Huge potential for offshore wind in Great Lakes

Note: Subsequent to this post the Ontario Power Authority sent me an e-mail to clarify some of the points I made below. I’m including them in the post where appropriate.

The Ontario Power Authority recently submitted an amendment of its 20-year system power plan to the province’s energy regulator. It includes a study completed by consulting firm Helimax Energy Inc. that looks at wind energy potenial on the Ontario side of the Great Lakes — presumably both offshore and nearshore opportunities. The study identified and ranked 64 offshore sites totalling nearly 35,000 megawatts. All sites were at water depths of between 5 metres and 30 metres, had average annual wind speeds of at least 8 metres a second, and were able to accommodate 100 MW or more each.

Helimax excluded any site that had physicial or environmental constraints. No sites on shipping lanes or located above underwater cables were considered. Likewise sites that were located around wetlands, conservation reserves and other protected areas were not included. Lake Huron had 27 promising sites, while Lake Erie had 25. Only nine sites were identifid for Lake Ontario and just three in Lake Superior. It bears repeating that these sites are only on the Ontario side — the U.S. side could have just as much or more. Characteristic of the better offshore wind regimes, Helimax calculated that the net capacity factor for all sites ranged from 34.7 per cent to 40.8 per cent, and it assumed the installation of 5-megawatt turbines. And as Helimax pointed out, “There are wind power projects that can be feasibly developed beyond the sites that are identified in the present study.”

What the study shows is that there is tremendous opportunity for offshore wind development in the Great Lakes, and it confirms capacity factors far superior than onshore sites. Though it is acknowledged that the cost of developing offshore farms will be higher, one must remember that they won’t be as high as the offshore projects being pursued in Europe, where rough, deep seas present greater technical challenges. And costs could drop depending on how serious Ontario — or Michigan or New York for that matter — want to develop this resource. In fact, jurisdictions like Ontario have an opportunity to become a centre of excellence for offshore wind development in North America.

But critics say the Ontario’s power authority continues to downplay the importance of the resource. For some reason its submission to the regulator has assumed a capacity factor for offshore projects of 25.3 per cent, compared to an assumed 20 per cent for onshore. Why it has ignored Helimax’s 34.7 to 40.8 per cent rating is perplexing? (OPA comment: The capacity factor of 34.7 per cent to 40.8 per cent to which Tyler refers represents the net annual output of offshore wind projects divided by the maximum output at rated capacity. It is a measure of the forecast energy contribution of offshore wind projects. Effective capacity of 25.3 per cent is OPA’s estimate of the amount of output from offshore windprojects that will be available with a high degree of confidence during the peak hour of the year… Effective capacity is a measure of the capacity contribution, and is quite different from the capacity factor. Unfortunately, the industry terminology has lead to confusion for many.)

The power authority also says it will not include any offshore projects in its 20-year plan because it claims the lowest-cost offshore project would still be more expensive than the highest-cost onshore project, “despite having a more favourable wind regime and higher energy production potential.” Interesting is that it includes the cost of transmission in the offshore projects, which doesn’t generally happen with other power projects. (OPA comment: Costs for connection, enabler lines and transmission upgrades were included in the all-inclusive Levelized Unit Energy Cost calculation for all wind and hydroelectric projects… To reiterate, transmission costs were included in the all-inclusive LUEC calculation for both onshore and offshore wind proejcts).

Given that the offshore market in North America is new and relatively wide open, one might think there’s added benefits to pursuing this resource as part of a much broader industrial strategy. Ontario’s manufacturing sector is struggling. Offshore wind could present one of several opportunities to create green-collar manufacturing jobs, proponents say. They’re hopeful that the Ontario government sees the larger opportunity and is more willing to pursue it.

Perhaps more frustrating for some is the context of all this. Two nuclear reactors in southwestern Ontario are 60 per cent complete and already $600 million over budget, but both the operator of these reactors and the power authority that approved the project seem to treat it more like a rounding error. Yet talk of spending hundreds of millions of dollars to support development of a new industry is dismissed because of higher costs and too much risk.

It’s fair to ask why?

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8 Responses to “Huge potential for offshore wind in Great Lakes”

  1. Anonymous Says:

    Asking why is a good question. Ontario government, except for throwing money at car manufacturers (they are after the unions jobs) has no interest in manufacturing. They are happy to pay .42/kwh hour for solar, even though none of it is going toward the development of solar manufacturing in Ontario, and they have some of the highest taxes on manufacturers in North America. But as long as they can throw money a Public Union workers and auto workers, they are happy. You have to be absolutely stupid to start a manufacturing business in Ontario.

  2. Anonymous Says:

    Business taxes affect NOTHING except the money that is paid out in dividends. If you reinvest your profits in your company, nothing is lost, regardless of how high the business taxes are. Frankly I don’t think that dividend payments are smart business in any case. They are just a shady way to boost a stock price by making potential shareholders drool in anticipation (and since most execs own shares in their own company… well, you can see why they give out huge dividends, right? It isn’t for their company’s success, because dividends don’t help that. It is for their personal profit).

    However I do agree that Ontario and all levels of government across the rest of Canada are failing to provide any substantial support to real manufactures. And I honestly, truly don’t understand why. There is no rhyme or reason to their stupidity.

  3. Anonymous Says:

    I am not sure where you learned accounting. Any business can use only after tax money for investment.

  4. Anonymous Says:

    Here a major breakthru in wind turbine from Flodesign’s jet engine shaped wind turbine is designed to be an amazingly 3 to 4 times more efficient than standard wind turbines. Present day wind turbines only capture 50% of the air flow, cannot stand high winds, have high building standards, require many trucks to deliver parts for 1 turbine and have to be built tall and away from habitable areas.

    http://got2begreen.com/jet-wind-turbine-4-times-more-efficient/

    Al Gore, the former vice president and Nobel Peace Prize winner who is now a partner at Silicon Valley venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, has offered FloDesign venture financing totaling as much as $10 million.

    http://www.xconomy.com/2008/05/14/al-gore-eyeing-big-investment-in-clean-energy-prize-winner/

  5. Anonymous Says:

    Thanks for the heads-up to Flodesign. Very interesting technology. I wonder how it will affect capacity factor, power per turbine, and cost per watt.

    Stephen

  6. Anonymous Says:

    … things like R&D, Building new assets (offices, manufacturing plants), and training workers are all tax deductible. Companies effectively don’t pay taxes for those things. Taxes are calculated based on NET PROFIT, not net revenue (hence the reason why the conservative minister of finance is an idiot for saying that lower business taxes will help the manufacturing sector in Ontario. If a company isn’t making any profit, they don’t pay taxes).

  7. Anonymous Says:

    I looked at the FloDesign website and watched the vid, but they didn’t show me how they are getting the increased efficiency, and especially since they first talk about large-blade machines knocking out of the way of the blades, ie deflecting, wind they might otherwise capture if it stayed within the circumference of the blades travel.

    Do you know of any better explanations of how the thing works?

    It seems to me the rear cowling catches that wind and adds it back into the on-axis winds, but this takes place AFTER they have passed the blades section. Is there some kind of suction effect pulling from after the fact, the winds still in front of the fact?

  8. Anonymous Says:

    FloDesign video talked about a typical wind turbine is only 50% efficient the other 50% of the wind moves around the blades. FloDesign shows their secondary ring, pull additional air through causing a turbulent affect and i would imagine increase air pressure, resulting in turning the turbines faster and thus creating increase efficiency. At least that’s how i interpreted it.

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