Ocean Tidal Energy: Tidal Current 1 MW Turbine and Installation Vessel by Voith
Geschreven op 19-9-2010 - Erik van Erne. Geplaatst in Energie en BesparingProven strength under a new name: The joint venture of Voith and Siemens which was founded in April 2000 will now be known as Voith Hydro. As before a full-line supplier for advanced hydroelectric equipment, technology, and services to the renewable energy market.
More than 40,000 generators and turbines have been installed worldwide by Voith Hydro, positioning it as a leading manufacturer for clean and low-carbon power generation from water. This not only applies to traditional hydro power but for energy from the oceans as well. The company’s rich history dates back to 1867. And for over 100 years, hydro power plants all over the world have been equipped with machines from Heidenheim. Many of the these orignal operators are our customers to this very day.
Voith Hydro developed a turbine for the utilization of tidal currents. Animation produced by Kral GmbH.
Ocean Tidal Energy: Tidal Current 1 MW Turbine and Installation Vessel by Voith – Renewable Energy: The First Tidal-Energy Power Plant in the World – A New Principle for Deep Green Tidal Energy by Minesto – The Bo Hai Tidal Bridge Project by Blue Energy – Tidal Lagoon Power 3,24 GW Project in the Severn Estuary Between Cardiff and Newport– Queen Elizabeth goes Green: 1.6 GW Wave and Tidal Power in 2020 – Ocean Wave Power: Oyster 1 and Oyster 2 Wave Power Devices How it works – Atlantis Unveils The World’s Largest Tidal Turbine: The AK1000 – The First Pelamis Wave-Energy Power Plant in The World – Wave Energy: Ocean Wave Machine by S.D.E. Energy Tel Aviv, Israël – Ocean Wave Power: The Wave Hub Connecting Wave Energy Generation Devices – Ocean Wave Power How Wave Energy Works – The Wave Hub: The Biggest Wave Energy Project in The World – Renewable Energy From the Deep Ocean – MARIN: Nieuw Groenwater Golfenergieconcept Succesvol Getest – Waterkracht: Onderzoek naar stromende zee als energiebron by Tidal Testing Centre – De Vergeten Kracht van Nederland: Waterkracht