Abstract
Policymakers are trying to cut carbon-dioxide emissions and have
promoted generating electricity using solar, wind, wave converters and
tidal turbines. But a larger need is to supplement petroleum, the
polluting but superb transportation fuel. Ocean Thermal Energy
Conversion plants operated during the past 40 years show that OTEC
plants have the (1) reliability and (2) massive scale to synthesize a
sustainable new global fuel to replace dwindling petroleum supplies. For
reliability, we will review the experience of the two OTEC plants
currently operating in Japan and Hawai’i. Both plants have demonstrated
robust performance for heat exchangers and power components. This record
is possible because OTEC uses components similar to typical power plant
or air-conditioning machinery. Mini-OTEC generated the first net power
in 1978, and it was designed and built in only a year. Today’s onshore
plants easily synchronize with the grid frequency, and generate
dispatchable electric power instead of the intermittent power from most
renewable energy sources. Recent OTEC floating designs benefit from the
offshore industry’s hull and power cable research & development. For
scale, large OTEC plants operating on the tropical high seas are a
feasible supply chain to make transportation fuel in
globally-significant volumes. Two recent computer studies suggest that
industrial OTEC will have benign biological and climate impact. In
comparison, it would require 100% of the US corn harvest to furnish
only 30% of US gasoline needs – with no jet fuel or diesel. The
expensive drama of obtaining permits for renewable energy projects show
that the land and shoreline are already crowded, yet the solar energy
equivalent to seven offshore Sahara Deserts is being ignored. Finally,
policies and costs supporting or hindering OTEC will be compared for
eight nations and the United States, including findings by the
International Energy Agency’s Ocean Energy Systems committee. These
results explain the current state of this attractive ocean energy
resource.