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Monday, 2nd November 2009 Change Date Latest Issue

Plan for 'micro-hydro' generators to get electricity from Water of Leith

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Published Date: 22 October 2009
IT once powered dozens of mills stretching the length and breadth of Edinburgh.
Now the Water of Leith may be set to become a power generator once more with plans to site five turbines along the waterway.

Renewables group Community Energy Scotland has awarded more than £30,000 to the city council and four community groups to assess the feasibility of installing "micro-hydro" generators at five points on the waterway.

The aim is to install turbines similar to the hydro-dynamic screw, a coil-shaped turbine in River Dart Country Park in Devon, which produces enough energy to power 100 homes for a year and saves the park £40,000 in electricity costs.

None of the five locations – at Harperrig Reservoir in Kirknewton, Harlaw Reservoir in Balerno, Mossy Mill in Juniper Green, and two weirs at Dean Village and Redbraes in Leith – is thought to be big enough to sustain a turbine the size of the screw but the study will ascertain whether smaller turbines will be cost effective.

Community Energy Scotland has given each group £6000 from the Scottish Government's Community and Renewable Energy Scheme (CARES), which helps community and voluntary groups fit green energy in their buildings and investigate renewable energy development using local resources.

Eric Dodd, CARES manager, said: "This is an exciting project.

"The weirs on the Water of Leith were originally built to power mills. It seems fitting to try to bring these weirs back into use, providing potential income for local communities using clean renewable energy technology.

"Projects like this can transform communities and help Scotland achieve its world leading climate change targets."

The work builds on a previous study commissioned by the city council sustainable development unit which highlighted the resource potential along several sections of the Water of Leith.

Go Balerno! – formerly the Balerno Village Conservation and Development Trust – will oversee the Harlaw Reservoir study.

Chair Simon Dormer said: "It's not clear whether all five of these projects will come together, but we've been preparing for the Balerno turbine for quite some time now so I'm confident that our project will fly."

Greener Leith will oversee the Redbraes Weir study. Chair Alastair Tibbitt said: "Obviously this turbine won't be big enough to power every home in Leith but we hope to use it as a community education project to demonstrate what can be achieved by a community committed to renewable energy."

The city council will take control of the Mossy Mill project.

Environment leader Robert Aldridge said: "One of our key priorities is for Edinburgh to become even more clean and green, and exploring the potential of sustainable micro energy sources, such as hydro power, will help us move towards this."

Kirknewton Community Development Trust will oversee the Harperrig Reservoir study, while the Dean Weir study will be handled by the Dean Village Association.


Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 22 October 2009 9:35 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Heedbanger,

22/10/2009 12:13:22
The water o Leith will melt anything that goes in it. It's toxic!!

Good luck Community Energy Scotland.
2

alfonsa pedrosa,

embra 22/10/2009 12:18:41
Great stuff,the water of Leith can do it,it will always have power.
3

Dragonlord,

22/10/2009 12:25:18
With modern technology in turbine design and they are still messing about with a giant Archimedes screw?
There must surely be a better system available?
4

Reggie Lebowski,

22/10/2009 12:30:12
Why not connect a turbine to Foo's keyboard. The amount of time he spends on EEN threads, could generate enough electricity for Lothian.
5

Jaco Pastorius,

22/10/2009 12:39:53
I could really go for a hydro-dynamic screw.
6

Unimpressed one,

22/10/2009 12:40:59
#3, The more ancient the technology, the more the greens lap it up. They sorely want to remove tractors and replace them with horses, just as they have in Albania.
7

Wullie Coyote,

22/10/2009 12:43:42
5) I'm sure Foo would enjoy having an Archimedes screw. He is after all, a tube.
8

digestive biscuits returns,

22/10/2009 12:53:09
What a load of eco-babble nonsense.
9

Foo,

22/10/2009 13:01:36
This sounds like a great idea. Who will get the power?
10

Vlad Tepes,

Snagov 22/10/2009 13:02:08
7- You who's living in the past with your dirty, outdated fossil fuel technology, yuch.
10- interesting perspective- thanks for that insight.

Btw this is Archimedes Screw in reverse- downforce produces rotation, not rotation raises water.
11

Foo,

22/10/2009 13:07:03
If only we could harness the power generated by the Johstone press share price continual plummet.
12

Jaco Pastorius,

22/10/2009 13:07:08
I could really go for an Archimedes Screw.
13

Reggie Lebowski,

22/10/2009 13:07:58
#13 and your keyboard.
14

digestive biscuits returns,

22/10/2009 13:17:25
#12

You're welcome.

Enjoy your tofu for dinner tonight.
15

Mrs Alex Pinkfoot,

22/10/2009 13:26:17
I,like Gorgie Tony prefer a shaduf.
16

Charles MN,

22/10/2009 14:24:20
More pictures in the link below.

http://www.mannpower-hydro.co.uk/attachments/casestudies/river-dart-job-sheet-updated-0309.pdf
17

fresian,

22/10/2009 14:29:45
Yes it is possible, but doubt it will be economoically viable. A bit like the solar panels on the wall at Napier Uni. They may work, but have a payback of 75 years and a design life of 25 years.
18

Donny B,

EDINBURGH 22/10/2009 14:44:41
Of course , they have to be installed at some of the most picturesque and busy parts of the walkway , necessitating closure to the public for months on end. And what for ? Not enough power to drive an electric fire. We really have to grow up.
19

Charles MN,

22/10/2009 15:02:39
#19 If you look at the newspaper article at the bottom of the link I posted at #18 you will see that the cost of installation was £120,000 and it saves £30,000 in electrcicty bills per year; that sounds like a good ROI to me. I presume that £120,000 didn't include various grants though.

I suspect the number of suitable sites in Scotland won't be enough to make any significant impact on our energy production but it will be more than solar.
20

Dragonlord,

22/10/2009 15:15:10
21# Scotland already generats more electricity through hydro systems than we need. They export the excess South!
Bearing in mind that all the hydro system are running at reduced capacity to get grants, it means we will not run out of power like many try to claim if we don't go nuclear!
21

Dragonlord,

22/10/2009 15:15:51
sorry~ Generates
22

Foo,

22/10/2009 16:06:04
#22

This is the problem with the anti-nuclear crowd, you live with your head in the clouds! And you make up figures.

Scotland is a net exporter of electricity, with a generating capacity of 10.1GW primarily from coal, oil, gas and nuclear generation

The Scottish Government has set targets that 18% of Scotland's electricity generation be derived from renewable sources by 2010, rising to 40% by 2020.

Currently renewable energy sources provide Scotland with 13% of its electricity production, with onshore wind generation making the largest contribution.

1.3 Gigawatts of electricity is produced by hydro-electric schemes.
23

Foo,

22/10/2009 16:10:24
Coincidentally, 1.3 Gigawatts is roughly the power required to run the DeLorean.

"Great Scott! One point twenty-one jiggawatts!!"
24

Jams,

Edinburgh 22/10/2009 16:16:59
"The city council will take control of the Mossy Mill project. "


It's Dooooomed Laddie Ah Tell ye, Dooomed!
25

digestive biscuits returns,

22/10/2009 16:18:42
Personally, I'd much rather have a couple of nuclear new-builds, than landscapes ruined by wind turbines that barely generate enough electricity to run a small table lamp.
26

Foo,

22/10/2009 16:27:18
Brian, you're from accounts and you speak the truth
27

The Lone Haranguer,

22/10/2009 16:31:12
The tram line crosses the Water of Leith. I don't suppose this scheme would produce enough to power a tram?

#25. They should have got DeLorean to build the tram cars. It would have been fitting on so many levels.
28

Dramfineday,

Edinburgh 22/10/2009 17:04:35
23 years after I first proposed to do a personal study on it for a academic paper (and was poo hoo'd) it finally happens, about time too! And I'm sure the weirs at Inglis Green and Kates mill could do the business too.
29

gus1940,

Edinburgh 22/10/2009 18:10:53
Even small watercourses such as The Figgate/Braid Burn could generate electricity.

I am old enough to remember Duddingston Mill which was a substantial operation with,if I remember correctly, 2 overshot mill wheels.

In fact the original weir still exists in Duddingston Golf Course along with the lade which ran under Duddingston Crossroads.

 

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