Kuwait Times

Dutch seek to harness energy from salt water mix

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AMSTERDAM: Dutch researcher­s are seeking to add a new, largely untapped renewable energy source to the world’s energy mix with the opening of a “Blue Energy” test facility on Wednesday.

Blue energy takes advantage of the difference in salt concentrat­ion between sea water and fresh water to produce electricit­y. Rik Siebers of REDstack BV, the company overseeing the project, said the goal is to improve the technology to the point where it will be profitable to build blue energy plants commercial­ly in the 2020s. Siebers said blue energy will one day have its own niche. “For wind turbines you need wind, and solar panels work in the day, but water is always flowing,” he said in a telephone interview Wednesday. The Dutch plant has a theoretica­l maximum capacity of 50 megawatts, about enough to power 100 Dutch homes. A more limited trial of similar technology began in Norway in 2009.

The technique uses two specialize­d filters with salt and fresh water on each side. One filter lets positively charged sodium ions seep through, while the other admits negatively charged chlorine ions, creating a natural battery.

Each square meter of the filter panel can generate roughly one watt, and the filters are then arranged in stacks of hundreds to multiply the effect. It’s no coincidenc­e the technique is being pioneered in the Netherland­s, which has a wealth of river-coast interchang­es including the Rhine and Meuse river deltas.

The test plant is strategica­lly located on the Afsluitdij­k, the long dike built off the Dutch coast in the 1930s that turned part of the North Sea into an enormous freshwater lake. The project is being funded by a mix of government and private sponsors, with participat­ion by the University of Twente. — AP

 ??  ?? This undated photo from the California Institute of Technology shows Marvin L. Goldberger. Goldberger, a former president of Caltech and a noted physicist, died Wednesday. He was 92. Caltech said Goldberger died of cancer in the La Jolla area of San Diego. Goldberger was Caltech’s president from 1978 to 1987. During that time, Goldberger helped develop the first 10-meter telescope at the Keck Observator­y in Hawaii. It is one of the largest optical telescopes in the world. — AP
This undated photo from the California Institute of Technology shows Marvin L. Goldberger. Goldberger, a former president of Caltech and a noted physicist, died Wednesday. He was 92. Caltech said Goldberger died of cancer in the La Jolla area of San Diego. Goldberger was Caltech’s president from 1978 to 1987. During that time, Goldberger helped develop the first 10-meter telescope at the Keck Observator­y in Hawaii. It is one of the largest optical telescopes in the world. — AP

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