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<title>Examining the potential of marine renewable energy: a net energy perspective</title>
<creator>Samsó, Roger</creator>
<creator>Crespin, Júlia</creator>
<creator>García-Olivares, Antonio</creator>
<creator>Solé, Jordi</creator>
<subject>Energías renovables</subject>
<description>Producción Científica</description>
<description>It is often claimed that marine renewable energy alone could meet the electricity demand of&#xd;
current and future human societies. However, such claims are based on highly uncertain estimations&#xd;
of the global potentials of marine renewable energy sources (including tidal, ocean currents, wave,&#xd;
offshore wind and salinity and thermal gradients), and do not take into account the embedded energy&#xd;
of current technologies. To better understand the effective potential of marine energy, we conducted&#xd;
a literature review of its gross, technical, economic and sustainable potentials, as well as the energy&#xd;
return on investment (EROI), and estimated the net energy potential. We found that all marine&#xd;
technologies could provide a maximum energy surplus of 57,000 TWh/yr. This figure goes down to&#xd;
  5000TWh/yr when excluding offshore wind. The previous figures do not include the contribution&#xd;
from ocean currents, for which no reliable estimates of global potentials and EROIs could be obtained.&#xd;
Due to its high upfront costs and environmental impacts and low social acceptance, no additional&#xd;
tidal range capacity expansion is envisioned. Similarly, the combination of a low sustainable potential&#xd;
and the low EROI makes the large-scale exploitation of salinity gradients unlikely with current&#xd;
technologies. Including all technologies, the average EROI of marine energy is   20, but excluding&#xd;
offshore wind reduces the average EROI to   8. While we did consider sustainability constraints&#xd;
for some marine energy sources, our estimation of marine net energy potential primarily relied&#xd;
on technical factors and did not account for economic and legal constraints. Therefore, the results&#xd;
presented here should be interpreted as an upper bound for the actual net energy contribution of&#xd;
marine energy sources to the global energy mix.</description>
<date>2024-05-08</date>
<date>2024-05-08</date>
<date>2024</date>
<type>info:eu-repo/semantics/article</type>
<identifier>Sustainability, Mayo, 2023, n. 15 p. 1-35</identifier>
<identifier>https://uvadoc.uva.es/handle/10324/67420</identifier>
<identifier>10.3390/su15108050</identifier>
<language>eng</language>
<relation>https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/15/10/8050</relation>
<rights>info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess</rights>
<rights>http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/</rights>
<rights>© The authors</rights>
<rights>Attribution 4.0 Internacional</rights>
<publisher>MDPI</publisher>
</thesis></metadata></record></GetRecord></OAI-PMH>