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posted by CoolHand on Thursday August 27 2015, @04:10AM   Printer-friendly
from the break-out-the-hula-dancing dept.

Hawaii is often the first to roll out new renewable energy projects and for good reason. The island state depends on imported fuel to provide most of its power, but that is changing quickly. The state has a plan to use 100 percent renewable energy by 2045 and it has already installed wind power plants, sophisticated smart grid systems, plenty of rooftop solar and, now, the first fully closed-cycle Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion (OTEC) plant in the U.S.

OTEC is a process that produces electricity by using the temperature difference between the warm ocean surface waters of tropical areas and the much colder deep water below. The plant that Hawaii has just installed pumps water from the warm shoreline as well as from the cold deeper ocean through a heat exchanger. The resulting steam drives a turbine and produce electricity at an onshore power station, pictured below.
...
The OTEC plant has a capacity of 105 kW, which is enough to power 120 Hawaiian homes per year. That may seem paltry, but even at that small capacity, it's the largest plant of its kind in the world. It will serve as a demo site called the Ocean Energy Research Center to prove the potential of this type of technology and to inspire other places in the region like Okinawa and Guam to install something similar.

The article projects electricity provided by a scaled-up version of the plant would retail at $0.20/kwh. Given that Hawaii has the highest electricity rates in the nation, in the neighborhood of $0.48/kwh, that's a big savings.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday August 27 2015, @06:19AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday August 27 2015, @06:19AM (#228486)

    And people from Hawaii Nei have to read about this on SoylentNews! Oh, auwe!