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While Finavera's Buoy Sinks, Hopes of Harnessing Ocean Energy Survive

By Miriam Widman
November 8, 2007   |   7 Comments

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"For the purpose of the project, it was highly successful."

Kevin Bannister, VP for Business Development, Finavera Renewables
7 Reader Comments
Comment
1 of 7
November 8, 2007
Anytime you test new equipment, something could go wrong. I am sure the design of the AquaBuoy 3.0 will be improved over the present one:

Ode To the Buoy

Tried to test the wintery sea,
But resting now upon the knee,
Of Davy Jones where others dwell.
A buoy now to stay and tell,
A story of wave power extraction,
Did not end in satisfaction,
Bilges filling up too fast,
Could not fully two months last,
T'was not the effort that was lacking,
Work performace was not slacking,
Like Titanic, sprung a leak,
Could not stop from going deep.

As the first train long ago,
Horses pulled to help it go,
Up a hill, it was too weak,
Laughter then but later sweet,
Victory when engines came,
Stronger then and helped to gain,
Transport east, north south and west,
This is what's remembered best.
Buoy's like the train that failed,
Could not move up on the rail,
First time tried and first time beat,
But will not hope in hearts unseat.

adrianakau@aol.com
Comment
2 of 7
November 8, 2007
I would have thought they would use a design that couldn't have sunk, by using foam to replace air and thereby eliminate the pump that failed.
Comment
3 of 7
November 9, 2007
I'm with you Jim, it doesn't seem like a viable design. The ocean environment is extremely harsh which makes it challenging to capture the energy.
Comment
4 of 7
November 10, 2007
I cannot understand why marine engineers still use steel.
The real answer is in foam sandwich/fibre and positive floating hulls for these RE machines . Then it would not matter if there was a hole and flooding etc .Having done a lot of work on wave power ,I now think the real answer is in flowing dynamic streams ~tidal and river for RE.
Our new device of a "Hapdrag" soon will be published.The biggest and most powerfull machines in the world are draglines and the dynamics of foils are all well known technology .Think of a up-ski lifts the otherway around, being pulled instead of pulling . Use the hapa/foils to drag the cable around~ the drive motor then becomes a generator . Place these RE machines just off headlands> where you have strong currents , top of water falls and weirs etc . Where other do not fish or dare to go .Wet cable cars that now ~can light up the stars!~ Ken > www.4paz.org
Comment
5 of 7
November 13, 2007
"...it seems to have had something to do with the bilge pump not being able to keep up with the amount of water it was taking on..."

Wasn't that a White Star Line press release after the Titanic sank?

Get it out before it impacts the local fishermen.
Comment
6 of 7
November 13, 2007
The answer to wave power is not to float on the surface at all.
Sinking to the bottom seems the way to go with a hydraulic pump/piston array that pumps high pressure water to shore for use making electricity or fresh water as required.
See http://www.ceto.com.au/ for how it is done.
Lots of energy here 24x7x365.25
Comment
7 of 7
November 23, 2008
Finavera kept quiet on some contract details, including the length of time the utility would buy energy and for how much, but said the contract calls for Finavera to deliver electricity from the project by 2010 after a permitting process expected to take two to three years.
----------------
Sally
Sunshine Coast
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