Related Links

Related Stories

  • Wave and tidal power – an emerging new market for composites
    The wind power market has been a huge success story for the composites industry. Is the developing wave and tidal energy sector going to prove the same?
  • Securing UK marine energy
    Lack of investment and an underdeveloped marine supply chain are holding back the marine energy industry in the UK. But there is room for development if the Government and private companies act on the vast potential for wave and tidal power that lies within and around the island, writes David Elliott of QinetiQ.
  • Maximising wave power
    Technology for extracting power from waves is still very much at the developmental stage, but it is already well known that devices in which the waves set up an oscillation work better if they can achieve resonance with the ‘forcing’ impulse i.e. the waves. In fact, exploiting the resonance phenomenon can amplify harvested wave power several times over what it would otherwise be. George Marsh investigates.
  • Solar thermal – thriving in the shadows?
    Solar thermal heating and cooling attracts less media attention and R&D funding than the more glamorous "high-tech" solar PV. Yet, this low profile player dominates the solar renewables market, accounting for 84%- as opposed to solar PV's 14%- according to Jes Donneborg, ceo of Denmark's Arcon Solvarme A/S. How can this be so and what are the prospects for solar thermal now?
  • PV manufacture:synergy without dependance
    Solar PV was born of electronic parentage, so it's not surprising that the two camps have much in common. Because of this, solar PV has inherited a manufacturing route and infrastructure originally fashioned for electronics. But some in the PV industry argue that this heritage can be as much a hindrance as a help, discovers George Marsh.

News

£1.5m to UK Wave Hub

30 July 2010

South West RDA’s Wave Hub project will receive £1.5 million investment for the development of wave energy technology from the UK Government.

Business and Enterprise Minister Mark Prisk, says: “This ground-breaking Wave Hub project is evidence of British engineering and offshore expertise – almost 80% of the value of contracts awarded so far have gone to UK businesses.

“The UK is already leading the way in marine energy, with 25% of the world’s wave and tidal technologies being developed here. This is a huge opportunity for UK business – the sector could be worth £2 billion by 2050 and it has the potential to create up to 16,000 jobs by 2040.”

An additional grant of £1.5m from the RDA will allow wave energy company Ocean Power Technologies (OPT) to develop a larger version of its Powerbuoy wave energy generator.

OPT is currently developing a scaled-up 500 kW version of its existing 150 kW Powerbuoy wave energy device.

OPT will be working with A&P Falmouth and the Peninsula Research Institute for Marine Renewable Energy during the development phase.

OPT also hopes to deploy a 150 kW version of the wave energy device at Wave Hub in Cornwall, UK.

 

This article is featured in:
Wave and tidal energy

 

Comment on this article

You must be registered and logged in to leave a comment about this article.