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June 30, 2006

Renewable Energy Company to Propel Wave Energy

Dublin, Ireland and Vancouver, Canada [RenewableEnergyAccess.com]

Finavera Renewables Limited, a private Irish renewable energy company focused on wind and wave energy development, will acquire the entire outstanding share capital of AquaEnergy Group Ltd., a renewable energy company focused on the development and application of wave energy technologies. In April 2005, it acquired 10% in AquaEnergy as part of a US$1 million investment program.

"There is huge potential in wave energy. The closing of this transaction presents us with an opportunity to play a large part of what will be the future of renewable energy generation."

-- Jason Bak, Finavera Renewables, CEO

The equity exchange, and consolidation of 100% ownership of AquaEnergy, make Finavera Renewables the owner of all patented and product technology rights for the AquaBuOY technology. Finavera Renewables and AquaEnergy believe that both companies and shareholders' interests are best served through consolidating ownership and combining resources to develop and deploy AquaEnergy's proprietary AquaBuOY technology.

The AquaBuOY technology, which has been independently evaluated and found commercially viable, is placed to acquire a dominant market position due to its potential to generate electricity at a cost that is competitive with onshore and offshore wind farms and some fossil fuels, in the near to mid-term.

Finavera Renewables' acquisition of AquaEnergy includes wave energy projects under development in Figuera da Foz (Portugal), Makah Bay (Washington), and Ucluelet (British Columbia) with planned installation dates of 2008, 2009 and 2010, respectively, for a combined power generation potential of 200 MW when at full capacity.

Jason Bak, Finavera Renewables CEO commented, "There is huge potential in wave energy. The closing of this transaction presents us with an opportunity to play a large part of what will be the future of renewable energy generation."
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Reader Comments (2)
 
No image available
July 1, 2006
I think Jason Bak has the right idea when he says that there is great potential in extracting energy using this method. In studying about waves, they may be generated by storms thousands of miles away and transmitted across the ocean with little loss of power. The energy of the wave remains in concentrated form until it strikes the shores of a land mass.

I can envision thousands of miles of shore lines with these devices anchored safely in locations where wave action is at a maximum. My only question is whether or not they could sustain a catastrophic event such as a tsunami. I think it would depend upon the depth of the water but in areas around the ring of fire (the Pacific Basin), the generation of tsunamis do occur on a regular basis and would have to be taken into account.

adrianakau@aol.com
Comment 1 of 2
No image available
August 13, 2008
please put some images related to aquabuoy technology
Comment 2 of 2
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