Purpose-Built Ship Deploys Wave Energy To Produce Green Ammonia Fuel At Sea
A new floating green hydrogen and ammonia production facility will deploy flotillas of wave energy converters along with wind and solar power.
A new floating green hydrogen and ammonia production facility will deploy flotillas of wave energy converters along with wind and solar power.
In a huge step forward for marine energy, a massive 1.25-megawatt, 826-ton buoy-type wave energy converter will be hooked up to the grid in Hawaii this year.
Wave energy converters can harvest electricity from the ocean, helping coastal communities cut their reliance on fossil fuels.
A wave energy device that resembles a deconstructed sea serpent has caught the eye of both public and private renewable energy investors.
Wake-up time for marine energy is finally here, in the form of new devices that harvest the natural motion of waves, tides, and currents.
Renewable Energy Discovery Island Offers Closer Look at Power Beneath the Waves
Wave energy developers are beginning to flex their muscles, and the Finnish company Wello aims to lead the pack with a new twist on the technology.
It’s possible to design machines that are anchored to the deep ocean bottom that will “fly” in the current, like kites in the wind. In the future, large-scale commercial-scale deployments composed of many turbines to generate power-plant quantities of ocean electricity could become common.
Japan’s IHI has completed a long term test of its renewable energy prototype designed to generate electricity from ocean currents.
Revamped Software Offers Marine Energy Industry the Data It Needs To Succeed, Ocean Energy & River Power Is marine energy finally here? This question, in various forms, pops up in news articles every year if not every month. In 2021, Wired Magazine claimed, “The United States is finally trying to unlock the power … [continued]