Wave resource characterization and co-location with offshore wind in the Irish Sea

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Wave resource characterization and co-location with offshore wind in the Irish Sea. / Neill, Simon.
In: Renewable Energy, Vol. 222, 119902, 24.02.2024.

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Neill S. Wave resource characterization and co-location with offshore wind in the Irish Sea. Renewable Energy. 2024 Feb 24;222:119902. Epub 2023 Dec 30. doi: 10.1016/j.renene.2023.119902

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TY - JOUR

T1 - Wave resource characterization and co-location with offshore wind in the Irish Sea

AU - Neill, Simon

PY - 2024/2/24

Y1 - 2024/2/24

N2 - One barrier affecting progress in the wave energy sector is detailed knowledge of the spatiotemporal distribution of waves in shelf sea regions, including their inter- and intra-annual variability. Here, a recent decade (2012-2021) of waves is simulated at high-resolution in the Irish Sea - a region with much offshore energy infrastructure. The spectral wave model SWAN is forced with ERA5 wind fields. There is a strong seasonal cycle in wave height and power. In all months except for July, large waves (significant wave height greater than 5 m) can penetrate into the northern part of the Irish Sea, but the most energetic region is the Celtic Sea, where monthly mean wave power exceeds 30 kW/m in December. In this region, wave power strongly correlates with the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) from September to March. To investigate the potential for co-location, i.e. to reduce costs through shared infrastructure, wave and wind power were compared at a leased floating wind site in the Celtic Sea. Over the simulated decade, r^2 ~ 0.5, demonstrating modest potential for co-location of wind and wave energy technologies in this part of the Irish Sea - considerably less favourable than other sites in the North Atlantic that experience greater swell.

AB - One barrier affecting progress in the wave energy sector is detailed knowledge of the spatiotemporal distribution of waves in shelf sea regions, including their inter- and intra-annual variability. Here, a recent decade (2012-2021) of waves is simulated at high-resolution in the Irish Sea - a region with much offshore energy infrastructure. The spectral wave model SWAN is forced with ERA5 wind fields. There is a strong seasonal cycle in wave height and power. In all months except for July, large waves (significant wave height greater than 5 m) can penetrate into the northern part of the Irish Sea, but the most energetic region is the Celtic Sea, where monthly mean wave power exceeds 30 kW/m in December. In this region, wave power strongly correlates with the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) from September to March. To investigate the potential for co-location, i.e. to reduce costs through shared infrastructure, wave and wind power were compared at a leased floating wind site in the Celtic Sea. Over the simulated decade, r^2 ~ 0.5, demonstrating modest potential for co-location of wind and wave energy technologies in this part of the Irish Sea - considerably less favourable than other sites in the North Atlantic that experience greater swell.

U2 - 10.1016/j.renene.2023.119902

DO - 10.1016/j.renene.2023.119902

M3 - Article

VL - 222

JO - Renewable Energy

JF - Renewable Energy

SN - 0960-1481

M1 - 119902

ER -