Izenburua
O&M-aware techno-economic assessment for floating offshore wind farms: A geospatial evaluation off the North Sea and the Iberian PeninsulaBeste instituzio
IkerbasqueUniversity of Strathclyde
Bertsioa
Bertsio argitaratua
Eskubideak
© 2024 The AuthorsSarbidea
Sarbide irekiaArgitaratzailearen bertsioa
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apenergy.2024.123684Non argitaratua
Applied Energy Vol. 371. N. art. 123684, 2024Argitaratzailea
ElsevierGako-hitzak
floating offshore wind
operation and maintenance (O&M)
techno-economic
site-identification ... [+]
operation and maintenance (O&M)
techno-economic
site-identification ... [+]
floating offshore wind
operation and maintenance (O&M)
techno-economic
site-identification
North Sea
Iberian Peninsula [-]
operation and maintenance (O&M)
techno-economic
site-identification
North Sea
Iberian Peninsula [-]
Laburpena
The development of accurate techno-economic models is crucial to boost the commercialisation of floating offshore wind farms. However, conventional techno-economic models oversimplify operation and ma ... [+]
The development of accurate techno-economic models is crucial to boost the commercialisation of floating offshore wind farms. However, conventional techno-economic models oversimplify operation and maintenance (O&M) aspects, neglecting key maintenance factors, such as component failure rates, metocean conditions, repair times, maintenance vessels and ports. To address this limitation, this paper presents an O&M-aware techno-economic model that comprehensively incorporates the most relevant maintenance factors and evaluates their impacts on site-identification across the North Sea and the Iberian Peninsula based on diverse O&M strategies. Results reveal that operational expenditure can contribute significantly to the levelised cost of energy, ranging from 22% to 50% in the North Sea and 19% to 46% in the Iberian Peninsula. Furthermore, results demonstrate that suitable sites vary based on O&M strategy: preventive strategies favour areas with abundant wind resources like northern Scotland, Norway and Galicia, whereas corrective strategy prioritise sites with less severe metocean conditions, such as southern Scotland and extensive regions in the Mediterranean Sea, including the Gulf of Roses and the Alboran Sea. Finally, the downtime of turbines, an aspect traditionally neglected in techno economic frameworks, emerges as a key factor for accurate techno-economic assessment and site-identification. [-]
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