Croatian Center of Renewable Energy Sources
promotes
Shane’s Castle Green Generation
Shane’s Castle on the
shores of Lough Neagh near Randalstown in Co. Antrim is the family seat
of the O’Neills of Clandeboy. The Demesne is one of the most beautiful
and well maintained in Ireland with a rich variety of flora and fauna,
including a lovely herd of fallow deer that have been resident there for
many years. The Castle is in ruins due to a devastating fire in 1816
but the remaining structure, including a unique Camellia House designed
by John Nash, is still a prominent feature in the landscape. A recent
and fitting addition to the Demesne is an Archimedean Screw hydro
turbine, ancient technology but with a 21st century application.
The O’Neill family are well
known for their preservation and conservation and love of nature and
the environment and this Archimedean Screw hydro project complements
their environmental initiatives very well indeed. Rated at 214 kilowatts
the hydro turbine is predicted to save an impressive 840 tonnes or more
of Carbon Dioxide (CO2) emissions annually by generating clean, green electricity and will make a major contribution to the Demesne’s green philosophy.
This project is a reinstatement of an
old hydro system that was installed circa 1900 that was used to power
the estate before mains electricity was introduced to Shane’s Castle in
the 1950’s. The old system was capable of generating a maximum of about
55 kW so the new Archimedean Screw system, with its high efficiency
across a wide range of flows, is capable of producing at least five
times the amount of energy over the year.
The predicted annual output
is a massive 1,300,000 kilowatt-hours. To put this in perspective, an
average household uses less than 5,000 kilowatt-hours per year, so this
hydro scheme has the potential to power more than 260 houses in the
locality.
The Archimedean Screw turbine provides a
fish-friendly alternative to conventional turbines, ideally suited to
low-head (1m-15m) sites, and sites with fish protection issues.
Extensive fish passage tests have conclusively demonstrated that the
large water chambers and slow rotation of the Archimedean Screw allow
fish of all sizes, and debris, safe passage through the turbine.
As a result, the Environment Agency (UK)
has agreed that no screening is required.Literally thousands of fish
passages have been monitored and recorded using underwater cameras at
the intake, inside the chamber of the Screw itself and at the outflow to
assess the effect of the Screw on salmonids (including smolts and
kelts), brown trout and eels.
The trials looked at fish passage across
a broad spectrum of sizes and turbine speeds, possibly the most
impressive of which was the safe passage of a kelt measuring 98cm in
length and weighing 7.6kg. In addition, behavioural and migrational
patterns across the species have been shown to be entirely unaffected by
the turbine.
The scheme was designed by
Hydroplan and the Archimedean Screw equipment was supplied by Mann Power
Consulting based in Yorkshire. Mann Power are the pioneers of the
Archimedean Screw in the UK and Ireland and Eco Evolution based in Co.
Wexford are their authorised representative for the whole of Ireland.
This Hydro project at Shane’s Castle is the first of its kind in
Northern Ireland and rated at 214 kilowatts this is the largest single
Archimedean Screw generator ever manufactured. Eco Evolution and Mann
Power installed the massive machine at Shane’s Castle earlier this year.
The scheme was commissioned during the summer and it is now fully
operational.
Croatian Center of Renewable Energy Sources (CCRES)
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