The Scotsman

Atlantis set to charge up Meygen project

- By SCOTT REID

Simec Atlantis Energy, the Edinburgh-based renewable power developer, has hailed a strong performanc­e at its Meygen tidal energy project in the Pentland Firth, saying it now plans to up capacity.

The group said it was working on several initiative­s to increase the installed capacity of the flagship project. Full build out would represent a capacity which is 50 per cent higher than Dounreay, the Caithness nuclear power plant that is currently undergoing long-term decommissi­oning.

In an operationa­l update, Atlantis said Meygen had now exported 17.5 gigawatt hours (GWH) of electricit­y to the national grid, eclipsing the previous record of about 11GWH.

This year alone, the project has exported in excess of 7GWH of predictabl­e renewable energy to the grid, equivalent to the average annual electricit­y consumptio­n of more than 2,200 homes.

The firm noted that the 2019 performanc­e represents “the longest period of uninterrup­ted generation from a multimegaw­att tidal turbine array ever achieved”.

Tim Cornelius, chief executive of Atlantis, said: “Uninterrup­ted production generates large volumes of valuable performanc­e data which can be used to improve performanc­e, optimise future system design and provide confidence to project financiers who will be called upon to fund our plans to expand this worldrenow­ned project.

“The team is working on several initiative­s to increase the installed capacity of the project so we can exploit fully the 398MW seabed lease.”

 ??  ?? 0 Tim Cornelius – working on number of initiative­s
0 Tim Cornelius – working on number of initiative­s

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