http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=585&e=2&u=/nm/20040301/sc_nm/energy_oceanpower_dc

Ocean Power Technologies to Harness Spanish Waves   
Mon Mar 1,11:17 AM ET  Add Science - Reuters to My Yahoo! 
 

By Andrew Callus 

LONDON (Reuters) - The stormy, ship-wrecking seas of the Bay of Biscay
are poised to take on a more constructive role as the site of the
world's first wave-driven power station on a commercial scale. 

   

Wave power firm Ocean Power Technologies (OPT) said on Monday it had
signed a deal with Spanish electricity utility Iberdrola for a pilot
project involving 10 power-generating buoys. These will be placed
about a half-mile off Spain's north coast, midway between Santander
and Bilbao. 


OPT has been ocean testing its kit since late 1997, and has a similar
pilot scheme running off Hawaii with the support of the U.S. Navy
(news - web sites). 


OPT Chief Executive and founder George Taylor says his firm has market
leadership in "ocean experience" in the youthful wave power industry. 


Although both the Hawaiian and Spanish projects will generate a tiny
1.25 megawatts, Taylor expects to have a 100 megawatt wave farm in
place by 2006 -- helping bring his loss-making company into profit the
same year. 


"Spain is very likely to be the first commercial site," he said. "We
have a great partner in Iberdrola, and European governments are
strongly committed to increasing power from renewable sources." 


POWERBUOYS 


The full-sized wave power farms will use a new generation of 500
kilowatt "PowerBuoys" four times the size of those OPT will use in its
Spanish pilot scheme. 


The buoys, anchored to the sea bed and floating beneath the surface,
capture and convert wave energy into a controlled mechanical force
that drives a generator, linked by an undersea cable to the shore. 


A smart sensor optimizes power in differing wave conditions, and
switches the generator off when the wave activity is too strong, to
avoid damaging the equipment. Severe storms therefore mean downtime
for the buoys, as do periods of flat calm. 


However, OPT says the buoys still offer between 80 and 90 percent
availability, comparable with conventional fossil fuel generators, and
enjoy a key advantage over wind (30-45 percent) and solar (20-30
percent) power generation. 


They take up less space per megawatt than either windfarms or
conventional shore-based generators. Ocean Power believes the 100
megawatt plants will be able to produce at an operating cost of 3-4
cents per kilowatt hour, compared with 5-6 cents for wind. 


Hawaii's fishermen have welcomed the buoys as fish attractors, Taylor
said. 


Taylor also has high hopes for starting a project off Japan, where
marine engineering and construction firm Penta Ocean Construction is
his partner and financial backer. 


OPT became the world's first listed wave power firm last year, raising
38 million pounds at an October initial public offering (IPO) on
London's Alternative Investment Market. 


Its shares have not performed well, dropping from a peak of 130 pence
after the IPO to stand at 95-1/2 pence on Monday. 


Robin Batchelor, who runs the Merrill Lynch New Energy Technology
Fund, is not a holder of the stock at present but is keeping a
cautious eye on its progress. 


"I'm a great fan of wave power, but at the moment you've really got to
believe the technology will work," he said. 

"After the IPO, OPT are one of the best financed wave power companies
out there, and if they start to deliver some results, there's some
potential," he said. 

Despite surging interest in the renewables industry, wave power
remains in its infancy, he warned. 

"It's quite early days for anybody in the wave industry to start
saying that they have a lead," he said. "The technology is very
immature, but there is some good progress being made." 


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