Major UK project to unlock untapped potential of ocean renewable energy fuels

August 2, 2021 Maritime Safety News

An innovative £10 million research project, led by the University of Strathclyde, has been set up to investigate the potential of harnessing offshore wind and marine renewable energy to produce zero-carbon hydrogen and ammonia fuels.

Illustration/Offshore wind farm collocated with wave energy farm (Courtesy of CorPower Ocean)
Illustration/Co-located offshore wind and wave energy farm (Courtesy of CorPower Ocean)

The multi-disciplinary Ocean-REFuel: Ocean Renewable Energy Fuels project will explore ways of converting ocean energy into fuels for use in heating, energy storage and difficult to decarbonise transport applications.

The news comes as the UK prepares to host COP26, the UN Climate Change Conference, in Glasgow and the consortium includes world-leading research teams from the Universities of Nottingham, Cardiff, Newcastle and Imperial College London.

The UK government has the ambition for offshore wind to produce more than enough electricity to power every home in the country by 2030, based on current electricity usage, but there remains extremely large ocean energy potential which can never be fully utilised by the electricity network.

 

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Major UK project to unlock untapped potential of ocean renewable energy fuels


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