donderdag 23 april 2026

Engineers just demonstrated a magnetohydrodynamic tidal generator that extracts continuous electrical power from ocean currents with zero moving components

 


Engineers just demonstrated a magnetohydrodynamic tidal generator that extracts continuous electrical power from ocean currents with zero moving components — eliminating all maintenance requirements and achieving a projected operational lifespan of 100 years.
A team from the University of Edinburgh deployed a magnetohydrodynamic duct array on the Scottish seabed where tidal current velocities reach 3.2 meters per second. Seawater flowing through the ducts — which contain no turbines or mechanical parts — passes through powerful permanent magnet fields inducing an electrical current directly in the conductive saltwater through Faraday's law of electromagnetic induction. The extracted current is drawn off through electrodes lining the duct walls. The 2-meter prototype array generated 47 kilowatts continuously across a 14-day tidal cycle test.
Scaling to a 100-meter array — feasible at identified North Sea sites — projects 2.3 megawatts of continuous baseload power with installation costs 60% lower than conventional tidal turbines and zero maintenance requirements over the device lifetime.
Source: University of Edinburgh School of Engineering, Renewable Energy Journal, 2024

Dubai just completed the world's most ambitious building-integrated photovoltaic program — retrofitting all 193 commercial skyscrapers in the downtown district with thin-film solar glass panels generating a combined 1,200 megawatts of clean electricity

 


Dubai just completed the world's most ambitious building-integrated photovoltaic program — retrofitting all 193 commercial skyscrapers in the downtown district with thin-film solar glass panels replacing conventional glazing across entire facade surfaces, generating a combined 1,200 megawatts of clean electricity from the vertical surface area of the city itself.
The Dubai Smart Facade program uses cadmium telluride thin-film solar glass panels manufactured at semi-transparency to maintain interior natural light while generating electricity across all south, east, and west-facing tower facades. Each glass panel achieves 14 percent efficiency — applied to facade surfaces 60 times larger than any available rooftop area. The Burj Khalifa alone generates 8.5 megawatts from its 120,000-square-meter facade — equivalent to powering 2,800 homes from a single building's exterior glass surface.
Dubai's towers receive 3,500 hours of direct sunshine annually with near-zero humidity eliminating soiling losses on vertical glass. The combined 1,200-megawatt output covers 28 percent of the downtown district's entire electricity consumption — generated from building facades that previously only consumed energy and produced none.
Source: DEWA Dubai Electricity and Water Authority, Emaar Properties Dubai, UAE Ministry of Energy and Infrastructure, 2025

China has demonstrated the world's first direct solar-driven seawater splitting device — a compact photocatalytic system that produces green hydrogen from seawater using only sunlight

 


China has demonstrated the world's first direct solar-driven seawater splitting device — a compact photocatalytic system that produces green hydrogen from seawater using only sunlight, without conventional electrolysis equipment, membrane separators, or external power supplies.
Researchers at Nanjing University developed a cobalt phosphide co-catalyst loaded onto carbon nitride semiconductor sheets, immersed directly in seawater and illuminated by concentrated sunlight. The catalyst absorbs photons energetic enough to split water molecules, releasing hydrogen and oxygen without any external electricity. Seawater salt and minerals actually enhanced catalytic activity by 15 percent compared to fresh water, eliminating the costly desalination step required by conventional marine electrolysis systems.
In a 1,000-hour continuous operation test under outdoor natural sunlight, the photocatalytic array produced hydrogen at 9.2 percent solar-to-hydrogen efficiency — approaching the 10 percent threshold considered commercially relevant. Scaling calculations suggest a 1-square-kilometer photocatalytic seawater array could produce 4,500 tonnes of hydrogen annually using only sunlight and ocean water as inputs with zero infrastructure cost for fuel supply.
Source: Nanjing University School of Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Nature Catalysis Journal, 2025

Singapore built an artificial island 8 kilometers offshore that generates all its own electricity from four renewable sources simultaneously — tides, wind, solar, and waves

 


Singapore built an artificial island 8 kilometers offshore that generates all its own electricity from four renewable sources simultaneously — tides, wind, solar, and waves — the world's first installation harvesting all four ocean energy types from a single location.
Sentosa Energy Island sits on a 4-hectare artificial platform in the Singapore Strait where the convergence of the Malacca and South China Sea creates exceptional multi-source energy conditions. Tidal turbines beneath the platform exploit the 2.4-meter daily tidal range in the strait, generating electricity during four tidal cycles per day. Wave energy converters around the platform perimeter harvest energy from strait surface chop. Wind turbines atop the platform capture consistent northeast and southwest monsoon winds. Bifacial solar panels on all horizontal surfaces generate electricity from direct tropical sun and reflected sea surface irradiance from both above and below each panel.
The four energy sources operate on different timescales and weather dependencies, providing natural portfolio complementarity — when one source is low, others compensate. The platform achieves 94 percent annual energy availability with zero fossil fuel backup required, supplying 45 megawatts continuously to the Singapore mainland through a single submarine cable. Singapore's grid operator reports Sentosa Energy Island provides the most consistent renewable generation on the national system.
The design proves that small island nations with no land for large energy installations can achieve energy independence by harvesting the ocean surrounding them from a single compact multi-source platform.
Source: Singapore Energy Market Authority, Keppel Infrastructure, Maritime Port Authority Singapore, 2025

France just scaled its urban biogas program to cover Paris and seven surrounding cities — collecting organic food waste from 4.2 million households and converting it through anaerobic digestion into biomethane injected directly into the natural gas grid, heating 200,000 homes with zero fossil fuel input.

 


France just scaled its urban biogas program to cover Paris and seven surrounding cities — collecting organic food waste from 4.2 million households and converting it through anaerobic digestion into biomethane injected directly into the natural gas grid, heating 200,000 homes with zero fossil fuel input.
The Grand Paris Biogas program deploys sealed underground anaerobic digestion vessels at 23 district waste processing hubs across the metropolitan area. Food scraps, restaurant waste, and supermarket organic discards are collected in sealed bins, shredded, and fed into digestion vessels where microorganisms break down organic matter over 30 days, releasing methane captured at 96 percent purity and compressed for direct grid injection. The remaining digestate — a nutrient-rich slurry — is distributed to surrounding agricultural land as fertilizer replacing synthetic nitrogen products derived from fossil gas.
Paris produces 1.4 million tonnes of organic food waste annually. Full conversion through biogas would generate enough biomethane to heat 600,000 homes — nearly eliminating residential gas imports for heating across the metropolitan area entirely. France has approved scaling this program to all cities above 100,000 residents by 2028.
Source: SUEZ Environment France, Ile-de-France Regional Council, French Ministry for Ecological Transition, 2025