Wave
energy could be cheaper and easier to integrate into current energy systems
than other forms of renewables because of its relative consistency, according
to new analysis.
The study, a collaboration between researchers
at Oregon State University, the University of Victoria, and private industry,
estimates that the cost of integrating wave energy into the system would be 10%
or less than the costs of integrating wind energy. However, the researchers
noted that integration is just one component.
The findings, published in journal Renewable Energy, are based on a lower variability
with wave energy. The researchers explain that the variability of alternative
energy sources is one of the factors that holds back their wider use because if
wind or solar energy decreases and varies widely, then other energy production
has to back it up, adding to the overall cost of energy supply.
In comparison to other renewables, wave energy
has a lower variability and by balancing wave energy production over a larger
geographic area this can be reduced further. As a result, wave energy has the
potential to provide cheaper and more consistent energy than both wind and
solar.
“Whenever
any new form of energy is added, a challenge is to integrate it into the system
along with other sources,” explains Ted Brekken, an associate professor and
renewable energy expert in the College of Engineering at Oregon State
University.
“By
producing wave energy from a range of different sites, possibly with different
types of technology, and taking advantage of the comparative consistency of the
wave resource itself, it appears that wave energy integration should be easier
than that of wind energy. The reserve, or backup generation, necessary for wave
energy integration should be minimal.”
Whilst wave energy is still in the infancy of
its development, and as a result is not price competitive on an overall bases,
costs are expected to fall further as technologies improve, systems are
developed and the energy source becomes more widespread.
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