The answer is so simple. Lines of turbines on the sea bed all the way up the estuary. No barrage, constant power as the high tide line moves. Generation both in and out. No environmental impact other than on the sea bed. Obviously too simple and not enough back handers!
The answer is so simple. Lines of turbines on the sea bed all the way up the estuary. No barrage, constant power as the high tide line moves. Generation both in and out. No environmental impact other than on the sea bed. Obviously too simple and not enough back handers!
I don't think, apart from travelling through, it will make much difference to us who sail there. To create the power they will have to allow the level inside the barrage to raise and lower, just as it does now. The only difference I can see is the delay they would have to introduce to provide enough "head" for the turbines to work. That delay may increase the settlement that causes such a problem at places like Watchet.I suspect the likely growth of aquatic leisure activities has never been adequately built into any of the countless Severn barrage studies; the taming of the Severn's fearsome tidal flows inside the barrier would create a watersports facility that would make the Solent look pokey in comparison, the potential economic impact of that could be vast.
If it was simple building subsea turbines we would be subsidising them like we're subsidising whirligigs. There's nothing simple about any of it, except perhaps Peter Hain!![]()
I'd have thought that when what are now raging torrents are reduced to perhaps 1-2 knots peak flow there will likely be a great expansion in watersports.I don't think, apart from travelling through, it will make much difference to us who sail there. To create the power they will have to allow the level inside the barrage to raise and lower, just as it does now. The only difference I can see is the delay they would have to introduce to provide enough "head" for the turbines to work. That delay may increase the settlement that causes such a problem at places like Watchet.
Allan
Not really; the energy is in the head of water. The flows would matter if it was an array of subsea turbines, but barrages work in the same way as dams; head matters.The other is that to get the energy levels they are predicting they cannot reduce the tidal flows significantly. After all it is the power of those flows that makes the scheme look so good.
Allan
I totally agree with that. Therefore to use that head to produce maximum power they will have to let all the water out whilst there is a height difference i.e. within the ebb. During the flood it works in the opposite direction. The difference between a tidal barrage and a dam is the time you have a usable head is restricted. The only way they will be able to use a significant amount of the obvious tidal power is to delay the tides within the barrage to create a head. If they halve the tidal streams on the ebb, they will only be producing half of the power and will still have half the tidal water inside, thus not have the head (difference) for producing power on the flood. I hope that makes sense?Not really; the energy is in the head of water. The flows would matter if it was an array of subsea turbines, but barrages work in the same way as dams; head matters.
I totally agree with that. Therefore to use that head to produce maximum power they will have to let all the water out whilst there is a height difference i.e. within the ebb. During the flood it works in the opposite direction. The difference between a tidal barrage and a dam is the time you have a usable head is restricted. The only way they will be able to use a significant amount of the obvious tidal power is to delay the tides within the barrage to create a head. If they halve the tidal streams on the ebb, they will only be producing half of the power and will still have half the tidal water inside, thus not have the head (difference) for producing power on the flood. I hope that makes sense?
Allan