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The Navy Finds Extra Power In The Waves Beneath Its Ships
The U.S. Navy, like other federal agencies, is under strict orders:
buy half of its renewable energy purchases from new sources. Executive Order 1342 means the military and feds are searching for new sources of clean power.
The U.S. Navy has found it, fittingly, in wave power. Long seen as
impractical, advances in materials and engineering have made converting
of wave energy into electricity not just practical, but increasingly
economical, at the commercial scale. Ocean Power Technologies
(OPT), which has been manufacturing power buoys for specialized
applications such as Marine bases or demonstration projects, is now
poised to become a full-fledged utility off the coast of Oregon.
The U.S.'s first utility-scale, commercial "wave park"
is now moving through the final permitting stages. Located 2.5 miles
offshore near Reedsport, Oregon, the park will generate about 1.5
megawatts, enough to power more than 320 homes, using 10 massive "PB150s,"
power buoys. The buoys, 115 feet tall, will float almost entirely under
the surface. Only a small yellow buoy is seen from above. As waves roll
past, the rise and fall of the buoys drives an internal generator,
which sends electricity back to the mainland grid.
The wave park in Oregon, and others like it, can ultimately scale-up
to 50 or 100 megawatts. Yet OPT says that’s just the beginning. It’s
hard at work on the "PB500," a power buoy that generates three times more energy than its predecessors.
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