New Energy Focus - 26/08/10
The latest stage of development of the Wave Hub renewable energy project has seen the export cable successfully pulled to the top of the beach at Hayle, in Cornwall, where it will be joined to onshore cables linked to a new electricity substation.
The South West Regional Development Agency (RDA) says engineers working to install its wave energy technology brought the end of the subsea cable ashore at 5am on Monday (August 23). This comes after an operation involving the use of more than 400 buoys to float a 1,800 metre stretch of cable weighing around 90 tonnes.
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Wave Hub cable brought ashore at Hayle
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Wave Hub cable brought ashore at Hayle
http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-cornwall-40294158Cornwall's Wave Hub energy project yet to produce electricity
A £42m wave energy project off the Cornish coast has yet to produce any electricity despite being up and running for eight years.
Wave Hub, an undersea electrical socket installed to test wave energy machines, has hosted just one device since 2010.
But it was not connected to the shore and one of the project's two remaining potential customers has now pulled out.
Wave Hub said it was "disappointed" that energy firm Carnegie had decided to test its device in Australia.
Carnegie - an Australian company - was given £9.6m from the European Regional Development Fund to test its device.
Wave Hub, based at Hayle in west Cornwall, said the wave energy business was "unfortunately taking longer to develop" than anticipated so it was "diversifying" and exploring options for testing floating wind turbines.
The scheme was financed by the South West of England Regional Development Agency (£12.5m), the European Regional Development Fund Convergence Programme (£20m) and the UK Government (£9.5m).
The authorities said at the time that it could generate £76m over 25 years for the regional economy.
MP for the area, George Eustice, said: "This is obviously disappointing news. Cornwall has a wave resource that is second to none, however the development of technologies to successfully harness wave energy has taken longer than hoped."
A total of four developers can connect a number of devices into the Wave Hub via the seabed socket, which then supply energy to the national grid.
Johnny Gowdy, from Regen South West, which promotes renewable energy systems, said floating wind turbines were a "great way of using the asset" and there was more money going into that technology than into wave power.
In 2006, three companies were signed on for initial development but all pulled out.
The only other project in the pipeline at Wave Hub is from the American firm Gwave, but that deployment is not expected for several years.
No-one was available for immediate comment from Carnegie.