A Connemara company has secured €3 million from the European Commission to research and design a marine turbine that uses recycled materials for the first time.
As The Times Ireland edition reports, designers at ÉireComposites in Indreabhán, Co Galway, believe their marine hydrokinetic power system can produce clean energy reliably at a reduced cost.
It will work with partners including marine renewable energy specialists Ocean Renewable Power Company (ORPC), NUI Galway, Mitsubishi Chemical Advanced Materials in Germany and Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, the Italian state research company.
Total value of the project is €3.9m, of which some €3m has been awarded to the Irish design team.
Tomás Flanagan, chief executive officer at ÉireComposites, said the aim is to use recycled carbon fibre for a “mini” version of a larger turbine that ORPC will build.
He says that marine turbine systems can harvest a potential 615 terawatt-hours per year from tidal streams, ocean currents and river currents – as in approximately 21 times Ireland’s annual electricity use.
Named “Crimson”, as in “Commercialisation of a Recyclable and Innovative Manufacturing Solution for an Optimised Novel”, the turbine project is being supported by the European Commission’s Horizon 2020 Fast Track to Innovation programme.
ÉireComposites has already worked with ORPC, which has headquarters in Portland, Maine, USA and a base in Ireland, on previous turbine design projects.
These include ORPC’s first commercial river generation power system, installed in Igiugig, Alaska, to provide a remote community with local energy from the Kvichak river.
The Connemara company is one of 16 partners in seven countries in the EU-funded Marewind project to design the next generation of offshore wind turbines.
It also recently secured a contract to design and manufacture equipment for the European Space Agency’s Altius satellite, which is due to be launched from French Guiana in 2023
Read The Times Ireland here