Cost-Benefit Analysis of a Hybrid Biophysical Approach to Wave Energy Extraction: Bio-Oscillator

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Tabea Hildebrand - , TUD Dresden University of Technology, NIWA, Fraunhofer Institute for Energy Economics and Energy System Technology (Author)
  • Christian Fischer - , NIWA, Oxenu LLP (Author)
  • Veronica Relano - , University of British Columbia (Author)
  • Richard Gorman - , NIWA (Author)
  • Craig Stevens - , NIWA, The University of Auckland (Author)

Abstract

A cost-benefit analysis (CBA) is described for a novel wave energy converters (WEC) design based on a marine hybrid bio-structure—a combination of macroalgae, shellfish or other species on a built frame. The Bio-Oscillator design utilises a hard “skeleton” (e.g., carbon fibre, wood) on which biological organisms (e.g., shellfish, large macroalgae) are grown. As waves pass by, the load generated by the oscillating drag and inertia is transferred through mooring lines to power takeoff technology. This novel approach essentially reverses the typical marine engineering view that “bio-fouling is bad” and instead leverages off the added-drag of biological growth on structures. The approach results in a structure that is largely biodegradable, naturally self-replicating and synergistic with the background environment, self-de-risking in terms of failure impact and can leverage off its own form to enhance energy capture beyond a conventional design. This reduces impact while connecting with conventional marine industries such as aquaculture. A CBA examines the economic pros and cons of this approach, focusing on installation and material costs, along with benefits from synergistic production. The analysis suggests that in addition to typical wave energy obstacles (e.g., cable length, capture width, and power take off) the benefits (biodegradability, harvestability, and carbon reduction) of replacing much of the mass of the structure with living biological material can be included.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Article number628148
JournalFrontiers in marine science
Volume8
Publication statusPublished - 15 Apr 2021
Peer-reviewedYes

Keywords

Sustainable Development Goals

Keywords

  • aquaculture, blue economy, macroalgae, marine energy converter, renewable energy, wave-structure interaction