The Scotsman

Wave energy firm eyes Orkney sea trials

- By SCOTT REID

An innovative wave energy converter will begin sea trials in Orkney later this year after the project achieved a “critical milestone”.

AWS Ocean Energy hailed the move after the two major sub-assemblies making up its Archimedes Waveswing wave energy converter were joined together.

Final hook-up of the internal systems is now under way at Malin Marine in Glasgow and AWS expects to start commission­ing and dry-testing early next month, before deployment at the European Marine Energy Centre (EMEC) in Orkney later in the year.

Simon Grey, chief executive of Inverness-based AWS, said: “You get a real feeling that it ‘looks the business’ – no arms, levers, hinges, joints and other bits to get broken by surface waves, just a simple telescopic can which will pulsate beneath the surface. This is what wave power machines should look like.”

The prototype Waveswing is being built by Malin Marine at its fabricatio­n facility at Westway Dock in Renfrew.

The £3.4 million project has been funded by Wave Energy

Scotland (WES) as part of the Novel Wave Energy Converter developmen­t programme. The objective of the programme is to demonstrat­e Europe’s top wave energy technologi­es in real sea conditions.

Earlier this month, a giant wave energy machine started sea trials in Orkney, marking a milestone for the ambitious green power project.

Mocean Energy said its 20-metre long, 38-tonne Blue X wave machine had been towed from Kirkwall to the EMEC’S Scapa Flow test site where it has been successful­ly moored and commission­ed for initial sea trials.

 ??  ?? 0 AWS’S machine has taken a major step forward
0 AWS’S machine has taken a major step forward

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom