The Wave Hub
A groundbreaking renewable energy project that will see the UK's first offshore facility dedicated to wave energy, has begun construction.
Wave Hub will be constructed off the North Coast of Cornwall (10 miles off Hayle) and will essentially be a 'socket' sitting on the seabed for wave energy converters to be plugged into. It is hoped Wave Hub's construction will make the South West a leading player in the global marine energy industry.
Infrastructure Design
Wave Hub's design will see a sub-station built at Hayle, adjacent to a connection point to the distribution network. From there, a cable will be taken through a 200m duct beneath the sand dunes and then across the sea bed to an eight square kilometre area within which the devices will be moored. This area will be indicated with navigational markers.
Four wave energy generation devices will connect their arrays into the Hub. This will allow the developers to transmit and then sell their renewable energy to the UK's electricity distribution grid.
Work is set to begin in January and will take six months to complete. The total capacity of the hub will be 20 MWe (megawatt electrical) and will cost an estimated £28 million.![]()
RDA is putting £12.5 million into the project with £20 million coming from the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) Convergence Programme. Another £9.5 million will come from the UK government. The scheme is expected to be operational next year and has already signed up its first wave device developer - Ocean Power Technologies Limited. Fred Olsen Limited, WestWave and Oceanlinx are said to be the other three companies.
"A milestone"
Stephen Peacock, executive director of Enterprise and Innovation at the South West Regional Development Agency (RDA), said, "This milestone is the culmination of more than six years' work by the RDA and its partners and will catapult south-west England and the UK to the forefront of wave energy development. Our aim is to create an entirely new low-carbon industry in the south west and hundreds of quality jobs."
Energy and climate change minister, Lord Hunt, welcomed news of the construction and said that it demonstrated huge scope for wave and tidal energy around the UK's shores.
"The south west is the UK's first low-carbon economic area, building on its regional business opportunities and skills," he said.
"The combination of its wealth of natural marine resource and its high level of expertise in marine technology makes it an ideal location for the Wave Hub."
Watch a video regarding Wave Hub here.
Relevant articles:
Inner city farms | UK to unlock wave energy potential | Portugal: A pioneer for wave energy
Like this article? Get the RSS feed: