Nova Innovation was set up in 2009 by
CEO Simon Forrest and
CTO Gary Connor. Both have a
PhD from the
University of Edinburgh, in Electrical Engineering and Power Systems Engineering respectively.
Nova 30 turbine In April 2014, Nova installed a 30 kW turbine in the Bluemull Sound, in partnership with the North Yell Development Council, making it the "world's first community-owned tidal power generator". This was connected to the local electricity grid by a 1 km subsea cable; helping power an ice house at
Cullivoe harbour and up to 30 local homes. The turbine was decommissioned in 2016. The project was supported by the
Scottish Government Community and Renewable Energy Scheme. The Nova 30 turbine was a three-bladed horizontal axis machine, mounted on a gravity foundation that sat on the seabed. It was fabricated by Renfrew based Steel Engineering. In March 2024, one of the turbine blades went on display at the
National Museum of Scotland.
Shetland Tidal Array After deploying the Nova 30, the company developed plans for an array of five turbines in the Bluemull Sound, to the northeast of Cullivoe Harbour. The company was awarded £1.9m in grants and loans from
Scottish Enterprise, and they raised a further £1.85m from
Belgium based green energy company ELSA, part of the IDETA Group. In 2021, the company received a further £6.4m investment from the
Scottish National Investment Bank. The first 100 kW tidal turbine was connected in August 2016, followed by another two similar turbines later that year. The original plan was for an array of five turbines, but in 2018 an amended license was awarded to install six turbines. A fourth turbine was added in 2020, then in January 2023 two further turbines were added, making it the largest number of turbines in a tidal-stream array. These turbines were connected by a subsea hub and a single export cable, whereas the previous turbines all had individual cables to shore. However, the three oldest turbines were removed just months later at the end of the EnFAIT project leaving the array at just 0.3 MW. By December 2020 the array had generated 469 MWh through more that 14,000 hours of operation. All of the turbines were two-bladed horizontal-axis machines, which sat on the seabed on gravity foundations. The first three were Nova M100 turbines which incorporated a gearbox. Nova simplified the design for the later M100-D by incorporating a direct-drive mechanism, reportedly cutting the cost by a third. They later installed an
electric vehicle charger at Cullivoe Harbour in March 2021, claiming this was the world's first "tidal powered" charger.
Turbine in Étel Estuary, Brittany, France Between March and April 2023, Nova tested a 50 kW turbine in the
Étel Estuary, their first turbine installed outwith Scotland. This was supported by the Horizon 2020 funded ELEMENT project. Due to the flow of the river, the tidal resource in the estuary had faster ebb currents than flood currents. The RE50 turbine did not yaw, and was therefore deployed facing into the ebb current minimising the impact of tower shadow and maximising power generation. == Future projects ==