Marine Renewable Energies: From Technological Advancements to Environmental Impact Assessment
A special issue of Energies (ISSN 1996-1073). This special issue belongs to the section "A3: Wind, Wave and Tidal Energy".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 September 2021) | Viewed by 30680
Special Issue Editors
Interests: coastal engineering; maritime structures; coastal morphodynamic; coastal defences; wave energy converters
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: pollution source apportionment; knowledge-based management and planning of environmental resources; scenario analysis for environmental impact assessements (EIA) and strategic environmental assessments (SEA); integrated coastal zone management and maritime spatial planning of human uses
Interests: coastal engineering; maritime structures; marine renewable energies
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
2. Adj. Prof. at Department of Marine Technology-Norwegian University of Science and Technology, AMOS-NTNU, Otto Nielsens veg, 10, Trondheim, Norway
Interests: wave-structure interaction; sea loads; ocean engineering; sloshing; slamming; hydroelasticity; marine renewable energy; offshore wind energy; hydrodynamics; nonlinear wave propagation
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Marine renewable energies (MRE) have the potential to become a large part of the future energy mix worldwide. The aim of harvesting and converting to useful forms this huge amount of renewable energy has recently seen increasing interest. In the awareness that, at present, only a very limited fraction of this huge resource is exploited, a lot of research projects have been carried out and many patents have been developed. However, to date, only harvesting offshore wind and tidal excursion energy have developed dominant technologies for the exploitation of these sources of marine energy and have already reached the commercial maturity level. The technological readiness level of devices for harvesting tidal stream energy are approaching commercial maturity, while the wave energy sector is still studying several different technologies and none of these seems at the moment to be the most promising.
This Special Issue will also focus on the potential and measured environmental risks associated with the presence of MRE infrastructures. It is now well established that the integration of resource planning needs to become a norm after the many failures of traditional sectoral, single-issue management. The greater awareness of the extent to which our marine habitats have become degraded, the widening of interests in—and users of—the marine space, including the general public and the increased governmental commitment to a wider stakeholder participation in marine decision-making have now created the context for marine spatial planning to become a routine process for analysing and allocating the spatial and temporal distribution of human activities in marine areas to achieve ecological, economic, and social objectives. Potential topics will include: the elements of ecological impact due to the presence of renewable energy installations (MREI) based on experimental studies; the definition of impact assessment methodological approaches that are transferable and scalable across sites; uncertainty quantification in environmental impact assessment procedures; spatial planning frameworks to support the optimal siting of marine renewable energy installations (MREIs); the positive environmental impacts associated with the presence of MREIs; experiences of mitigation; experiences of marine policies integration; and the environmental monitoring of pilot-scale MREIs.
This Special Issue intends to provide a detailed picture of worldwide MRE resources, the technological readiness level and implications for the marine ecosystem.
An ensemble of interdisciplinary articles will be then collected, which includes reviews and original papers, emphasizing the importance of tackling technical and scientific problems at different scales and from different points of view.
Prof. Dr. Diego Vicinanza
Prof. Dr. Arianna Azzellino
Dr. Lorenzo Cappietti
Dr. Claudio Lugni
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- harvesting devices
- resource assessment
- structural response
- turbine technology
- floating technology
- multi-purpose platform
- environmental impact assessment
- strategic environmental assessment
- marine spatial planning
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