Energy
In France, marine and coastal comes principally from electricity generation. Power plants located ashore are conventional thermal plants, nuclear plants and wind turbines. The choice of an electricity generation site depends on its capacity for colling and diluting effluents discharged by the plant. The natural, stable cold reservoir provided by the sea makes coastal access hightly attractive for building nuclear and thermal power plants. This location also enables fuel supply costs to be lowered. Finally, the sea provides power, as shown by tidal power plants in estuaries, and projects for wind farms and marine current turbines off our shores.
Coastal thermal and nuclear plants
The large power plants on the coast supply a significant part of installed power in metropolitan France, in particular slightly more than 30% of total nuclear power generation.
Site | Generating units | Net power (MW) | Energy Source | Operation start | Employment7 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dunkirk (harbour) | 1 et 2 | 2 x 400 | Combined Cycle Gas turbine | 2005 | 35 |
Gravelines (outer harbour of Dunkirk)1 | 1, 2, 3 | 3 x 910 | Nuclear | 1980 | 1635 |
4 | 910 | Nuclear | 1981 | ||
5 | 910 | Nuclear | 1984 | ||
6 | 910 | Nuclear | 1985 | ||
Penly (East English Channel)2 | 1 | 1330 | Nuclear | 1990 | 634 |
2 | 1330 | Nuclear | 1992 | ||
Paluel (East Channel) | 1 et 2 | 2 x 1330 | Nuclear | 1984 | 1250 |
3 | 1330 | Nuclear | 1985 | ||
4 | 1330 | Nuclear | 1986 | ||
Le Havre (harbour)3 | 1 | 250 | Coal | 1968 | 340 |
2 | 600 | Coal | 1969 | ||
4 | 600 | Coal | 1983 | ||
Flamanville (West Channel)4 | 1 | 1300 | Nuclear | 1985 | 671 |
2 | 1300 | Nuclear | 1986 | ||
Rance estuary | 240 | Tidal plant | 1966 | 28 | |
Cordemais (Loire estuary)5 | 1 | 490 | Coal | 1970 | 458 |
2 et 3 | 2 x 685 | Fuel | 1976 | ||
4 | 580 | Coal | 1983 | ||
5 | inactive | Coal | 1984 | ||
Le Blayais (Gironde) | 1 | 900 | Nuclear | 1981 | 1351 |
2 | 900 | Nuclear | 1982 | ||
3 et 4 | 2 x 900 | Nuclear | 1983 | ||
Martigues6 | 1 | 250 | Fuel | 1971 | 116 |
Total | 25320 | 6518 |
Renewable marine energy: wind turbines
Wind energy was mainly European until 2006; in 2008, comparable amounts were invested in Europe, North America and Asia (China and India). Europe is a world pioneer for offshore projects. To date, those were launched in North Europe (UK, Denmark, Netherlands, Sweden). Other stakeholders are appearing (Spain, Ireland, Finland, France, Italy, Poland). En France, the first offshore wind farm project has been approved for construction in northern France. There are also offshore projects outside of Europe, notably in China (7 GW).
- Offshore wind farms projects in France
- Objective for 2020: offshore wind energy and other marines energy sources will account for 3.5% of domestic electricity consumption. This requires a 6 GW offshore wind capacity, i.e. around 1,200 turbines.
- Project for a wind farm at 6.5 km off the coast of Upper Normandy. 21 units, 105 MW. Commissioning annouced for 2012.
- First call for tender in July 2011, for a 3 GW offshore capacity, i.e. 500 to 600 units. Selection of tenders in April 2012. Units to be authorized for building from 2015. The selected offshore zones are:
- Fécamp (Upper Normandy), 88 sq km, 498 MW
- Courseulles-sur-mer (Lower Normandy), 77 sq km, 450 MW
- Saint-Brieuc (Brittany), 180 sq km, 500 MW
- Saint-Nazaire (Loire esturay, Pays de la Loire region), 78 sq km, 480 MW.
- A second call for tender has been announced for the second half of 2012, for another 3 GW installed capacity, in addition to the site of Le Treport (Upper Normandy) which has not been awarded in April.
Other marine energy technologies (brief overview)
Other technologies are less mature than wind power and are being tested at sea.In France :
- Marine current turbines: a turbine was deployed in August 2011, which would be the first of the four units of EDF's farm off the coast of Paimpol-Brehat in Brittany, in co-operation with DCNS, using the technology of Open Hydro (Ireland). Announced installed capacity of the farm: 2 MW.
- Marine current turbines: a small number of projects are announced in en Europe; they are mainly British, off the coasts of Scotland and Northern Ireland (British waters account for 75% of the natural current energy potential in Europe).
- Wave energy: several offshore pilots are being tested or announced in UK (e.g. Pelamis deployed and tested in a zone off the Orkney Islands), Denmark, Belgium, Sweden, Australia, USA.
- Tidal energy plants: after the first large plant - in the Rance estuary at the border of Brittany and Normandy (240 MW) in 1966 - the technology was used for a limited number of projects, the most recent of which being the only one of important size:
- Annapolis Royal, Canada, Nova-Scotia, 20 MW, commissioned in 1984,
- Jiangxia plant, China, 3.2 MW, commissioned in 1985,
- plant of lake Sihwa, South Korea, 254 MW, commissioned in 2011.
- The other marine energy technologies (ocean thermal energy conversion, osmotic power) have not yet reached the stage of pilot project testing at sea.