4.5 Article

Environmental Assessment of the Impacts and Benefits of a Salinity Gradient Energy Pilot Plant

Journal

ENERGIES
Volume 14, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/en14113252

Keywords

salinity gradient energy; RED; PRO; coastal systems; stress factors; receptors; environmental impact

Categories

Funding

  1. CONACYT-SENER-Sustentabilidad Energetica project: Centro Mexicano de Innovacion en Energia del Oceano (CEMIE-Oceano) [FSE-2014-06-249795]

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This study evaluated the environmental impacts of a hypothetical 50 kW RED plant in La Carbonera Lagoon, Yucatan, Mexico, showing that a well-designed SGE plant can have low environmental impact and benefit local ecotourism and ecosystem conservation. Moreover, the study highlighted that the same plant in another location in the same system could cause significant damage to the coastal lagoon environment.
Although the technologies involved in converting saline gradient energy (SGE) are rapidly developing, few studies have focused on evaluating possible environmental impacts. In this work, the environmental impacts of a hypothetical 50 kW RED plant installed in La Carbonera Lagoon, Yucatan, Mexico, are addressed. The theoretical support was taken from a literature review and analysis of the components involved in the pressure retarded osmosis (PRO) and reverse electrodialysis (RED) technologies. The study was performed under a three-stage scheme (construction, operation, and dismantling) for which the stress-inducing factors that can drive changes in environmental elements (receptors) were determined. In turn, the possible modifications to the dynamics of the ecosystem (responses) were assessed. Since it is a small-scale energy plant, only local impacts are expected. This study shows that a well-designed SGE plant can have a low environmental impact and also be of benefit to local ecotourism and ecosystem conservation while contributing to a clean, renewable energy supply. Moreover, the same plant in another location in the same system could lead to huge modifications to the flows and resident times of the coastal lagoon water, causing great damage to the biotic and abiotic environment.

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