Seabased global wave resource map shows where wave energy is possible

When people think of ocean waves, they think of big waves crashing into the shore or tossing about ships. They may not recognize that waves that seem relatively tame and gentle have enormous power, too. In building the technology to capture the power of ocean waves to channel into electricity, Seabased needed a tool to understand where waves are a viable source of power at utility scale: so we built one.

The data visualization above shows the power the ocean waves around the world. The most powerful waves are seen in bright red, nearer the poles; the least powerful are in deep blue – often in places protected from heavy winds. Between those two is a whole range of wave climates. The numbers indicate how many kilowatts (kW) of energy per meter wavefront are available in each region.

“Many if not most wave technology developers have focused on big waves, because those waves can undoubtedly create a lot of power,” explains Dr. Francisco Francisco, Seabased’s manager of Energy and Environment. “But most of the people in the world live in the mid and lower latitudes. That’s why Seabased designed our technology to best fit these regions.”

So the huge swaths of light blue, teal, green and pale yellow – where waves are likely to be moderate – is also where the bulk of the global population is.

Besides the fact more people live near smaller waves, there is another advantage to focusing on those waves: cost. “The more powerful the waves that the equipment has to endure, the stronger the equipment needs to be, which often drives the price up,” continues Francisco. “That cost is not always justified when you consider the number of days the wave park could provide increased power from these very large waves. We want the commercial success of wave energy to be a huge contributor to the transition to renewables. That can only happen if wave power is affordable, competitive with other renewables.”

More importantly, the research shows that a place where waves are smaller but steady for months and months of the year can produce as much or more electricity than a place where waves are very powerful during fewer days of the year. By tracking the resource, we see where the most power is actually produced over time. Regions with waves with a power as low as 8 kWh per meter wavefront, when using Seabased technology, may produce a predictable stream of electricity that is competitive in price and can replace other fuels on the grid.

A lot of factors go into how much power waves can create. This global map, created using Google Earth and the IOWAGA-Ifremer database, helps us identify locations where Seabased equipment could catch the most energy to work efficiently and competitively.

Currently, Seabased is in the final stages of pre-commercial optimization and certification of its wave-to-grid system. Already we have over 200 megawatts of projects planned around the world, many in those in low to medium wave climate – or cool color - places. 

Wave energy could produce enough stable energy  to the grid to change the game.

3D Modeling helps optimize the power output from Seabased’s generators

The beauty of 3D modeling is that you can see what’s happening on the inside of a complex system, as well as on the outside. 3D, hydrodynamic CFD modeling offers a good way to understand in precise detail how a linear generator responds to a buoy moving through different waves. Seabased engaged the University of Edinburgh to use their powerful 3D tool to model the direct drive linear generator´s response to different kinds of waves.

The results enable Seabased to better optimize its wave-to-grid system by maximizing the power generation achievable from multiple generators connected to one electrical system. The company is looking for the sweet spot, the optimal point, where the system can produce maximum output at minimum cost, without risking excessive wear and tear on system components.

 “It has been exciting for us to participate in this project," said Professor Markus Mueller, Chair of Electrical Generation Systems at the University’s School of Engineering. “We work with a number of companies and Seabased has advanced technology in the wave energy sector.

The project is part of an ongoing system optimization project in advance of the commercial launch of the Seabased wave-to-grid system.

One of the studies used the university’s 3D modeling capability to model how the generator reacts as the buoy moves through the waves. This information will be used to refine the system to optimize the amount of grid ready electricity that can be produced.

The goal of the second study was to acquire even more granular data around producing maximum electrical power with the correct voltage for the grid while not overheating the equipment. 

With Seabased’s technology/solution, a buoy on the surface of the ocean moves with the waves. This motion lifts a heavy, magnetized weight called a translator, up and down inside the generator. The generator – called a Wave Energy Converter, or WEC - converts this mechanical energy into electrical energy which it sends it to Seabased’s unique electrical system, also located on the seabed. This system converts the power from multiple WECs into 33kv DC electricity suited for grid use.

Seabased CEO Laurent Albert said he was pleased with the results that came out of the university. “The University has a stellar reputation,” he said. “The work they did is part of a larger campaign to reduce any margins of uncertainty in preparation for certification and industrial ramp-up of Seabased’s wave energy parks. 

We are delighted that the results they produced are in line with previously measured performances and that the study gave us tangible insights in the optimization of the whole system.”  

 As Seabased finalizes the specifications for the commercial system, it aims to maximize power output while keeping a firm cap on costs. Factors to consider in system optimization include:

  • Getting the most power, at the proper voltage, in different wave climates

  • Finding the ideal balance between power output and heat flux in the generators

  • Finding the balance between energy output and cost of energy (which includes using off-the-shelf parts)

Protecting the environment and keeping the lifecycle CO2 low

“Partnerships with organizations like the University of Edinburgh mean that many minds are working to solve the complex equations that will help bring wave energy to the renewable market,” notes Albert.

 

 

 

Seabased to speak at Sustainable Energy for Africa Conference

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Seabased CEO Laurent Albert and Energy and Environment Manager Francisco Francisco PhD are honored to have been asked to speak at the SE4A 2021 conference to be held in Cotonou from 08 thru 11 November 2021.

 The two will present together on aspects of wave energy in Africa including:

  • The advantages of West Africa’s moderate and steady wave climate in producing electrical power

  • How the predictability of wave can offset some of the intermittency issues experienced with other African renewable sources

Access to energy is essential to growth and development around the world, and many African nations have eagerly embraced renewables as part of their strategy for future growth. The wave climate in West Africa, though less vigorous than in Northern Europe, is very steady and could produce significant amounts of electricity year-round. Seabased wave energy technology has already been tested offshore near Ada, Ghana.

Sustainable Energy for Africa is an international conference organized jointly by the Benin National Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters (ANSALB) and by the Royal Academy for Overseas Sciences of Belgium (KAOW-ARSOM).

 
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 Laurent Albert joined Seabased as CEO in 2019. He is a French civil engineer and MBA who has previously held senior executive positions in Europe and Asia in both high-end tech and marine renewables in Naval Group (formerly DCNS), Naval Energies, and TechnipFMC.

 

Francisco Francisco has a PhD in Electrical Engineering and conducts feasibility studies for Seabased’s commercial wave energy parks. Originally from Mozambique, and now a resident of Sweden. Prior to joining Seabased in 2017Francisco was a research fellow with OceaNET - Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions where he developed hardware based on sonar systems for sub-sea environmental monitoring.

 

 
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Seabased and ORE Catapult Complete Wave-to-Wire Simulation Software

The software will help the wave energy company extract the most power from many different types of wave climates.

Seabased and the Offshore Renewable Energy (ORE) Catapult have created a new software tool that can help Seabased optimize its wave energy system from wave to grid.

The new tool will move Seabased toward its anticipated third-party commercial certification at the end of 2021. When combined with the test bench currently under development, with continued engineering support from ORE Catapult, it will allow Seabased to quantify the amount of power customers can expect from our technology in any given wave climate.

Seabased wave energy technology comprises a buoy on the surface that, when lifted by a wave, raises a translator inside a generator on the sea floor, producing electrical power. Seabased’s system channels that power to a marine substation where the electricity is converted to a form usable by conventional grids and sent on to provide CO2-free power to the grid.

Modeling different kinds of waves

How much power can be extracted from waves depends on the average size of waves, but also on the time between waves, the length of waves, and more. While many people assume wave power will only work on coastlines with the biggest waves, Seabased’s technology was specifically designed to be able to work in many different wave climates – from robust to moderate.

The new wave-to-wire software tool created for, and in collaboration with, Seabased models how much power is generated at each step of the process. It can model many different wave climates. This will allow Seabased to optimize its system for those wave climates and extract the most power from each.

The collaboration with ORE Catapult was partly funded through the Interreg North Sea Region’s Ocean Energy Scale-up Alliance (OESA) project, which aims to accelerate the development of marine energy technologies through strategic partnerships and international collaborations. ORE Catapult is the UK’s leading technology innovation and research center for offshore renewables and supports the development of new products and services, and the growth of SMEs, in the marine renewables sector.

“We need to know exactly how much power is going through the wire,” said Francisco Francisco, Energy and Environment Officer for Seabased who, with Lead Electrical Engineer Anders Kronberg, has been working on power park array simulations for each wave climate. “Working with ORE Catapult has been really helpful. My passion is ensuring the numbers are accurate and ORE Catapult is an industry leader in these kinds of simulations.”

Quantifying the energy of waves

ORE Catapult’s Wave and Tidal Energy Sector Lead, Simon Cheeseman said: “The introduction of commercial-scale wave energy into the renewables mix would be a welcome addition as we strive to reduce our carbon footprint and meet Net Zero targets by 2050. ORE Catapult is pleased to be able to continue our support to Seabased with their ongoing technology development. Quantifying the energy taken from wave resource is vital to secure investor confidence and this new wave-to-wire simulation software is designed to do exactly that.”

Simon Stark, OESA’s Project Manager said, “This kind of collaboration is what is needed to bring the enormous promise of ocean energy to fruition. We’re really pleased to see this progress with our OESA partners.”

About Seabased

Seabased is a leader in the wave energy industry - designing, building, installing, and maintaining wave parks that use the power of ocean waves to provide cost-competitive electricity directly to the grid. Seabased’s modular, utility-scale technology generates stable and predictable power that enables grid operators to increase the amount of renewables they can incorporate into the energy mix, either through stand-alone wave parks or in combination with other renewables such as offshore wind. Seabased’s solution is also proven gentle on the environment.

About the Offshore Renewable Energy Catapult

ORE Catapult was established in 2013 by the UK Government and is part of a network of Catapults set up by Innovate UK in high growth industries. It is the UK’s leading innovation centre for offshore renewable energy.

Independent and trusted, with a unique combination of world-leading test and demonstration facilities and engineering and research expertise, ORE Catapult convenes the sector and delivers applied research, accelerating technology development, reducing risk and cost and enhancing UK-wide economic growth.

Active throughout the UK, ORE Catapult has operations in Glasgow, Blyth, Levenmouth, Aberdeen, the Humber, the East of England, the South West and Wales and operates a collaborative research partnership in China.

About Ocean Energy Scale-up Alliance

The Interreg North Sea Region Ocean Energy Scale-up Alliance (OESA) is an accelerator project aiming to develop and deploy large-scale marine energy pilots. The transnational partnership under the lead of the Dutch Marine Energy Centre (DMEC) combines expertise from 6 European countries from the North Sea Region.

Through its transnational collaboration OESA strives to strengthen the ocean energy sector. This will allow to share lessons learned and lead to the faster production of more renewable energy in the North Sea region.

 

 

The new software will help Seabased optimize its technology to extract the most power from wave climates around the world.

The new software will help Seabased optimize its technology to extract the most power from wave climates around the world.

Marine Construction Specialist Jason Bayne Joins Seabased as Director of Installation and Commissioning

 

Seabased has engaged Jason Bayne as Director of Installation and Commissioning. Jason brings more than 20 years’ experience in subsea construction and installation globally, including project management and offshore execution for many projects that were the first of their kind in the maritime industry. That experience of industry firsts, breaking old paradigms, is one of the things that attracted him to Seabased.

“Three years ago, I was supporting Seabased on transport and installation scopes of work around the globe,” Jason said. “Seabased is a never-before-seen solution and I wanted to be part of that. It’s a really unique opportunity.”

Seabased CEO Laurent Albert noted that Jason is highly professionally versatile. “He has overseen installation in every kind of environment around the globe and he’s a creative thinker when it comes to iterating the process toward increased efficiency. He’s also an excellent team player.”

Jason, an American living in Norway, grew up on the water of the Great Lakes in the US, doing water sports. The father of four is still an active surfer and sailor.

“I’m much more comfortable on water than on land,” he said. “I’d live at sea. If Norway had a warmer climate, I’d be living on a floating house right now.”

His primary role at Seabased is to ensure the company has a cost effective, efficient, and environmentally sensitive transport and installation methodology for the commercial projects in its pipeline. The installation itself, he notes, is simple relative to other offshore construction since there’s no drilling of the seabed and the work can be done with light vessels. 

With a BSME and MBA in Ocean Industries, Jason has worked both as an entrepreneur and for Fortune 500 companies, garnering experience in areas from Offshore Operations to Project Development and Technical Subsea Construction Development to Market Strategy. Over the years he’s had several personality tests to gauge whether he would be a good match for a given team. The results are always the same:

“I specialize in seeing the big picture,” he said. “I tend to see things holistically; I can spot anomalies.”

“But I’ve also had 10 years in executive level corporate functions where I’ve been exposed to how to reach clients through development of commercially viable solutions.“

He’s also very practical, and fits well with the Seabased team which approaches problem-solving in a straightforward, nuts-and-bolts fashion.

Jason Bayne Director of Installation and Commissioning

Jason Bayne Director of Installation and Commissioning

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Seabased is one of the first companies to tackle the goal of using waves for utility-scale electrical generation; and one of the few from those early days to weather an investment climate that sat in the doldrums for years. Despite wave energy’s immense promise, skepticism that it would ever become commercially viable resulted in many investors shying away from the industry, so the funds for the tests and innovation needed to bring companies’ efforts to fruition weren’t available. Through it all, Seabased kept plugging away. By joining the team at this juncture, when investment in renewable energy is taking off, Jason has the opportunity to play a key role in helping shape the remaining stages of the certification and commercialization process so Seabased can take its place among the renewables fighting Climate Change. That’s a challenge he relishes.

“The management is fantastic,” he said. “They’re good at focusing, good at giving direction, and excellent at listening.”  

“Seabased is in the first mover position and as soon as the certification milestone is achieved, Seabased will be ready to deploy all over the world,” he said. “It’s like Tesla: they had the development pains as a pioneer in new technology, but once they crossed the threshold of viability, a new standard was set, and the industry around the globe embraced it.”

Seabased is closing in on that breakthrough moment: One more first to add to Jason’s world first collection.

 

 

 

Seabased Supply Chain Director Heidi Ødegården Channels Offshore EPCI Skills Into Wave Energy

Seabased has engaged Heidi Ødegården as Supply Chain Director. Heidi brings more than 25 years’ experience in Engineering, Procurement, Construction, and Installation (EPCI) contracts including roles as manager of subcontractor deliveries, senior purchaser, assembly supervisor, and offshore operations coordinator. She has worked in India, China, Canada, the United States, and Europe.

 Heidi’s current role includes globally sourcing the materials and services required to assemble the components for the turnkey wave energy parks in Seabased’s project pipeline. That includes finding high quality parts and materials located near planned projects so as to keep costs and lifecycle CO2 footprint low while potentially creating local jobs at the site. Heidi, who has held several roles in project management and worked as Health Safety Environment and Quality manager, is also overseeing safety and assembly documentation necessary for the company’s certification process towards DNVGL in preparation for industrial ramp-up.  

 Though she has several hats to wear as the company works through its certification process, that works for her. “When you do it for the team, it’s a different feeling than when some guy on the other side of the world says ‘You fit this box so you do this.’ I hate being in a box.“

 “Heidi is a huge asset to the team,” said Seabased CEO Laurent Albert. “She’s very knowledgeable, very meticulous. There are a lot of details in this industry and she's excellent at keeping track of all of them. She also brings a lot of enthusiasm and humor.”

In addition to decades of experience, Heidi has an extensive network in the offshore industry that gives her a strong advantage in finding the best solutions. “I have a network who can deliver,” she said.

 Heidi, who grew up in the coastal village of Grimstad, Norway, loves to be out on the waves, on a vessel loaded with heavy industrial equipment – such as tons of mooring chain - to be installed in the sea. She likes to be in the middle of the action.

 “Chain is like water. It’s challenging to work with,” she said. “It can cause serious damage if you don’t know how to treat it. If you get a knot on the chain you’re in trouble. If it starts running on its own, you run too, it the opposite direction! I’m fascinated by the challenge of loading it in an organized and safe manner.”

Supply Chain Director Heidi Ødegården

Supply Chain Director Heidi Ødegården

Heidi in her chain loading days

Heidi in her chain loading days

Only about 3% of employees in offshore are women; it was less when Heidi started. When she was a girl, her mother gave her an interesting piece of advice: “She told me not to learn how to type, because if I did I would wind up as a secretary,” Heidi recalls. When she was working for a mooring company and the leadership refused her an offshore role because she wasn’t an engineer, Heidi paid for her own offshore basic safety training program and was rewarded with an operations coordinator job on an offshore project. In her career, the only traditionally female role she’s held was when she did a short stint as a flight attendant for a Spanish airline because she wanted to live in Spain and the airline industry had many of the same safety requirements the offshore industry had. She left that job when her former boss called her and said “I’m in a new company. It’s total chaos. Please come and help create some order back in my life.”

 Throughout her career, Heidi found ways to open doors to the roles and work experiences she wanted.  At Seabased, she continues to be a pioneer, as a leader in one of the world’s first ocean wave energy companies.

 “I really love the team and the extreme diversity of the people,” Heidi said. “There’s no echo chamber. Everyone brings a unique perspective. And I like the opportunity to be at Seabased in this moment when it’s about to become a commercial reality and I can develop the systems in the way I think will benefit the project. Bringing my experience to a company in this stage of development in a new industry is a big challenge that I am enjoying taking on.”

 

 

EU Commissioner Kadri Simson Meets with OEE

European Commissioner for Energy, Kadri Simson, met with Ocean Energy Europe (OEE) October 20 to learn more about the promise and advances of ocean energy. Seabased VP Business Development Marcelle Askew, a member of OEE’s board of directors, was invited to speak about the importance of incorporating wave energy and other ocean energies into the renewable mix rather than relying solely on wind and solar. Currently the percentage of renewables like solar and wind on the grid are extremely limited, less than 10%, globally. One reason is that their intermittency makes it difficult for grid operators to provide a baseload of energy that meets the demand. Consequently, most grids fall back on fossil fuels. Simson has expressed an interest in more aggressively pursuing renewable energy for Europe. By utilizing and optimizing technology for all the different forms of renewables, focusing on those in greatest abundance in a given area, we can balance the variability of one renewable against another, increasing the amount of renewables on the grid. Ocean energy has the potential to provide 400% of current electrical consumption. It needs to be part of the solution. As Askew noted, renewables are #bettertogether.  

Seabased Addresses International Forum on Marine Economy 

Seabased CEO Laurent Albert was invited to join a prestigious group of presenters Oct. 15 to speak at a forum on the marine economy moderated by WU Chen, Chief Editor of The Economist Global Business Review, People’s Republic of China. The theme of the forum was building a stronger blue economy post Covid-19 and “Betting on the marine energy as the wave of the future: The technological innovations which will deliver.” Albert spoke on how the combination of the power of wave energy and offshore wind has the potential to be a real game-changer in the domain of marine renewable energy because it increases the amount of renewables that can provide a baseload of energy for the grid, while sharing many of the costs. Other speakers included Peng Wei, Deputy Director, National Marine Technology Center, Ministry of Natural Resources; Henry Jeffrey, Chairman Ocean Energy Systems (OES); Phillip Sinn, Founder & CEO of Germany’s Sinn Power, and Chen Daoyi, Director of Marine Technology Center, Tsinghua University. The October 15 forum was organized by Shenzhen SEZ Construction and Development Group Co., Ltd. 

HOME: Let Nature Design Your Renewable Strategy

This piece was originally published in Renewables Now.

by Laurent Albert, CEO

It’s time to redesign our energy strategy. And the very same nature that created an impressive energy palette with sun, wind, water, and more can show us how to do it.

Today, only 9% of the energy that powers grids worldwide comes from variable renewable energy (VRE) sources like sun and wind. Because of their intermittent nature, VREs are still considered a costly add-on to the “normal” grid. Even with the existential crisis of climate change, renewable technology investment is often treated as a luxury and decisions are driven by short-term thinking: how many megawatts can I get for my dollar with this technology versus that one?

It’s time to take a longer view. Renewables create a challenge because they’re variable; the sun sets, the wind stops. But sun and wind are not the only resources. Every point on the globe has multiple natural resources with unique synergies, an interplay between natural elements that balance each other and shape a particular climate, year in and year out. Rather than balancing one renewable resource with fossil fuels, we need to take our cues from nature and build an infrastructure designed around several resources and technologies that can balance one another. At Seabased, a European wave energy company, we call this the Hybrid Optimal Energy Mix: HOME.

The exact recipe for HOME in any given place is based on data--carefully tracking, minute by minute, the amount of potential power generated by various resources over time. Grid operators must provide a baseload of power—enough to meet the demand under normal circumstances. Historically, grid stability becomes a critical issue as soon as a certain percentage of the energy supply (15-20%) originates from intermittent sources. This explains why about 70% of our energy still comes from fossil fuels. So, the Holy Grail of a sustainable renewable energy strategy is to achieve a stable baseload by mitigating this intermittency through a robust, optimal combination of technologies and energy sources. When you track each resource meticulously, you can see at the end of a year how much of that baseload you can expect to derive from each renewable resource – and from the different resources combined.

Renewables in concert

Think of it as a symphony. Each instrument on its own delivers beautiful music, though with limitations. Flutes don’t hit the low notes. Drums don’t offer a melody. But when they work in concert--the strings, the brass, the woodwinds, the percussion, perhaps a piano--each doing what it does best, the difference is breathtaking. This is synergy: creating a whole that is more than the sum of the parts. This is what we can achieve by balancing multiple renewables.

For example, today we witness expensive windmills that are only running at a fraction of their capacity due to the intermittency and the corresponding grid limitations. But the right combination of technologies could increase the combined level of stable baseload, enabling each technology to produce at a higher level, mutually enhancing the value of each: the optimal combination of technologies is a tide that lifts all boats.

As head of a wave energy company, I am passionate about this topic. I find it a fascinating and exciting problem to learn to work with the Earth’s energy to create the best scenario based on nature, rather than extract energy in a way that harms Earth, and, ultimately, we who live on it. The tendency to embrace renewables based on their current price point has led to relatively anemic investments in ocean energy, despite the fact that the research shows wave energy could produce enough electricity for all the world’s demand. Ocean waves are more predictable than wind, more constant than sun—being a 24-hour phenomenon. And water’s density—800 times that of wind—makes waves incredibly powerful. Seabased is moving toward certification and commercialization. But, like many in the sector, we struggle against a pervasive notion that there are “enough” renewable technologies out there. We beg to differ.

If countries hope to reach their renewable goals, wean themselves off fossil fuels, and reduce their carbon output, they will need to be able to lean on all their resources. The technology will always evolve; the resources are relatively constant. The enlightened approach would be to make investments in technology that capitalize on those resources.

Bermuda at HOME: A case study

We have been working with the island of Bermuda, which, like most other islands, is entirely dependent on imported fossil fuels. Per capita, residents of Bermuda pay about three times what residents of their neighbor, the United States, pay for electricity.

Bermuda is 21 miles long and two miles wide, at its widest point. No one on Bermuda is ever more than five minutes away from the ocean, which is probably one of the reasons why, during non-pandemic times, the island attracts nearly 700,000 visitors per year. Bermuda has ample sunshine, wind, and waves, but the island also has constraints on how much it can capitalize on these resources. There is not enough available land for large wind or solar farms. So the country determined they would only be likely to derive a small amount of power from solar. And, any energy source offshore must be sufficiently invisible that it does not detract from ocean vistas.

Given these parameters, and using minute-to-minute sun, wind, and wave data in Bermuda, collected over a full year, engineers from Seabased have calculated Bermudians’ HOME. By plotting the power output of each resource on a graph, and cross-referencing it against another graph that plots variability of power produced by wind and wave, Seabased’s engineers concluded that Bermuda’s HOME would be found by supplementing the 6% of solar power with 28% wind energy and 66% wave energy. As exciting as this favorable data is for wave, we’re not quite ready for it yet – though Seabased is on track for providing competitive utility scale solutions like this in the near future.

The point is that looking at HOME tells us which mix of renewable technologies would benefit us most if they were available, and hence which are worthy of investment today, because the win – both commercial and environmental – will be enormous when we roll them out.

Making renewable decisions

The calculations for Bermuda were based on that island’s distinct geography, land mass, and access to a powerful wave climate, etc. Other climates will have a different HOME.

Ireland, for example, has wood, water, wind, wave and some wastes as key renewable energy sources. Its wave climate is dynamic, with waves up to three meters average on the West Coast and from one to two meters in the Irish Sea. In addition, there are only about 1,400 hours of sunlight per year—averaging less than four hours a day. Some inland places average fewer than two windy days a year, while northern coastal locations may have more than 50.

After plotting the resource’s potential power output, communities must explore and consider the possible constraints of land and/or water use. Finally, they will be able to calculate which renewable hybrid mix will produce the most stable power to the respective community; they will know their HOME. Donegal will likely have a different HOME than Galway Bay or Cork. However, the natural energy resources for each of these locations are consistent over time. 

Our 21st-century data collection and analysis tools give us a powerful new window into how the Earth’s resources work, separately and in tandem. With these tools, we can make precise decisions, with small margins, that can drive in significant value and benefits to our society. Over time, our technology and the way we use power will change. What will remain relatively constant—even with climate change—is the resources that make up the environment in our communities. We must design our renewable architecture based on an optimal mix of the resources themselves. 

Building the renewable energy world for 2050 starts at HOME.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

What is Ocean Energy?


What is ocean energy? When you think of solar power you can picture a photovoltaic panel; when you think of wind energy you can picture a giant windmill on the horizon; but what contraption do you imagine with ocean energy? It’s clear that the ocean is an enormous source of power, as anyone who has been knocked over by a wave, seen them crash on the shore, or been rolled about in a ship can attest. Water is some 832 times denser than air; and ocean energy incorporates the forces of many resources: the sun, the wind, the movements of the earth, and the gravitational pull of the moon.

Ocean Energy Europe says wave energy could be the largest renewable, theoretically providing up to 125% of the world’s current electrical consumption. Experts from the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) say if you included the other technologies - energy made by tides, from the chemical exchange of salty and fresh water, and geothermal exchange - ocean energy could provide 400% of the world’s electrical energy consumption. Since 1799, people have been working out how to turn the energy of the waves into electricity. A little over 200 years later, we’re finally arriving.

It’s reasonable to ask, what’s taking so long? Ocean energy faces some challenges the others didn’t.  While solar panels and windmills weren’t easy to figure out, at least they could be developed on dry land where you could test and fix things relatively easily. It’s a lot tougher when the part you want to recalibrate is more than a dozen meters under the surface of the ocean.

And while solar panels and windmills have to withstand storms, they’re not also contending with tons of churning saltwater. Saltwater is highly corrosive and the water in the ocean may oscillate as aggressively as the water in a washing machine, so anything built to sit in it for decades has to be impervious. It can’t break down or expose the environment to toxins. In Seabased’s opinion it also has to be benign or beneficial to the ecosystem.

As Simon Stark, project manager of the Ocean Energy Scale-up Alliance pointed out: “Putting something in the ocean is as difficult as putting it out in space.”

Because it’s cutting edge technology, ocean energy is generally more expensive than solar or wind. But both solar and wind were much more costly when they were emerging technologies. According to IRENA the price of solar dropped 80% between 2010 and 2017, and the price of wind dropped 38%. The same low rates are expected of some ocean energy technologies as they are commercially deployed.

How much power each of these technologies could theoretically generate is calculated by the type of technology and the abundance and type of resource. The calculations do not take into account the cost of any of these technologies.

To give a sense of the promise of ocean energy, the world consumed 22,315 TWh in 2018. Some of these technologies could conceivably provide more power than the world consumed.

In the ocean, there is not one technology for harnessing power; there are many. What follows is an overview from 10,000 feet of what many of these technologies look like and how they work, although there are far too many particulars to cover in this space.

Earlier rendition of Seabased wave energy park

Earlier rendition of Seabased wave energy park

Tidal Energy

The ocean energy technology with the most commercial projects in the water as of 2020 is tidal energy. Imagine the tide is coming in, the water’s getting higher, but there’s a barrier. The water will exert pressure on this barrier, but to pass through it must push through turbines – devices that rotate. The water causes the turbines to spin and the spinning of the turbines creates electricity. When the tide goes out, it happens again. There are many different kinds of turbines designed for this purpose.

Tides aren’t affected by weather conditions but only by the cycles of moon, sun, and earth, so tidal power is entirely predictable. And this technology is proven: EDF has operated a 240-megawatt tidal barrage since 1966. Tidal lagoons are a newer technology and can be entirely land-based. Their turbines include a ring-shaped harbor wall with a section of hydro turbines.

There are also tidal currents that harness the lateral motion of ocean currents.

Scientists estimate tidal energy has the global potential to produce 500–1000 TWh/yr 

Wave Energy

After tidal, wave energy is the most developed ocean energy technology. Actually, the most developed technologies, since there are several. Some of them lie on top of the waves like a raft, others sit under the waves with something like a fan sticking up that is slapped around by the moving water, some use turbines. They may be onshore, nearshore, or offshore and can be matched with other technologies like solar panels or offshore wind.

Seabased wave technology is based on a patented direct-drive linear generator that captures this dense resource. A buoy riding the waves is tethered by cable to a generator resembling an 8 meter high spark plug that sits on the sea floor. The waves move the buoy, the buoy pulls the cable, the cable raises and lowers translator (mostly made of magnets) inside the generator. This mechanical energy is converted to electrical energy. This kind of generator is part of an array of generators, each collecting energy from the waves they’re riding. Each generator sends the power to a subsea substation that converts it to electricity that can go directly to the electrical distribution grid. Electrical grids can only incorporate electricity that meets quality requirements and very few renewable technologies can meet those requirements. Seabased wave power parks are designed to be plug-and-play, modular systems that can be expanded as needed. They require little maintenance, so it’s okay if sea flora and sea fauna move in and make the place home, since they’re safe from fishing or recreation in there.

Among the European countries with attractive wave climates are the UK, Ireland, Portugal, France, Spain, and Denmark. But there are also thousands of islands with waves that currently depend entirely on imported fossil fuels. Seabased has designed its system to work not only with big waves, but also with moderate ones.

Wave energy is believed to be one of the most powerful forms of ocean energy with a theoretical potential of 29,500 TWh/yr of high density power.

 Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion

Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion (OTEC) works in tropical places where the water at the surface is at least 28 Celsius. Some places where it is expected to be effective are parts of India and Africa. OTEC generators draw warm water in from the ocean’s surface. They may operate on seawater alone or they may incorporate a substance like ammonia, which boils at a low -33.34 Celsius. The ammonia becomes vapor which, like any other steam, can turn a turbine when forced into a small space. On the other side of the turbine, cold ocean water, drawn from about 900 meters below the surface, is used to cool the ammonia and it begins its journey again.

OTEC could theoretically produce 44,000 TWh/yr to 88,000 TWh/yr though the power it produces is very low density.

Salinity Gradient

Salinity gradient is a way of using water’s chemistry to make power. When you mix saltwater and fresh water, positive and negative ions will naturally flow from the water with the highest concentration (the saltwater) to that with the lowest (the fresh). This is energy moving around. But if you use special membranes that only let one or another kind of ion through, the water can be made to move in specific ways that creates power. OEE said, “The energy released from 1 m3 fresh water is comparable to the energy released by the same m3 falling over a height of 260 m. The availability and predictability of salinity gradient energy is very high, and therefore makes it a solid baseload energy source.”

Salinity gradient is estimated to have a potential output of 2,000 TWh/yr.  

This is a highly condensed look at decades of research with possibly thousands of studies produced on different mechanical designs, materials incorporated, results from different climates, and so forth. What is certain is that the sources of ocean energy – waves, tides, temperatures, and salinity - tend to be predictable and reliable compared to some other renewables. They draw power from the rest of nature to create a formidable source of energy.

The ocean is very different in different places—the Atlantic is not the Caribbean is not the North Sea. All of these ocean energy types may find their optimal technology or combination of ocean technologies to help make the renewable transition. Already the cumulative energy produced from wave and tidal energy has increased from less than 5 GWh in 2009 to approximately 45 GWh in 2019.

“Implementing this wide array of ocean-based opportunities could reduce global GHG emissions by nearly 4 billion metric tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent in 2030 and by more than 11 billion tonnes in 2050, compared to projected business-as-usual emissions,” according to an article in the World Resources Institute.

There is a tremendous need for the world’s governments to establish policies that would quickly bring these ocean energies to commercialization, just as they did for other emerging technologies. Hopefully one day soon no one will have to ask, What is ocean energy? We’ll all be experiencing a cleaner planet because of it.

Oceans can help free islands from fossil fuel dependency

When you think of islands you often think of holidays, sunshine, ocean views, and a laid-back, relaxed environment. You don’t think of fleets of tankers carrying fossil fuels to keep the lights on. But for most of the world’s thousands of inhabited islands, paying huge amounts of money to import fossil fuels has been their only option for economic development. Islanders, many of whom are below the poverty level, are accustomed to paying more than double what mainlanders pay for their electricity. But they also live with energy insecurity, since storms—which are common on islands--political unrest, and trade wars, can all disrupt delivery of the fuel, or make it too expensive to purchase. Without that fuel there is no power for homes, medical facilities, water and water treatment plants, businesses--including those that provide food, transportation systems….

The costs alone make shifting to renewables an attractive prospect. A 2014 report by the World Bank estimated that Small Island Developing States (SIDS) spend more than €57 million per day for oil. That cost, the report said, was largely to blame for SIDS high levels of indebtedness. In Puerto Rico, whose electric utility declared bankruptcy, the purchase of fossil fuels accounts for about 70% of the electric utility’s operating costs. But islands that are not SIDS pay prohibitively high rates as well. For example, Hawaii spends about €4.2 billion.

If SIDS switched to 100% renewable sources, they would save around €2.83 billion annually, research shows. That’s equivalent on average to around 3.3% of their GDP. Some, in the Pacific and Indian Oceans could achieve even higher percentage savings. Many are working to make that happen. The Global Island Partnership, led by the Presidents of Palau, Seychelles, and the Republic of the Marshall Islands, Prime Minister of Grenada, and Premier of the British Virgin Islands, supports resilient and sustainable island communities by inspiring leadership, catalyzing commitments, and facilitating collaboration for all islands. It holds several events every year and raises money and awareness.

And the EU has launched Clean Energy of EU Islands, policy initiative to help islands with their energy transition. The region has also mobilized €100 million under the Horizon 2020 program to enable island power systems by 2023.

But islands have several significant hurdles to overcome.

 

Jumping the hurdles

One of the big hurdles for renewable energy on islands has to do with landmass. Many islands simply lack the space for large industrial power sites, whether that’s hydroelectric plants, wind or solar farms, or other types. Offshore wind plants are an option, but since many islands depend on tourism, unobstructed sea views have significant economic value.

In lieu of big renewable power plants, many islands are moving toward microgrids—distributed energy systems with virtual power plants (VPP). With these small systems, a community of homeowners and shops might share the power from rooftop solar systems. The virtual power plant—a cloud-based system--distributes the generated power where it is needed. Often microgrids can connect and disconnect from the larger grid. This allows them to sell excess capacity to the grid and draw power from the grid when they run short. Microgrids help reduce the need for big swaths of real estate being dedicated to renewable power generation. But even these systems don’t work for everyone.

 For example, on some islands, rooftops are already in use for other things: water catchment, gardens, extra living space, solar water heaters, and more. And what do you do about a multi-family housing situation or a place where rooftops are made of materials not suitable for supporting solar panels, especially on islands where hurricanes and storms are an issue?

Each island, or group of islands, is finding solutions based on its own constraints. Recently, for example, two Danish islands—Bornholm and Samsø—and one of Scotland’s Orkney Islands were awarded the first ever EU RESponsible Island Prize in line with the Clean Energy for EU Islands initiative. Bornholm, for example, committed to being 100% sustainable and carbon neutral by 2025. All the energy produced on the island is fossil free and harvested from wind, sun, and biomass. They produce about 60% of the island’s energy needs and purchase the rest from Sweden. Their EcoGrid 2.0 project involves 1,000 households participating in experiments to guide demand-side management.

The other big hurdle is, as always, money. Renewables often fall either on the extremes of “too emerging” and therefore too expensive; or “too affordable” and therefore not profitable as investments. Countries need to find more creative vehicles and approaches for making renewables a reality, for the sake of the whole planet.

 

Ocean energy, a powerful option

Emerging technologies that make perfect sense for many of these thousands of islands are those that capitalize on ocean energy. Islands are surrounded by ocean—ocean waves, ocean tides—the ocean is in constant motion, 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. One of the problems with solar and wind energy is that they are very variable, which is hard on grid stability. But tides are very predictable and even more powerful waves take longer to build and subside than wind, so they’re more predictable and can balance out that variability.

Wave energy has multiple functions. It can be used to run hydroelectric plants, for water desalination, and to run smaller systems—like fisheries. Not all islands have the right wave climate for wave energy, but some, like the technology developed by European wave energy company Seabased, was designed to work even with moderate wave climates.

Some ocean energy technologies are designed not to be eyesores. Seabased’s buoys, for example, can barely be seen from the shore. And Seabased has done several environmental impact studies that show that our wave parks can actually become artificial reefs where desirable species can thrive and biodiversity increase, creating greater fishing opportunities outside the park and contributing to a healthy ecosystem.

 

Ecotourists love destinations with renewable energy

Increasing the amount of renewable energy on the island provides a strong economic lift as well. Increasing numbers of tourists prefer to stay in places that focus on sustainability. A report by the International Renewable Energy Agency shows that global spending on ecotourism has increased by 20% every year in the past few years; 6% of international tourists pay extra for sustainable tourism options; and 25% would be willing to pay more for environmentally friendly destinations. In Crete, Greece, 86% of survey respondents said they preferred to stay in hotels equipped with renewable energy technologies (RET), and 75% of them would be willing to pay higher fees for staying in a hotel with RETs installed. The revenues from ecotourism are estimated at roughly €513 billion per year.

Investment in renewables for islands is increasing. Research shows that €1.05 billion was invested globally into renewable energy for SIDS development between 2002 and 2016, with a big boost after 2009. However, during the same time period, non-renewable energy investment totaled €330 million—much of which, researchers assumed, went to prop up old grid systems.

 Right now, wave energy is just emerging, not ready to be commercially deployed. It is one of those technologies that today looks expensive but that, a few years hence, will be producing CO2-free power and saving islands billions in fuel costs. Waves aren’t subject to trade agreements or political unrest. When operating with more variable renewables, they can provide a stability that boosts the value and usability of all these renewable technologies. The most logical place to put money in energy, in economic development, in islands, is into freeing them from the burden of imported fossil fuels and providing CO2-free energy that becomes progressively more affordable for decades to come.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Exciting Possibilities of a Blue Recovery

We can hardly comprehend the oceans. They cover 70% of the earth’s surface but 80% of their depths have never been explored. Only a fraction of ocean species have been discovered. Oceans provide much of the oxygen we breathe as they cool the planet. But the vastness of the oceans tends to make us think they can take whatever we throw at them, like eight million metric tons of plastic waste. And actually, the oceans are in danger. Industrial and agricultural waste, oil spills, and sewage make the water toxic for sea life; sea level rise from climate change threatens the coasts; a third of fish stock are overfished…. Once this pandemic is over, we need to build back better, pursuing a Blue Recovery that could mean a lot of great new products and opportunities, cool inventions, brilliant discoveries, and healthy oceans.

The ocean economy is different from the Blue Economy. The Blue Economy means sustainable use of the ocean resources: fishing, but not overfishing; beach recreation and tourism minus the 14,000 tons of sunscreen that poison the water; using ships to carry goods back and forth without oil spills or picking up invasive species from one part of the world in ballast water and dumping them on the other side to mess up the ecosystem. Or Seabased’s favorite—getting power from the ocean in a way that can actually help the ocean environment.

 So we thought we’d look at just a few of the exciting plans for a Blue Recovery:

Clearing the oceans of plastic

The Great Pacific Garbage Patch is twice the size of Texas or three times the size of France. Though many countries have moratoriums against dumping trash in the ocean, not all are compliant and some allow their ships to dump trash at sea. A nonprofit called the Ocean Cleanup set out to clean up the garbage patch. After a year or so of false starts, they finally brought in their first haul of 60 cubic meters from the garbage patch, from large debris to microplastics, in January 2020. They believe they could have half the garbage patch cleared out in five years. They’ve also created the Interceptor which intercepts garbage at the mouth of rivers and feeds it into a solar-powered marine shuttle that can collect up to 100,000 kg of trash a day. The company plans to park an Interceptor at the mouth of the 1,000 rivers that create 80% of the waste. Once the plastic is cleaned from the ocean, it could be fed to giant maggot-like waxworms that live on the wax in beehives and  are able to digest plastic. But it won’t, because it’s actually quite valuable.

Recycling Ocean Waste

“Polyethylene is a high-quality resin that can be up-cycled in many ways and can fetch up to $500 per tonne,” according to biologist Tracy Mincer at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute. That cast-off water bottle is actually valuable to someone who can use it to make everything from sunglasses to athleisurewear. You can easily find lists of cool new companies using recycled ocean waste, much of which is plastic. Even very big companies are getting in on the action.

Adidas has a pair of shoes, Coca Cola has a soda bottle, and Patagonia has been making polyester fleeces out of recycled plastic since 1993. Companies like Oceanworks sell the plastic itself, ready to be made into something else. Ocean Waste Plastics forms recycled ocean plastic into packaging.

And it’s not all about plastic trash, either. Bureo makes everything from office chairs to skateboards out of recycled fishing nets.  

Sustainable Marine Tourism

Tourism has shrunk considerably during COVID-19, letting many people experience their communities in a whole new way—beaches and streets you can actually move around in, cleaner air, less trash…. In ocean areas, touristic boats can damage corals, touristic skin care products can poison the water, and in many places, tourists tend to litter the waters and the beaches. However tourism also provides one out of 10 jobs globally and tourism can help in lower income areas and boost the economic conditions of women and artisans. In the World Bank’s 20 Reasons Sustainable Tourism Counts for Development they wrote: “Tourism accounts for an estimated 26% of ocean-based economic activity, and much of the projected growth of global tourism will be coastal and marine. Many countries that rely on ocean-based tourism have recognized the importance of protecting their coastlines, coral reefs, marine biodiversity, beaches, and waters.”

The key is to focus on sustainable tourism going forward—examining ways to incorporate ecotourism into the design strategy. For example, instead of treating spa water with chemicals, using sea or saltwater; using hydro-powered boats instead of gasoline ones; creating boundaries around reefs and other fragile ecosystems; imposing steep fines for littering; and reducing the amount of single-use plastics and paper.

Desalinating water for people

Desalination is removing the salt from ocean water. Currently, according to the EU’s 2020 Blue Economy Report it is used to overcome water shortages in places with limited freshwater resources-- big coastal cities and islands as well as for offshore industrial processes where high salinity makes seawater unusable. The Blue Economy report said that there were 1,573 operational desalination plants in the EU in 2019 producing a total of 6.9 cubic meters a day of fresh water from seawater and brackish water. Most of it goes to public water supplies managed by municipalities, the rest is for industrial and irrigation purposes.

It’s expected that as climate change reduces the availability of water, desalination will become even more crucial. Many EU regions are expected to face severe water scarcity by 2050. Coastal desalina­tion processes require 18 terawatt hours of energy each year and nearly 40% of the energy demand for desalination processes comes from European islands. The Clean Energy for EU Islands Initiative calls for viable technological solutions to power desalination with renewable energy, which Seabased can do as part of providing CO2-free energy.  

Providing clean energy from ocean power

Ocean energy could power the world. Water is 800 times denser than air which means that it embodies an enormous amount of energy. And ocean waves are predictable: they work 24/7, 365 days a year. While the wind moves quickly and can change just as quickly, ocean waves take longer to build and longer to subside so it’s easier to know what the wave height and power will be. Ocean Energy Europe predicts that by 2050, ocean energy will be providing 10% of Europe’s energy and 400,000 jobs.

By the very fact that this is a nascent industry, it means many jobs will be created to bring it to fruition. And that’s the very definition of a Blue Recovery.

Redesigning how things are done to protect the oceans while using their resources can inspire the creation of new technologies, new solutions, even new industries, and create jobs while fighting against climate change. But it takes money, imagination, and political will. In its report, Financing and Investment for a Sustainable Ocean Economy, the Organization for Co-Operation and Economic Development notes:  “The challenge is…significant, requiring scaling up investment in sustainable ocean activities and reallocating capital away from harmful or unsustainable activities…. many ocean sectors are inherently risky compared to their land-based counterparts, because the ocean is a harsh and often remote physical environment. This can make attracting finance for ocean investment difficult and costly, even before integrating the additional risk posed by some sustainable activities, for example due to new technology and business models.”

The report recommends governments create policy frameworks around ownership of ocean assets, improving the underlying investment climate, using public funding to mitigate the risk of private sector capital, and creating new financing models and incentives toward sustainability, like carbon credits related to conservation of coastal ecosystems.

The oceans are abundant with benefits for humans; we have to decide whether they stay that way.

 

Ten reasons ocean energy is good for the planet

When it comes to renewables, most people are familiar with the site of a bank of solar panels or a giant, white windmill on a hillside. Few outside the industry would recognize a wave energy converter (WEC) that resembles a giant fishing bobber, quietly turning the dense power of waves into electricity. But ocean energy technology is about to become part of the family of commercial renewables, and that’s a very good thing for the planet. Here are 10 reasons why:

1. Ocean energy could be the largest source of clean energy:

Wave energy is a staggering global resource. As noted by Ocean Energy Europe, wave energy has the potential to be the largest source of clean energy on the planet. Estimates of the power that could be produced range from 4,000 terawatt hours per year (TWh/yr) to 29,500 TWh/yr. Europe consumes around 3,000TWh/year.

2. Ocean energy does not harm the land or water:

Extracting energy often involves ripping apart mountains, drilling deep in the ground or seabed, injecting substances into the earth, and creating toxic byproducts like tailings, fracking water, and nuclear waste. Ocean energy, though, doesn’t extract energy from its environment in a brutal way. It simply harnesses the energy that is already pulsing through the ocean. Nothing in Seabased’s technology, for example, is a permanent installation. Generators rest on the ocean floor---they’re not drilled in. They’re connected by cable to buoys that sit on top of the water, generally below the sightline from the shore. And like other ocean energy technologies, wave energy emits no CO2, it requires no fuel, and produces no waste.

3. Ocean energy eases integration of renewables into the grid:

One big reason the world doesn’t already run on renewables is that renewables are variable—the sun goes down; the wind dies down. In fact, globally today only 9% of the power on the grid comes from variable renewables. Waves are variable, but much less so. Grid operators can better predict much better how much power they will be able to channel from wave-to-grid than with some other renewables. So, wave energy is more grid-friendly. 

4. Ocean energy helps the earth’s carbon problem:

Replacing fossil fuels with ocean energy would reduce CO2, because ocean energy doesn’t produce CO2. Most of us understand that CO2 causes a dangerous warming of the planet. What we may not realize is that it’s the ocean’s job to absorb a lot of that carbon so the planet doesn’t get too hot. And we’re making that job harder. People sometimes talk about the Amazon Rainforest as the “lungs” of the Earth. Plants take in CO2, and breathe out oxygen, so anyplace there’s an abundance of plants, that place creates oxygen for us. But much more oxygen—up to 80%--is produced in the oceans, largely by plants like phytoplankton. The danger is when the oceans take on too much CO2—which is happening now. Too much CO2 causes the oceans to acidify; recent research shows that the oceans have actually absorbed twice as much CO2 as scientists previously calculated. Even before this research was published, scientists knew that sea life is struggling from low oxygen levels. While COVID-19 temporarily reduced the amount of CO2 we’re producing, the amount of carbon in our atmosphere is still at record levels. To regain health, oceans need to stop absorbing so much carbon. Adding ocean energy—a very powerful CO2-free source of energy— to the renewables mix, would help that a lot. The work oceans are already doing—via waves and tides—when harnessed would spare them from being overtaxed with coping with our carbon output.

5. Ocean energy is available where the carbon footprint is worst:

Some of the world’s most populous cities have the world’s highest per capita carbon footprint. They are also coastal. They have access to the power of the ocean in the form of waves and tides. If these communities embrace the opportunity of ocean energy, the resultant drop in CO2 would make a huge difference, not only for the clean air of those cities, but for the world.

6. Ocean energy is a great solution for islands:

Thousands of inhabited islands around the world depend on expensive, polluting, imported fossil fuels. Not having a local power source leaves these islands very energy insecure. Plus, the price they pay for electricity is usually much higher than mainland prices. If there’s one thing islands have in abundance—it’s ocean.

7. Ocean energy requires only a small footprint:

Many non-renewable and even renewable power generation stations take up a lot of land area, and can be considered as eyesores. NIMBY – “Not In My Back Yard” is a known challenge that extends also to renewables. This makes siting and building them complicated, both politically and in terms of finding the space. Wave energy produces a lot of power per square meter and takes up almost no land area— Seabased buoys float offshore, mostly out of sight. It only needs a small space for the electrical power to connect to the grid.

8. Ocean energy is gentle on its environment:

One of the key goals Seabased had in mind in the original design of wave energy parks was that they would be good for the ecosystem they operated in. They would do no harm to the seabed, to the water the parks operate in, or to the sea life around and within the parks. Consequently, there is nothing in the parks that can hurt sea creatures. There are no nets, blades, or moving parts that endanger sea animals. There are no toxins. There is minimal noise, which research suggests does not disturb sea life. And there is little need for humans to maintain the parks once they’re established, so the environment is left at peace during operation.

9. Ocean energy can help the ecosystem:

Several researchers have found that the wave energy parks actually encourage biodiversity at certain sites. Seabased generally installs wave energy converters (WEC) on an area of barren sea floor; a desert in the ocean, if you will. Few species can dwell in this environment. By adding the WECs--some of which have been designed with various-sized holes in their concrete bases to serve as habitats—the wave energy generators became artificial reefs where certain species can find comfortable living. This more diverse habitat increased biodiversity in some parks. Because fishing isn’t possible among the WECs, some species were able to reproduce and increase their numbers, even spilling outside the parks where fishing was possible, according to one study. One of these was the Norway Lobster, also known as scampi, langoustine, or the Dublin Bay Prawn, which is Europe’s most valuable crustacean.

10. Ocean energy can serve many functions:

Wave energy is a technology intended for utility-scale power production, but it’s also very versatile. It can be used for smaller projects—like aquaculture. It can be used to desalinate water for coastal communities, for hydrogen production, or even to power charging stations for electric cars.

Seventy percent of the globe is covered by ocean. Ocean energy is the most ubiquitous, potentially most powerful form of renewable that exists. And we can harness it without hurting the ocean and while helping the planet and the humans. That’s a goal worth attaining.

 

 

 

Ocean Energy an Exciting Option for COVID-19 Recovery

COVID-19 dislodged the argument that change must happen slowly. When the world had to change overnight, it did. Now, as nations contemplate how to move forward, it seems clear the dismantling of “normal” presents an opportunity to chart a more resilient future--environmentally, socially, and economically. A key part of that is building a green and blue recovery, investing in renewable energy growth, and renewable energy jobs.

Global energy use dropped by an average of 20% each month after the lockdowns began, causing CO2 to fall to 2010 levels, according to an August report by the World Economic Forum. Obviously, this accompanies a devastating loss in jobs and productivity. But it’s a temporary lull; on the other side of this crisis, the demand for energy will surge again. By then we can have built more infrastructure to ensure that clean energy will be in place to meet that surge. This is not only an environmental issue; research shows that green and blue economic recoveries provide a greater and more long-lasting lift to the economy than brown ones.

Green job initiatives work

Following the 2009 global financial crisis, green stimulus policies generated more jobs, more quickly, than traditional economies, according to a paper by the Oxford Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment on the impact of COVID recovery on climate change. One model suggests that every $1 million (about €840,000) in spending generates roughly 7.6 full-time jobs in renewables, but only about 2.7 jobs in the fossil fuels industry. Part of that, of course, is because much of the clean energy infrastructure has yet to be built. Once the infrastructure is in place, the number of new jobs will shrink. But by then, the proliferation of these jobs would have helped pull the world out of the COVID recession and effected a huge part of the transition to cleaner, more affordable energy.

One organization leading the charge for a renewable recovery is Ocean Energy Europe, which has called for a target of 100 Megawatts of ocean energy to be installed by 2025. OEE would like to see 100 times that - 100 Gigawatts (GW) - installed by 2050, a goal they predict would create 400,000 jobs in Europe. These would be high quality and sustainable jobs, many of them using synergies and skills transfer from other maritime sectors—including oil and gas.

Bright future for ocean energy jobs

As a wave energy company, we’re clearly interested in the opportunities for ocean energy jobs.

Already Seabased has employed engineers, designers, programmers, biologists, electricians, manufacturers, installers and more. As we near certification, we’ll need people in supply chain, manufacture, deployment; all the roles necessary to make commercial distribution more accessible and affordable.

The  EU Joint Research Centre 2018 Annual Economic Report on Blue Economy found that 1,350 direct jobs, and 500 full-time indirect jobs already exist in ocean energy across 16 countries. Many from the oil and gas industries are  drawn to these jobs. In the year before COVID-19, oil and gas jobs had already fallen by 5% or 14,000. Many employees, knowing it is just a matter of time before their industry is retired, hope to shift to an emerging sector. This is especially true among younger people—Millennials and Generation Z—who prefer to work in clean energy. Ocean energy jobs would benefit inland areas as well as coastal ones, since the manufacture and supply chain may be located inland.

And the prospect for ocean energy is good. Between 2009 and 2019, the cumulative energy produced from wave and tidal stream has increased from less than 5 GWh to about 45 GWh, according to Ocean Energy Systems 2019 Annual Report. Judit Hecke, a member of the International Renewable Energy Agency’s (IRENA’s) Innovation Team was interviewed by Power Magazine which characterized the coming decade as looking at a “stunning overhaul” in ocean energy.  “There is up to around 3.7 GW of capacity in the pipeline at the moment,” Hecke said in the article. The majority of this capacity is tidal stream, with wave energy making up most of the balance. Despite the pandemic, she said, developers are gearing up to deploy up to 24 MW—15 MW of tidal stream and 9 MW of wave energy—with activity on every continent.

Ocean energy has considerable support from organizations like the United Nations, Ocean Energy Europe, and programs like the Ocean Energy Scale-Up Alliance. But with more policy support from governments and financial investment from all sectors, ocean energy could be part of a powerful recovery effort to help move the world out of the COVID recession. 

Government support is crucial

'Clean energy is not just affordable and reliable, it also offers the highest return on investment,” said Charles Donovan, Director of the Centre for Climate Finance and Investment, Imperial College Business School, in an article about a green COVID recovery. “Investors have a growing appetite to put money to work in sustainable finance. Governments need to re-write the rules so that they can.”

Researchers interviewed dozens of senior central bank officials, senior development bank officials, senior members of finance/treasury ministries, expert academics, and think tank commentators for the Oxford paper. They were asked to identify industries that could both impact the climate positively and produce a large long-run economic multiplier--cause gains in total output greater than the change in spending that produced it. Clean energy infrastructure and clean energy R&D spending were both listed at the top. They were also frequently identified as the respondents’ preferred recovery policies.

Right now, Europe leads the way in ocean energy, a strategic advantage it must protect. According to Ocean Energy Europe, the global ocean energy market is estimated to be worth €53 billion. European companies hold over half of wave and tidal patents globally and are net patent exporters. Every €1 of EU and national public funding has leveraged €2.9 of private investments since 2007. This means now is the time for Europe to ensure these high-value blue economy renewable energy jobs are made available here. Governments have the power to create a structure either to support and encourage the investments that will lead to industry growth and maturity, or stunt them.

There is increasing attention paid to the world’s oceans—as is appropriate given they cover 70% of the earth’s surface. Starting 2021, the United Nations will launch a Decade of Ocean Science and Sustainable Development.

The potential for ocean energy and the opportunities for jobs and economic development have only begun to be explored. COVID-19 has given us the perfect chance to make that a priority.

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OESA Accelerator Will Help Bring Ocean Energy to the Grid

Ocean energy companies face many shared challenges: Building machinery that can withstand decades of pummeling from moving saltwater; designing adaptive tech for a resource that is often calm, but can be wild; pulling power from the ocean without hurting the ecosystem. The promise of ocean energy is well worth it, but overcoming the challenges will require a lot of good minds working together. Innovation is faster when we collaborate from different angles and perspectives. That’s why the Ocean Energy Scale-up Alliance (OESA) is so exciting.

OESA is a Pilot Accelerator Program for ocean energy technologies. It was launched in 2019 to enable various ocean energy companies to work together to propel promising ocean energy technologies toward commercialization. Led by the Dutch Marine Energy Centre (DMEC), the transnational partnership combines expertise from six European countries from the North Sea Region. Its first program has a €6.2 million budget and is supported through €3.1 million in European Regional Development Funds through Interreg.

Designing and deploying utility-scale ocean energy could be a game-changer for renewables. By creating an international effort, and exchanging expertise and experience in one European program, OESA hopes to reduce the costs of developing energy technology pilots, accelerating their deployment, and making renewable power more affordable and accessible around the world.

The challenge of ocean energy

As noted by Simon Stark, OESA’s project manager: “Putting something under water is like putting something into space…. Unlike other accelerators, we don’t just have to deal with innovation and the creative process. We’re dealing with very hard basic engineering and system engineering, and developers having to learn the hard way.”

“OESA is an accelerator for a whole new vertical in renewables,” said Marcelle Askew, VP of Projects for Seabased, which is one of four technology developers benefiting from the OESA’s grant. “These projects have never been done before; there’s no supply chain with parts you can just pull off the shelf.”

Askew noted that other technology accelerators don’t quite meet the needs of marine energy technology developers. “We’re trying to develop an industry, not an app. We’ve got to manufacture and certify heavy equipment that you can only validate in the harsh ocean environment it will operate in. We need to find cost-effective ways to test and optimize before putting devices in the ocean.”

She also pointed out the different timelines to market. While many tech startups can go from concept to commercial roll-out in a few months, utility scale power parks take years. “So, I think it’s fantastic that we get to work with some of the leading organizations in the industry and share our knowledge and experience,” she said. “It’s enabling us to more quickly march toward certification and industrial ramp-up.”

Uniting ideas, money, and policy

Now almost halfway through its first three-year program, OESA aspires to:

· Successfully accelerate four technologies to achieve large scale deployments

· Combine services of project partners to increase value

· Influence important stakeholders from Offshore, Investment and policy makers

Twelve organizations are combining their expertise in offshore engineering, ocean energy testing, technology development, and market development. Four tech developers, including Seabased, are charged with making sure the program offer is tailored to the most urgent needs of the industry. The eight service partners are combining their expertise to offer a portfolio that covers both technological as well as commercial services. This will not only lead to the immediate acceleration of pilot development, but also ensure the sustainable growth of technology companies.

This project, the first to build an alliance between the Nordics and North-West Europe, brings stakeholders from the offshore industry, investment business, and policy makers together into one platform that aims to demonstrate ocean energy’s potential and hopefully secure support for future deployments.

“It’s not just about taking one pilot, one technology to the water,” said Stark. “We’re focused much more on trying to tackle similar problems across different developers at the same time, to streamline the process.”

 Seabased in OESA

With support from OESA, Seabased is working with EMEC on the design of a testing program which will move us toward certification. We’re also working with ORE Catapult on a unique, wave-to-grid, simulation software tool that will show us how to glean the most energy from all the different wave environments we hope to work in around the world. We are also working with Uppsala University on test planning and data analysis.

“These partnerships, collaborations, and relationships built across the industry are helping ocean energy take its place among renewables as an important natural resource that can help transform the energy profile of coastal communities,” said Askew.

OESA, Stark said, is about looking at ocean energy holistically. And that’s how a nascent industry is going to be able to quickly join other renewables in tackling CO2 and climate change.

Europe leads the world in ocean energy development and the North Sea region is a leader in the sector within Europe. OESA’s first program includes eight service providers:

 Dutch Marine Energy Center (DMEC)

Aalborg University

AKP

Danish Wave Energy Center (DanWEC)

European Marine Energy Center (EMEC)

Offshore Renewable Energy Catapult (OREC)

SSPA Sweden

Uppsala University

 The four technology developers are

Seabased

Nemos

Floating Power Plant

SeaTwirl

 

Seabased Plans Make News in Norway

Seabased plans for whole system optimisation and testing in Norway made the news on Friday 17 June.

The article in TA, a regional newspaper for Telemark where Seabased´s offices are located, is based on an interview with CEO Laurent Albert and VP Industry Ove Almaas. The two outline plans for the final stages of optimisation and testing before certification, and the subsequent industrial roll-out and commercial launch.

The article explains that Seabased plans to build a full-scale test bench in the Vard shipyard facilities located right beside its office, as well as to perform hydrodynamic testing of buoys in the fjord just a few kilometers south. The optimisation and certification project, totalling almost EUR €6 million, is planned for completion by next summer.

Seabased chose Brevik, Norway for its offices and production facilities because of the competence in both technology and industry found in the region, especially in sub-sea operations, the article explains.

The funding round for Seabased’s whole system optimisation and certification stage is nearing completion, explain Albert and Almaas. In addition to investor capital, the company has received local public support from Vekst i Grenland and Telemark Utviklingsfond, and is hoping for additional support from Innovation Norway.

While the production is planned in Norway, the wave power parks are for an export market. Seabased has a pipeline of wave park projects totalling almost EUR €500 million, pending certification.

Albert explains that the industrial ramp-up will create opportunities for direct jobs as well as for suppliers. Roughly translated from Norwegian: “We hope to participate in the creation of new commercial activity in this fjord region, both in relation to what we do in-house and through our relationships with partners and suppliers for the equipment we will produce.”

Once the industrial ramp-up begins, Seabased estimates creating 200 new jobs internally, as well as significant opportunities for regional suppliers and partners.

World Oceans Day Celebrates Sustainable Ocean Innovations

Ships that sweep up plastic pollution from the water for recycling; seaweed farming to sustainably feed the world; self-driving ocean vessels that run on electricity and—of course—technology that channels clean ocean power to people on land: these are just a few of the creative ways companies are working to sustainably develop in the oceans in accord with the United Nation’s Sustainable Development Goals. And that’s the theme for this year’s World Oceans Day, June 8, 2020.

The ocean is an extraordinary resource. It absorbs about half our carbon dioxide and provides half our oxygen. It holds 97% of our water supply and moves heat around the globe to protect the environment. It is home to untold numbers of species, including some of the world’s oldest: jellyfish are half a billion years old.

The UN celebrates World Oceans Day this year with virtual events drawing attention to innovations in sustainable development of the ocean. Roughly 80% of the ocean has never been explored or mapped. There are vast quantities of knowledge that still elude scientists regarding, for example, the ecosystem of the ocean floor. There are presumed to be many species we have yet to discover living in the deep ocean.

Unfortunately, too many of our encounters with the ocean have been destructive—including overfishing, destroying coral reefs, and creating great islands of floating plastic that break down into ever smaller bits and are found in the bloodstreams of fish caught from the ocean. Sustainable development, sustainable innovation, is about using the ocean resource without damaging it, and understanding ocean ecosystems before we presume to infiltrate them. That’s what World Ocean’s Day is about.

Ocean energy is a key

Ocean energy has the potential to be one of those developments that positively impacts the oceans; if the oceans must absorb our carbon, then providing an energy source that reduces that carbon output relieves the burden on the ocean.

Many forms of ocean energy work with the resource, not against it.  Waves, for example, are embodied energy. The wind sets the water moving and the power of dense water rising and falling is liquid energy that wave energy companies are working to harness in order to provide a reliable source of clean power.

The potential power that could be extracted from the oceans is immense, roughly 125% of current electrical usage. But the challenges are formidable also: building something that can withstand saltwater, tides, and storms.

World Oceans Day is a good reminder that whatever we develop has to enhance and protect the ecosystem it’s placed in. Seabased has worked with scientists to design wave energy parks so that they can become artificial reefs where diverse species of fish and crustaceans seek shelter in the hard-shell homes provided by the generators. These wave energy parks have no blades that threaten sea creatures, emit no pollutants or toxins, and produce only negligible amounts of sound that don’t disturb sea life.  

And yet, they can provide a reliable source of CO2 energy for the grid without creating eyesores for or demanding huge land areas from the communities where they’re installed.

Ocean industries working together

People who work in and around the oceans have a deep appreciation for humans’ history with the sea. It has been our chief means of exploration; it is the primary way we get goods from here to there. It is a source of food, of recreation, and inspiration. And it makes our planet habitable. Celebrations like World Ocean Day remind us that this is a resource beyond price and treating it with respect is crucial to our own and our planet’s future.

OCEAN ENERGY’S ROLE IN REALIZING THE UN’S SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS

INSIGHT: How ocean energy can contribute to a more resilient recovery

As we plan for economic recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic, the UN’s 17 Sustainable Development Goals, or the UN SDGs, are more crucial than ever. The world needs a map that supports prioritizing human health and the health of the planet, fighting hunger and poverty, creating sustainable jobs… in other words, building back better. The UN SDGs can provide this map – and ocean energy has a broad role to play in achieving these goals by creating jobs, providing clean power, promoting energy security, protecting ecosystems and reducing CO2.

Oceans cover 70 percent of the surface of our planet, produce more than half of our oxygen, and absorb over half our CO2. They are their own economy, with an estimated value between $3-6 trillion per year USD globally. More than three billion people rely on the oceans for their livelihoods.

The UN Conference on the Oceans was scheduled for this June, but like so many events it had to be postponed because of the Coronavirus. Seabased was looking forward to speaking at the conference about how ocean energy can help realize the UN Sustainable Development Goals. Here are some of the ways:

5 SDGs.png

SDG #7: AFFORDABLE AND CLEAN ENERGY

One of the biggest accomplishments in the evolution of the renewable industry was that renewables became ubiquitous and affordable because of the industry’s technological innovation and the commitment of governments to support them. That’s where ocean energy is also heading: providing affordable, clean power for the world’s coastal cities and islands. Abundant energy is embodied in ocean waves, tides, and winds; all of it is CO2 free. As the sector and its supply chains develop, it too will be cost competitive in more and more areas of the world.

SDG #8: DECENT WORK AND ECONOMIC GROWTH

The goal of this SDG is to promote sustained, inclusive and sustainable economic growth, full and productive employment and decent work for all. As mentioned, more than three billion people rely on the oceans for their livelihoods. One study showed that even now, about 1,350 direct jobs and 500 full time jobs exist around ocean energy. And the sector is just getting going. Ocean Energy Europe’s CEO, Rémi Gruet, writes that installing 100GW of ocean energy will provide 400,000 high quality European jobs by 2050. Energy is essential to economic development. And ocean energy that also protects ecosystems and sea life, as well as the beauty of coastlines in areas that rely on tourism, plays a key role in sustaining productive employment.

SDG #9: INDUSTRY, INNOVATION AND INFRASTRUCTURE

This SDG is about building resilient infrastructure, promoting inclusive and sustainable industrialization and fostering innovation. Marine energy industries are a literal blue ocean of possibility for future innovation and industrial production. The OEE projects a global market for ocean energy of €53 billion by 2050. In many respects, ocean energy is where wind energy was in the 1970s except that current technology makes development exponentially faster.

Ocean energy can help decarbonize islands. Producing their own renewable energy will enable them to replace polluting fossil fuels and become energy independent. Insurance company MAPFRE lauds marine energy as the energy security source of the future. Ocean energy is built to withstand storms—necessarily because of the challenges of the ocean environment. There is no risk of fuel spills, unlike offshore drilling or importing fossil fuels. And marine energy technologies can create local jobs within existing maritime infrastructure. Accessible energy makes innovation and industrialization possible.

SDG#13: CLIMATE ACTION

Taking urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts is the goal of this SDG. Ocean energy is an important part of the fight against climate change. It emits no CO2 and, according to OEE estimates, can avoid 234 million tonnes of CO2 in Europe alone. One of the struggles in shifting toward 100 percent renewables stems from the natural variability of supply of wind and solar energy. A successful green transition requires balancing renewables with each other, such as wind and wave, so that there’s a more even supply of power to the grid. Wave energy continues to produce for hours after the wind drops, smoothing electricity output. Waves are available 24/7 and are very dense, so they build slowly and release energy more slowly than wind. Power grid operators can predict days in advance how much electricity will be channeled from wave-to-grid.

By investing in and developing ocean energy, we can significantly reduce the amount of carbon produced and thus the amount the oceans must absorb. And we make it more possible for grid operators to move toward their renewable energy goals. The ocean is the world’s climate protector—now more than ever.

SDG #14: LIFE BELOW WATER

The SDG that is at the fore of the UN Oceans Conference aims to conserve and sustainably use the oceans, seas and marine resources for sustainable development. Ocean energy provides a clean source of power without negatively affecting marine life. Like all sectors, we have a duty to be mindful of the precious resource we’re working with. Seabased, for example, has been collaborating with researchers for over a decade to discover ways to not only avoid harm, but actually provide support to the ecosystem. By placing holes in the concrete bases of our generators we can often increase the biodiversity around the wave energy parks. Creatures are drawn to the hard structures where they can live, much the way birds are drawn to bird houses. In some areas, populations of Norway Lobsters – Europe’s most important commercial crustacean – have grown around the wave parks, and even spilled outside of them where they are available for local fishing. This is power that benefits its ecosystem.

Seabased looks forward to participating in the UN Oceans Conference when it is held. In the meantime, we and many of our fellow ocean energy companies will keep pushing the industry forward with the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals top of mind.