The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Clone of Fife turbine will help Scottish renewables

ENERGY: Project is huge opportunit­y for Scotland to fulfil potential of green energy

- Andrew argo business@thecourier.co.uk

A digital clone of the Levenmouth turbine is being created by the Offshore Renewable Energy (ORE) Catapult to help create more effective versions of the giant green energy bladed structures.

The Scottish Government has contribute­d £215,000 to the £450,000 project, seeing it as a venture to help Scotland capitalise on the potential of the renewable energy sector.

ORE Catapult, headquarte­red in Glasgow, is one of Europe’s leading research centres specialisi­ng in offshore renewables, including wind, wave and tidal.

It acquired the Levenmouth 7MW demonstrat­ion offshore wind turbine from Samsung Heavy Industries.

One of the world’s most advanced offshore wind turbines dedicated to research, it offers opportunit­ies for training and skills vital for the future of the offshore wind industry.

The developmen­t of a digital clone opens up the opportunit­ies to the wider academic and industrial base in Scotland.

The clone will use sensor instrument­ation to advance the industry’s understand­ing of how large megawatt turbines behave, and identify cost saving opportunit­ies through design optimisati­on.

Censors will monitor the Levenmouth turbine’s blades, tower and substructu­re to provide data on its behaviour in real-world conditions.

The findings can help Scottish engineerin­g and manufactur­ing companies in the green energy market.

The digital clone is a better way to develop large scale turbines than continuall­y build new ones without detailed data and judge their performanc­e.

Cian Conroy, ORE Catapult’s sector lead for wind, said: “Deploying sensors on the Levenmouth turbine gives us a unique opportunit­y to understand the behaviour of a large turbine in realworld conditions, and benefit the industry, its supply chain and academia.”

Professor Bill Leithead of Strathclyd­e University and chairman of Supergen Wind, said: “Instrument­ation of the turbine has the potential to support a number of vital research projects for the offshore wind industry.

“It will also position the UK academic research community at the heart of European wind research.”

Scottish Energy Minister Paul Wheelhouse said: “This represents a huge opportunit­y as the country looks to increase vastly its demand for renewable electricit­y and heat.

“This is why we must have a workforce with the skills needed to help grow this industry.”

 ??  ?? ORE Catapult’s sector lead for wind, Cian Conroy, strategy and commercial­isation director Dr Stephen Wyatt, Scottish Energy Minister Paul Wheelhouse and ORE Catapult operations director Tony Quinn on the platform of the Levenmouth Demonstrat­ion Turbine.
ORE Catapult’s sector lead for wind, Cian Conroy, strategy and commercial­isation director Dr Stephen Wyatt, Scottish Energy Minister Paul Wheelhouse and ORE Catapult operations director Tony Quinn on the platform of the Levenmouth Demonstrat­ion Turbine.

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