The discussion nowadays is no longer whether the solution is offshore wind versus nuclear power plants. The story is simple: uranium is not sustainable, whereas wind is. Uranium supplies will deplete eventually, as will oil and gas, and there is still no sustainable solution for the problem of nuclear waste. Therefore, wind farm developers claim spaces for offshore wind farms. They are faced, however, with powerful existing interests of the shipping and dredging industry. The oil and gas lobby are powerful and have their claims, too. Nevertheless, we can safely say that this third market is here to stay and will grow hard in the coming years.
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| Biography of the author Mattijs de Lange is a hydrographer and civil engineer. Since 1983 he has been involved in multidisciplinary sea projects worldwide for the first and second market, and since 2008 with survey aspects for offshore wind farms. He shares his professional passion as board member of the Hydrographic Society Benelux and as chairman of the SEAfoundation. Email: matt...@seaknowledge.nl Albert van der Hem is an offshore wind energy developer since 2003. As project director, he was responsible for the development of both the UK Sheringham Shoal (315MW) and the Belgium Belwind (330MW) offshore wind farms. Since 2009 he runs BLIX Renewable Energy BV. Email: alb...@blix-bv.com |
| References |
| http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bligh_Bank_Offshore_Wind_Farm |
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Comments (0): |
In the case of the Belgium Exclusive Economic Zone, some firm sea planning decisions have already been made by the government, speeding up the planning process. The famous Bligh Bank, named after the hydrographer and unfortunate captain of the Bounty, is one of them. The Bligh Bank project was developed by Belwind NV and its first phase of 165MW reached financial closure in July (see Figures 1 and 2). As we already knew from works from the first and second market, the southern North Sea and its phenomena of mega-ripples are renowned for causing free spans on pipelines for hundreds of metres. The tidal waves coming south along the coast of the UK make a right turn to the east due to the narrow Channel and continue in a northerly direction via the Belgium and Dutch coast, to complete an anti clockwise turn. At the same time, influx of fresh ocean water from the Channel makes it a very dynamic sea with a lot of friction and building power to create huge banks.
In order to give engineers sufficient input to create robust designs, reliable surveys are carried out, comprising geophysical surveys over the site, cone penetration tests (CPTs) at all turbine locations and boreholes at 10% of all turbine locations (see Figure 3). So, straightforward calculation shows a potential of approximately 10,000 CPTs and approximately 1,000 boreholes for the geotechnical survey market. Based on an average of 5–9MW per km2, a total of about 6,000km2 of geophysical surveys is expected in the North Sea alone.