Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumWave energy in Hawaii
http://m.kitv.com/news/hawaii-first-state-to-plug-into-wave-energy/27085698HONOLULU -Hawaii will be the first state to connect a wave-generating buoy into a power grid. Hawaii is already well-known as the place for spectacular waves, where the best test their skills in the surf.Now the state will also be known as the place to test just how much energy can be created in the waves before they reach our shores.
The U.S. Navy is spending $9 million to expand the Wave Energy Test Site in Kaneohe Bay."The potential energy for Hawaii is huge, but the practical problems to make it commercially viable are also huge," said Patrick Cross, a project specialist for the University of Hawaii.UH will monitor and measure the impact and effectiveness of a new prototype buoy that will be installed in the fall. The buoy will sit largely below the surface in about 100 feet of water, generating power to undersea cables by the motion of the ocean.
The buoy is just one of two new buoys that will be launched, each different in design and size because researchers are still trying to figure out the best way to get the most power from the ocean."Wave energy is where wind energy was 30 years ago. We're at that early stage of trying to figure out what the viable approaches are to energy extraction," said Cross.Coastal areas already have numerous buoys bobbing around, but it is unknown how an array of large power producing buoys could affect marine life.
That is why UH will measure the amount of sound generated electro-magnetic frequency waves and take environmental studies during the testing. It will also conduct underwater surveys to see the durability of the new devices.Information that could be used as larger, commercial wave-power buoys are produced.The first prototype could generate up to 20 Kwh, enough to power several homes. More importantly it will also help determine just how much energy can be captured as both big waves and small roll in."There is a lack of of data to really answer the question: how much power can we get out of a given wave?" stated Cross.The first buoy will go in about 3,000 feet from shore. In 2015, the second buoy is expected to be installed just over a mile from shore.Each of the test buoys will be deployed for a year, then newer designs and bigger buoys could take their place.
phantom power
(25,966 posts)And when it's finished generating 20 Kwh it shuts off?
mahina
(17,615 posts)NYC_SKP
(68,644 posts)This is huge news, Hawaii uses petroleum for most of it's electrical generation, but has the most potential for becoming energy independent and 100 percent renewable.
Go Hawaii!
msongs
(67,360 posts)NYC_SKP
(68,644 posts)Because such differences, or lack of understanding thereof, are opportunities for the for-profit energy monopolies to employ propagandist techniques.
Do you know the difference, off hand, between kW and kWh?
Don't feel bad, most people don't!
mahina
(17,615 posts)Kind of like the way Solar City doesn't say it sells panels, but access to electricity.
It's coming...Heco knows the current model won't keep them whole for much longer. Having been the most profitable company in Hawaii forevers, it's about time, some would say.
NYC_SKP
(68,644 posts)The old kW versus kWh fuck-up, dead giveaway of people who don't know the field.
It doesn't, however, really clear up what they mean.
Is it that the top end of generation is 20kW, after which the system goes off line, as do some wind turbines in high activity or low demand?
Good news in any event.
It's not the first or even the second prototype here...Oceanlinx was here first, right? And weren't there was one or two off Pyramid Rock?