Friday, October 23, 2020

NY's East River Experiment Aims to Tap Tidal Power for Con Ed


The New York's East River is set to become the Testing Ground for a Technology that Generates Electricity from the Tides.

Verdant Power, a Marine Energy Technology Company in New York, installed Three Small Underwater Turbines in the River, Thursday Oct. 22nd, that will Feed Power to Consolidated Edison’s Grid.

“We want to prove we have the basis of a commercial, standard system that can be scaled,” Verdant Chief Executive, John Banigan, said in an interview.

Marine Energy has been around for years, but its Adoption has been Stymied by High Costs and Mechanical Issues.

Verdant’s System, big enough to Power a handful of Homes, is expected to Showcase the Technology as the Company works on a Large, Commercial Project in the United Kingdom that might be Installed in 2023.

The Turbines have 16-foot Rotors, Half the Size of what Verdant is Planning for the U.K. Project, with 35 Kilowatts of Capacity each, about Four times Bigger than a Typical U.S. Residential Rooftop Solar System.

Reducing Costs is key to making the Technology Competitive.

If Verdant can Install about 300 Megawatts to 400 Megawatts Worldwide, the Company expects to produce Power for about 14 cents per Kilowatt-Hour, with Installation Costs of about $3 Million per Megawatt.

At 1,000 Megawatts in Operation, that would fall to 10 cents per Kilowatt-hour.

Still, that’s more than Twice the Cost of Wind and Solar Power Today.










NYC Wins When Everyone Can Vote! Michael H. Drucker


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