| India
Set to Get Asia's First Tidal Power Plant
With the proposed
commissioning of a 50-Mw tidal power project off the coast
of Gujarat in 2013, India is ready to place its first seamark
that will be a first for Asia as well.
London-based marine energy developer Atlantis
Resources Corporation, along with Gujarat Power Corporation
Ltd, has signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with the
Gujarat government to start this project.
The cost for the plant is expected to
be in the vicinity of Rs 750 crore. This plant is also is
expected to be scaled up to 250 Mw.
Timothy Cornelius, CEO, Atlantis Resources
Corporation, said with just about 2 giga watt of tidal power
installations in the world today, this is a completely new
and uncharted power sources with immense potential. Tidal
power today is what wind energy was 10 years back, he
said.
Due to the high investment in setting
up the project, a typical tidal power project is expected
to break even between 8 and 12 years after commissioning.
Despite the long gestation period to make it commercially
viable, tidal power has unparalleled environmental advantages.
Tidal current power uses turbines
to harness the energy contained in the flow of ocean tides.
It is unique as like tidal movements, power output is highly
predictable and sustainable with zero visual impact and the
turbines are completely submerged. Tidal power is like putting
a wind turbine subsea and the turbine rotors rotate slowly,
causing very little environmental impact to marine flora and
fauna, said Cornelius.
The power offtaker would be Gujarat Power
Corporation. The final cost of power per unit will be determined
at the completion of front-end engineering and design (FEED)
phase, but was expected to be competitive when compared to
the large solar power projects planned for development in
Gujarat, the company said.
The project is currently owned by Atlantis
and GPCL and project equity participants will be sought at
the completion of FEED phase.
Late last year, Atlantis became the turbine
supplier to the largest planned marine power project in the
world, MeyGen, a 378-Mw tidal power project in the Pentland
Firth in Northern Scotland.
Current estimates suggest 15 per cent
of the worlds power demands can be met by tidal current
power sources, while the estimates for India are currently
around 5 per cent of its annual demand for power.
It is only an estimate, but it could
be certainly more than 5 per cent, inclusive of wave power
and tidal power, from what we know now. However, resource
investigation has just begun and with so much coast line,
I would expect this number to increase significantly,
said Cornelius.
Sea water, which is 832 times denser than
air, gives a 5 knot ocean current more kinetic energy than
a 350-km an hour wind, thus allowing ocean currents to have
a very high energy density. Accurate predictions of tidal
current movements also make this one of the most predictable
and, therefore, reliable sources of renewable energy available
today.
Source: India Brand Equity
Foundation
Date: January 17, 2011

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