The Anonymous Widower

Dutch Take Aim At Lower Green Hydrogen Costs By Combining Offshore Wind And Floating Solar

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on offshoreWIND.biz.

This is the sub-heading.

A consortium of Dutch companies has launched a government-backed project to explore the synergies between offshore wind, offshore solar and hydrogen production at sea for improved sustainability of North Sea renewable energy projects.

T thought about calling this post, The Dutch Go For The Full Monty, but there is no mention of wave or tidal power.

These two paragraphs outline the project.

The four-year project, dubbed Solar Enhanced North Sea Energy Hub (SENSE-HUB), is expected to accelerate the rollout of offshore solar into offshore renewable energy systems.

Let by TNO, short for Netherlands Organization for Applied Scientific Research, the project will address the integration of various energy system modules for the Dutch North Sea by understanding and removing the implementation barriers for future SENSE-HUBs from a technical, economical, ecological, legal and societal perspective.

I wouldn’t be surprised to see more integrated systems like this in the waters around our coasts.

I also believe that the ultimate offshore energy production system will also use wave and tidal power to generate electricity and have inbuilt energy storage.

March 1, 2023 Posted by | Energy, Hydrogen | , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Moorgate To Charlton Via Cannon Street

I needed to go to Charlton station this morning to take a couple of photographs for a possible blog post.

  • I had had my usual breakfast in LEON on Moorgate, so I started from Moorgate station.
  • I took the Northern Line one stop to Bank station.
  • It was then straight up the double escalators.
  • I followed this by a brisk walk along Cannon Street.

The total time between entering Moorgate station and sitting on my train at Cannon Street station was about ten minutes.

One of London’s more difficult stations to access now has a North-South Underground line, to go with its East-West line.

March 1, 2023 Posted by | Food, Transport/Travel | , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

NHS Prevention Programme Reduces Type 2 Diabetes By A Fifth

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on The Times.

This is the sub-heading.

Participants are given free Fitbits or smart watches to help them lose weight

These two paragraphs outline the program.

An NHS scheme that sends obese patients to slimming classes and gives them free Fitbits has cut diabetes rates by one fifth.

The NHS Diabetes Prevention Programme, also known as Healthier You, offers health advice alongside free cookery and exercise sessions online or in person. Participants are given NHS-funded Fitbits or smart watches to monitor their activity to help them lose weight.

Note.

  1. Manchester University have analysed the project.
  2. Those on the scheme lost five pounds on average.
  3. The Healthier You programme is available in all parts of England.

It sounds like the programme has been a success.

I’d like to hear of peoples’ stories about this programme.

March 1, 2023 Posted by | Health | , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Vattenfall Invests In 76-Megawatt Agrivoltaic Project

The title of this post, is the same as that of this media report from Vattenfall.

This is the sub-heading.

Agrivoltaics is the combination of sustainable agriculture and solar power generation on the same agricultural land. Vattenfall has now made a final investment decision for a 76-megawatt solar park Tützpatz in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania. The project is being set up without state support.

These two paragraphs outline the project.

Photovoltaics is now one of the cheapest technologies among renewable energies, and solar power has a high level of acceptance among the population. However, critics of open space photovoltaics fear that expansion could take place at the expense of agricultural land used for food production. The relatively young technology of agrivoltaics, which can reconcile agricultural use and photovoltaics, can help to resolve this competitive situation.

For the first time, Vattenfall will implement this innovative concept of land use on a commercial scale with partners. The aim of the project in Tützpatz is to combine module types on different mounting systems with suitable agricultural uses over an area of 95 ha, and thus gain further practical experience for future commercial projects of this kind. According to current plans, construction at Tützpatz is scheduled to start in early summer 2023.

Note.

  1. Tützpatz is a few miles North of Lincoln.
  2. This project is subsidy-free.
  3. At Tützpatz, 76 MW is to be installed in 95 hectares, which is an energy density of 0.8 MW per hectare.
  4. Agrivoltaics have an extensive Wikipedia entry.

I would expect we could use agrivoltaics in quite a few places in Southern England.

February 28, 2023 Posted by | Energy | , , , , | 3 Comments

Unique Study: Birds Avoid Wind Turbine Blades

The title of this post, is the same as that of this media report from Vattenfall.

This is the sub-heading.

Seabirds deliberately avoid wind turbine rotor blades offshore – that is the main finding of a new study that mapped the flightpaths of thousands of birds around wind turbines in the North Sea. Most importantly, during two years of monitoring using cameras and radar, not a single bird was recorded colliding with a rotor blade.

I must admit I’m not surprised, as I’ve landed a light aircraft many times with birds flying above the runway and I can’t remember ever hitting one. But I have seen several dive out of the way.

The report is a fascinating read.

February 28, 2023 Posted by | Energy, Environment | , , , , , | 4 Comments

A Quality Takeaway With A Station And A Large Garden

It was cold today and on walking from the Hanover Square entrance to Bond Street station to the Marks and Spencer store on Oxford Street, I came across this Leon, where I had a hot chocolate.

Is this the ultimate pit-stop on the Elizabeth Line?

February 28, 2023 Posted by | Food, Transport/Travel | , , , | 2 Comments

Floating Foundation For 15+ MW Offshore Wind Turbines Launches

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on offshoreWIND.biz.

This is the sub-heading.

Odfjell Oceanwind has launched the Deepsea Star™ harsh environment floating wind foundation designed to support wind turbines with a capacity of 15 MW and more.

Note.

  • Odfjell Oceanwind is a Norwegian company and has this web site.
  • This news item from Odfgell Oceanwind is entitled  Odfjell Oceanwind Launches The Deepsea Star™ 15MW Floating Wind Foundation and was published on the 28th of February, 2023.
  • The news item was the source of the iffshoreWIND.biz article.
  • In the news item, one of the designers, explains some of the features.

I very much believe that ,my twenty-three-year-old self armed with ICI’s PACE 231-R would have had great fun examining the dynamic proiperties of a structure like this.

 

February 28, 2023 Posted by | Design, Energy | , , , , | Leave a comment

Metro Operator Opts For Better Mobile Signal Instead Of Wi-Fi

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on Railway Gazette.

This is the first paragraph.

Tyne & Wear Metro operator Nexus has chosen to eliminate mobile phone connectivity ‘not spots’ instead of deploying on-train wi-fi as previously planned.

I agree with this, as it is so much more convenient. Especially, if like me, your eyesight isn’t  a hundred percent.

If Greater Anglia were able to offer it on their Mark 3 coaches, the technology must be easy to implement.

 

February 28, 2023 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , | Leave a comment

Appliance Of Science To Boost Stevenage

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article in The Times.

These two paragraphs introduce the article.

Planning permission has been granted for a former TK Maxx outlet and two other stores in the middle of Stevenage to be knocked down and replaced with laboratories.

The £500 million development, funded by UBS Asset Management and designed by Reef Group, is the latest example of how Britain’s town centres can be adapted and brought up to date.

Note.

  1. We have a laboratory shortage in the UK, which is especially serious in Oxford and Cambridge.
  2. Canary Wharf is also turning offices into laboratory space.
  3. There was even an article in The Times yesterday about converting offices to laboratories in Harley Street.

It’s probably a sign of success!

If Stevenage is to become a worldwide centre for life sciences and medical research, it probably needs the town’s excellent rail links to London and Cambridge to be further improved.

  • LNER runs two fast trains per hour (tph) to and from London King’s Cross.
  • Other fast services call during the day.
  • Local services include two tph to Cambridge, London and Peterborough.

Services need to be improved, especially to and from Cambridge.

ERTMS Is Being Installed Through Stevenage

Installation of full digital signalling on the East Coast Main Line could have various effects.

  • LNER and other fast services could be faster to places like Doncaster, Leeds and York.
  • Fast Cambridge, Ely and King’s Lynn services would have to be run by 125 mph trains to keep out of the way of the expresses.
  • 125 mph services to Cambridge would reduce journey times by a few minutes and might allow the Cambridge Cruisers to sneak in a stop at Stevenage, whilst maintaining the current times.
  • Will the Thameslink Class 700 trains have to stick to the slow lines?
  • As the Hertford Loop Line will also be digitally signalled, it might be possible to divert some trains via Hertford North.

There will be a lot of hard thinking going on to find out the best way to run services on the Southern section of the East Coast Main Line.

High Speed Norfolk

I like the concept of running high speed trains to Ely, Norwich and Kings Lynn.

  • It would open up a lot of West Norfolk for laboratory space and commuter towns for Cambridge.
  • The Breckland line between Ely and Norwich would be improved for higher speeds. It could even become a 125 mph line.
  • High Speed Norfolk trains would have a frequency of two tph and call at Stevenage, Cambridge South, Cambridge, Cambridge North and Ely before alternatively going on to Norwich and King’s Lynn.
  • Cambridge and Norwich services would alternate with the Norwich and Stansted Airport service.

Norwich could be the overspill city that Cambridge needs.

 

February 27, 2023 Posted by | Health, Transport/Travel, World | , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Activity Ramping Up On Irish Floating Wind Test Site

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on offshoreWIND.biz.

This is the sub-heading.

The Sustainable Energy Authority of Ireland (SEAI) is busy with bringing forward its Atlantic Marine Energy Test Site (AMETS), a floating wind and wave energy technology test site which has been in development for several years now. Along with offshore surveys scheduled for next month, SEIA has also commenced work on procuring an onshore substation and a floating LiDAR for AMETS.

It all sounds very professional.

The Atlantic Marine Energy Test Site will be located off Annagh Head in the West of Ireland. This Google Map shows the location of Annagh Head on the island of Ireland.

I do have a imperfect memory of a weekend of good hospitality and gourmet food at a hotel called the Cashel House Hotel to the West of Galway, but I can’t remember how C and I flew there. Did we fly to Knock or Shannon either using a scheduled airline or my Cessna 340 A?

All I can remember of the holiday, was that it was very windy at times and driving through Westport. So did we explore towards Annagh Head?

This Google Map shows a close-up of Annagh Head.

I suspect that Annagh Head is an ideal location to test floating wind and wave power.

There will also be good hospitality and airlinks to the UK and Europe.

In So Many Floating Wind Designs, So Few Test Sites – Norwegian METCentre Sold Out, I wrote about the shortage of test sites for wind power.

So perhaps, AMETS will help to fill the gap?

In

February 27, 2023 Posted by | Energy | , , , , , , , | Leave a comment