Researching methods to reduce energy use has long been a focus of the Canary Islands Institute of Technology (ITC), a research facility supported by the regional government of the Canary Islands. Scientists there are taking this one step further: they are investigating how to produce freshwater from saltwater without using fossil fuels at all.

The Canary Islands have a great deal of sun, wind, and seawater. It is an excellent place to develop systems. It is also an ideal place to simulate conditions in many developing countries.

The engineering involved in using renewable energy to power a desalination plant can be relatively simple: solar or wind generators can be hooked up to an existing utility grid, which then offsets the power demands of the desalination plant.

The challenge, however, in coupling desalination directly with renewable energy such as solar or wind power lies in the variability of renewable energy. The membranes used in reverse osmosis need to be kept wet, and the systems that make up a desalination plant have been developed to handle a steady stream of water. Solar energy is plentiful when the sun shines and wind power only when the wind blows.

Researchers in the Canary Islands have spent the past decade developing stand-alone small plants that could provide water for approximately 100 to 300 families, about the size of a small village in a developing country. ITC projects are also carried out in conjunction with other international research institutes or companies.
On one Canary Island test site, photo-voltaic panels are hooked up to a battery, which feeds a steady supply of electricity to a small desalination plant. But batteries not the best solution because you have to replace them after five or 10 years, and then you have to dispose of them as well. It’s better to develop a system that needs no batteries in the first place.

Other solutions tested at the Canary Islands site make use of wind power. In one, a small wind-energy converter powers a seawater RO plant designed to operate even with the stops and starts of wind power. In another, a small wind farm creates a small stand-alone electricity grid that then feeds electricity to the desalination plant.

The Canary island of El Hierro, which has 10,000 inhabitants, hopes to model the future of island living. ITC is involved in a project there in which eventually 100 percent of the island’s energy needs will be served by renewable energy; that energy, through a grid, will also power desalination plants that supply all the island’s drinking water and irrigation needs.

The ITC research group is one of only a handful focusing on developing and testing plants in which wind turbines directly power the desalination process without going through any grid.

Though all of these systems could be used in industrialized countries, the main goal of the ITC is to develop plants that could theoretically supply water to even a fraction of the billion people around the world in need of clean drinking water. Many of these people live in areas that have abundant renewable energy resources and yet no electricity grid, and they may never be connected to a grid. This is the philosophy behind these researches.
