Harnessing wave power: The Pelamis generator


Harnessing wave power: The Pelamis generator
Harnessing wave power: The Pelamis generator
Overview of efforts to create usable energy from waves, including a discussion of the Pelamis power generator in the North Sea off the coast of Scotland.
Contunico © ZDF Studios GmbH, Mainz; Thumbnail ScottishPower Renewables

Transcript

A red snake-like steel device floats off the northern coast of Scotland. It looks like a submarine but is actually a power generator that converts the motion of the waves into energy. Waves have tremendous potential as a source of energy. Experts from the World Energy Council in London estimate that wave farms could provide 15 percent of the global energy demand. The device consists of four cylindrical sections, linked by hinged joints, which move up and down in time with the waves and convert this motion into electricity.

The steel snake is 150 meters long, has a diameter of three meters and weights 750 metric tons. The designers of the device were fully aware that it looked like a big metallic snake and named it accordingly: Pelamis is a breed of sea snake. The choppy north sea in the fierce climate off the Orkney Islands is the perfect place to test the potential of Pelamis. The European Marine Energy Center, or EMEC, has long been testing ways of harnessing energy from the North Sea here. The research facility, housed in an old school house in the small seaport of Stromness is unique in Europe. Readings of wave height are constantly transmitted to it from wave measurement buoys anchored off the coast. Most waves measure between three and four meters in height. The tests are monitored by a data link and a remote-controlled camera, enabling the researchers to respond immediately to developments. All this represents the optimal conditions for the trial run of Pelamis, which is positioned around a kilometer out at sea. When Pelamis devices are put into commercial operation, they will remain relatively close to the coastline. One reason is the high cost of seabed cables. The Pelamis prototype has already proved its mettle on the high seas.

In an age when fuel sources are rapidly running dry, developers are under increased pressure to find alternatives. There is a great deal of international interest in Pelamis and the first orders have already been placed. A factory on a disused site around one hour's drive from Edinburgh is the perfect place to build the 150-meter-long steel cylinders. Yet constructing them is no easy task. That requires the input of engineers from a multitude of disciplines. The experts working on the project come from the automobile industry as well as the oil and electronics sectors. Thanks to their knowledge, it looks like these steel sea snakes will soon be making waves in the field of alternative energy.