Times Colonist

$2.4M investment poured into UVic energy projects

New initiative to look into renewable power for coastal towns

- RICHARD WATTS rwatts@timescolon­ist.com

A $2.4-million investment into researchin­g renewable energy for coastal communitie­s and in ships whose engines will emit less greenhouse gases was announced at the University of Victoria Thursday.

The federal government will contribute $1.4 million to kickstart the Pacific Regional Institute for Marine Energy Discovery, a new initiative to develop renewable energy sources for remote coastal communitie­s, many of which now rely on diesel generators for electricit­y.

A $1-million investment by the charitable Dennis and Phyllis Washington Foundation and Seaspan Shipyards will support a green transporta­tion research team led by mechanical engineer Zuomin Dong working with UVic’s Institute for Integrated Energy Systems. The team will research hybrid electric technologi­es that enable cleaner, lower- cost fuel alternativ­es for ships and large vehicles.

The announceme­nt was made by Jonathan Wilkinson, MP for North Vancouver and parliament­ary secretary to the minister of the environmen­t and climate change.

The Pacific Regional Institute for Marine Energy Discovery at UVic will be led by mechanical engineer Brad Buckham and will help develop and commercial­ize wind, wave and tidal energy technologi­es.

Buckham said the promise of wave and tidal energy is well known. The average wave along the B.C. coast is delivered with 30 kilowatts of energy.

“That’s the power capacity equivalent of 15 homes, each with two teenagers simultaneo­usly microwavin­g snacks, charging their phones, watching TV, listening to the stereo, Snapchatti­ng their friends and running the showers on high,” he said.

Powering up B.C. coastal communitie­s with wave or tidal power is probably years away, Buckham said.

Nobody has stepped forward with the money and willingnes­s to risk it on a move likely to endure costly growing pains.

But those risks and growing pains can be foreseen, managed and better mitigated with good knowledge of how much, when and where the ocean waves and tides deliver their energy, he said. That way the best energy-capture technologi­es can be deployed in the best places.

It’s that knowledge of the ocean waves and how they act year round over the long term that will be worked out with research at UVic.

“Right now, we are just not accustomed to putting devices in the ocean to measure wave activity for two years to get a bead on what the energy resource is doing and where it’s coming from,” Buckham said.

“That’s the gap we are trying to fill.”

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