Renewable Energy, Vol.161, 1341-1358, 2020
A high-resolution, long-term wave resource assessment of Japan with wave-current effects
The largest source of uncertainty in estimating annual energy production from a wave energy converter is natural variability. Standards recommend the collection of long-term on-site records, but with a concurrent requirement of dense data coverage, it becomes intractable to assess resources even at the feasibility development stage. Here, we provide uncertainty estimates of wave energy resources along the coast of Japan at 1 km resolution based on 21-year long numerical simulation, assuring a mean absolute percentage error of 4%. The uncertainties of the annual, seasonal and monthly climatologies are provided, and the epistemic uncertainty due to the effects of ocean current and finite depth on wave power estimation are quantified. Additionally, a significant wave height threshold is applied to exclude severe storm periods when devices are not in operation. The estimated total available wave power in Japan is 115.1 GW, whereas with a 3 m significant wave height threshold, it reduces to about 70 GW. Wave modeling under strong influence of ocean current is yet another source of epistemic uncertainty and the local and remote effects of strong current field are discussed. Results from the wave resource assessment are accessible to the public via a user-friendly web-based Geographical Information System, which was developed to help foster the use of marine renewable energy. (C) 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Keywords:Wave resource assessment;Aleatory and epistemic uncertainty;Wave power density;Doppler-shift;Wave-current interactions;NOAA WAVEWATCH III (R)