Nova Innovation celebrates birthday with Shetland Tidal Array expansion
NOVA Innovation is celebrating its 10th birthday with the successful expansion of the world’s first tidal array.
The company confirms a step-change cost reduction in tidal energy as their new turbine begins powering homes in Scotland’s most northerly isles.
The company behind the world’s first tidal array in Shetland, Nova Innovation, has confirmed that it has successfully installed its commercial direct-drive tidal turbine “Eunice”. The new turbine is already powering homes across Shetland.
Nova has announced that the next generation of direct-drive turbine slashes the cost of tidal energy by a third – making tidal energy cost competitive with fossil fuels. Eunice is the first of three turbines set to double the size of the Shetland Tidal Array as part of the EnFAIT project, making tidal energy a commercial reality.
The EnFAIT project, now in its third year, has been driving the commercialisation of the tidal energy sector by improving reliability, reducing costs, and boosting the sector’s ‘bankability’. The pan-European consortium involved in the project has been instrumental in driving down costs.
Nova and its partners had something extra to celebrate after the latest installation, coinciding with Nova’s 10th anniversary since it started trading in 2010.
Nova was founded in humble beginnings – two men in a shed with global ambition and a great idea. Fast forward a decade and Team Nova is thriving – a clear global leader with a full order book expanding into new international markets.
When asked what the next decade holds for Nova, Mr Forrest added:
Nova’s tidal array in Shetland is part of EnFAIT (Enabling Future Arrays in Tidal) – a flagship project funded by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme. The first half of the 5-year project has been focused on learning from the three existing turbines in the Shetland Tidal Array and proving the reliability of the technology. The next stage of the project is focused on installing the direct drive turbines to demonstrate the rapidly falling cost of tidal energy.