One of the major concerns over the current crop of renewable energy technologies is that they’re pretty expensive compared to dirtier, more conventional fossil fuels. However researchers at Boston University and the Fraunhofer Center for Manufacturing Innovation think they’ve found a way of producing cleaner, cheaper wave generated energy on demand. Their idea would send a fleet of wave-powered ships out into the middle of the ocean, where they would drop anchor and start gathering energy from the movement of the surrounding waves. This energy would then be stored in on-board batteries, and once fully charged the ships would return to shore where the energy could be distributed into the grid.
The concept was recently presented at the Clean Energy 2011 conference and expo in Boston. It would do away with the need for expensive transmission cables that currently take electricity from offshore power generation projects to the mainland. These cables typically cost more than $500,000 per kilometre and account for a significant fraction of the cost of conventional wave-generated electricity.
As reported by New Scientist, the 50-metre-long ships would harvest wave energy via buoys attached to their sides by pivoting arms. While the hull remains relatively stable, the buoys bob up and down on the waves, causing the arms to pivot back and forth and drive a generator producing up to one megawatt (MW) of electrical power. The batteries are planned to have a capacity of 20 MW/hours, so the ships would have to stay at sea for at least 20 hours to be fully charged.
The plan could produce electricity at $0.15 per kilowatt hour (kWh), which is far cheaper than energy produced from existing wave technology, which costs between $0.30 and $0.65 per kWh. In comparison, offshore wind energy costs from $0.15 to $0.24 per kWh, and solar power around $0.30 per kWh.








far better solution in your own pages:
http://inhabitat.com/ecotricitys-searaser-tidal-power-generator-could-be-the-worlds-cheapest-method-of-producing-electricity/
I agree with L. Appleton. They should store the energy as hydrogen gas. I also agree with C. Angelo
I completely agree to C. Angelo’s post above.
Why can’t the huge amount of energy (MW) be used to run the Ships themselves?
If it can then it’ll be huge saving over Fossil Fuel Usage and we can have the marine equivalents of Electric Vehicles.
Making the batteries to store the energy causes HUGE environmental impact…and then the batteries have a finite lifespan. The idea is great, we just need to come up with a storage mechanism with a lower environmental impact.
Could this technology be used to meet the power needs of seafaring vessels, rather than storing the energy and bringing it back to land?
I don’t see how this is cheaper. You spend fossil fuels to drive out to the ocean and then back…