- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
cross-posted from: https://feddit.org/post/23384142
More info on this at
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pelamis_Wave_Energy_Converter .
The company was bought by E.ON and the project was killed. At that time, there were working 450 Kilowatt prototypes (see the video). 450 Kilowatt is a power volume that took wind power plants over three decades (about from 1970 to 2000) to achieve.
The technology was then apparently copied by a Chinese company.


Maybe I’m dumb, but don’t wind and waves usually come at the same time? No wind --> tiny waves
No. Waves travel trough space and time. Wind causes waves but their origin can be far away, especially if they are larger.
Even looked at the stars? The star light is electromagnetical waves. They travel millions of light years, which means that you look at a state very, very far away, from millions of years ago.
Do you see a ray of lighning? Count. Sound waves travel at about 330 meters per second - that’s why you hear the thunder only seconds later.
Go to the beach of a small lake at a quiet day. Throw a stone into it. Observe the waves. They take time to travel through space. And the pattern on the water surface is storing the energy.
(Edit) Now, with a large ocean, it is thousands of kilometers of space, so consequently the travel time from the origin to the point of harvest can be many days.
Bruh, did you seriously compare water waves with light and radio waves?
Just because the name is the same, it doesn’t mean the underlying physics are the same too.
Water waves for example are beholden to friction and a persistent gravity, something light and radio waves can mostly ignore (at least on the planetary scale).
The relevant aspects of physics is the same here: Energy moving through time and space. This is an aspect that all mentioned forms of waves - pressure waves, surface gravity waves, and electromagnetic waves do have in common.
You’re right that waves and wind don’t necessarily overlap, they most often do anyway.
Have you ever been standing at a shore facing a large ocean, like the Scottish Outer Hebrides, Ireland, Bretagne, Portugal, Chile, California, Patagonia or Tasmania ?
And are you aware that wind power plants in the North See im winter sometimes can’t be serviced because the friggin waves are too high - over six meters ond more?
But that doesn’t mean anything about whether or not it’s windy at the same time.
If the waves are too severe to allow servicing of the wind turbines, how do you think you’re going to service wave generators? (yes, the answer is to wait until the sea and wind conditions are better)