ORCID

Abstract

The location of a wave farm and, in particular, its distance to the coast is one of the key aspects in a wave energy project. The effects of the farm on the coast, which can be instrumental in mitigating storm-induced erosion and thus contribute to coastal defence, are sometimes disregarded in selecting its location, possibly due to the inexistence of an ad hoc methodology. In this context, the objective of this work is to examine the influence of the farm-to-coast distance through a sensitivity analysis in a case study: Perranporth (UK). The impacts of a wave farm on the beach morphology are examined in four scenarios with different farm-to-coast distances using a high-resolution suite of numerical models. The results show that a wave farm closest to the beach offers the highest degree of coastal protection (up to 20% of beach erosion reduction). The downside of this enhanced coastal protection is that the wave resource available at this location would be slightly smaller (approx. 10%) than in the case of the wave farms further from the coast. More generally, we find that the farm-to-coast distance is a critical variable in determining the effectiveness of a wave farm for coastal defence.

DOI

10.1016/j.renene.2014.10.048

Publication Date

2015-01-01

Publication Title

Renewable Energy

Volume

75

ISSN

0960-1481

Embargo Period

2015-07-01

Organisational Unit

School of Engineering, Computing and Mathematics

Keywords

Beach morphology, Erosion, Nearshore impact, Sediment transport, Wave energy, Wave farm

First Page

572

Last Page

582

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