The Grid Value of Ocean Current Energy in Florida

Sarah Awara, Kelly Gjestvang, Ben McGilton, Brady Cowiestoll, Elaine Hale, Levi Kilcher, Greg Stark

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaper

Abstract

Ocean current energy technology has been proposed as a potential contributor to Florida's energy portfolio. There has been limited investigation of how this energy would be valued when integrated into the Florida electrical grid. This study assesses three future grid scenarios to evaluate the impact of adding zero-cost ocean current energy to each. The Resource Planning Model, a tool developed by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, is used to identify the least-cost generation mix through 2050, with and without ocean current energy. The first scenario is a base case and assumes existing policies in which the addition of ocean current energy does not retire fossil-based technologies but variable generation technologies. In the second scenario, solar and storage technologies are lower cost, and the addition of ocean current generation enables those technologies along with wind to retire existing natural gas units earlier. In the third scenario, which requires a 95% reduction in carbon emissions from 2020 levels by 2050, ocean current energy can play a role in decarbonization along with other variable generation technologies. This analysis is intended to inform stakeholders on the opportunity, potential challenges, and overall value to the grid of ocean current technology from a reliability and availability focused perspective.
Original languageAmerican English
Number of pages5
DOIs
StatePublished - 2024
Event2024 IEEE Power & Energy Society General Meeting - Seattle, Washington
Duration: 21 Jul 202425 Jul 2024

Conference

Conference2024 IEEE Power & Energy Society General Meeting
CitySeattle, Washington
Period21/07/2425/07/24

Bibliographical note

See NREL/CP-5700-88034 for preprint

NREL Publication Number

  • NREL/CP-5700-92015

Keywords

  • capacity expansion model
  • grid modeling
  • ocean current technology
  • renewable energy

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