http://thechronicleherald.ca/Business/1218342.html Companies to discuss turbine today
Damaged unit expected to reach Dartmouth Dec. 30By JUDY MYRDEN Business Reporter
Tue, Dec 21 - 4:53 AM
Officials from Irish tidal energy company OpenHydro and Dartmouth’s Cherubini Metal Works will meet today and Wednesday to prepare for the arrival of their badly damaged $10-million experimental turbine.
A specially built barge designed by OpenHydro is carrying the doughnut-shaped damaged turbine to Cherubini’s yard from Parrsboro, where it was pulled from the seabed on Thursday.
Depending on weather conditions, the turbine is expected to arrive Dec. 30.
Steve Ross, Cherubini’s general manager, expects to find out the extent of the work that will be required for Cherubini when OpenHydro’s technical team arrives at the yard.
The turbine, which weighs between 40 and 45 tonnes, is to be lifted off the barge at the Cherubini fabrication facility and brought inside, where OpenHydro wants to conduct a forensic analysis of what caused all 12 blades to break off, said Ross on Monday.
"They are trying to discover what happened, and I think they have an onboard computer that they have to get some information out of."
Cherubini fabricated the 400-tonne gravity sea base of the turbine in the summer of 2009 for $1.9 million.
The one-megawatt tidal turbine, manufactured in Ireland by OpenHydro, was deployed in November 2009 in the Bay of Fundy. It was retrieved a year earlier than planned, due to blade breakage and wireless sensor failures.
The Chronicle Herald was the first to report that the utility
lost contact with the turbine seven days after it was launched. Wireless sensors attached to it were to collect data about potential electrical production and environmental impact.
Then in June, OpenHydro and its partner Nova Scotia Power announced they had discovered that two blades made from blends of plastic and glass had broken off the turbine. This malfunction forced OpenHydro to pull the device out of the water.
Last Friday, Nova Scotia Power and OpenHydro held a news conference to announce that the turbine had been recovered from the Minas Passage, about 10 kilometres west of Parrsboro in about 30 metres of water.
James Ives, OpenHydro’s president, revealed that
all 12 blades were missing but the rest of the turbine was intact and in good condition.
Ives said it will be months before a decision is made as to whether the turbine should be fixed or a new turbine deployed.
"That’s a decision we’ll make further down the road. We are totally committed to re-installing this turbine and continuing this program," Ives said Friday. "We’ve got an enormous amount of data from this turbine. We’re going to analyze that and we’re going to inspect the turbine."
He said the privately owned technology company probably underestimated the force of tidal currents that caused the blades to pop out.
Ives refused to reveal how much the recovery of the turbine will cost, except to say that Nova Scotia Power customers would not be paying the tab.
Despite the setbacks, both companies remain optimistic the project will move forward.
"Tidal flows are the single most important input into tidal economics, so the stronger flow of water the better the tidal farm and, really, what we are seeing is the Bay of Fundy is really at the top of the list in terms of the best tidal farm in the world," said Ives.
"We’ve got turbines in other parts of the world that are running extremely well. This is the only occurrence we’ve had of this issue."
The turbine cost $10 million, with Nova Scotia Power investing the lion’s share, and $4.6 million coming from Sustainable Development Technology Canada, a non-profit green energy foundation with offices in Ottawa, Toronto and Vancouver.
Two other groups — Minas Basin Pulp and Power and partner Marine Current Turbines Ltd. of Bristol, England; and Alstom Hydro of France with Clean Current Power Systems Inc. of Vancouver — plan to deploy test turbines in the Bay of Fundy in 2012.