Business Standard

India’s first wave-powered navigation­al buoy launched

- PRESS TRUST OF INDIA

A wave-powered navigation­al buoy, developed by the National Institute of Ocean Technology (NIOT), to guide ships in and out of ports, was launched here on Monday.

The buoy, deployed at Ennore Kamarajar Port here, would help ships, moving in and out of the harbour, navigate through a designated channel.

According to the NIOT, the buoy’s beacon, for guiding ships, is powered by wave energy while convention­al ones use solar power. The buoy stores energy generated by waves in a battery.

Also, the buoy would be able to record data on wind speed and direction an various other aspects, which would be relayed to port authoritie­s, it said.

The buoy was launched by Secretary, Ministry of Earth Sciences M Rajeevan on the eve of the 33rd executive committee meet of Internatio­nal Energy Agency-Ocean Energy Systems Collaborat­ion Programme (IEA-OES) and as part of a workshop ‘Harnessing Energy from the Oceans — A global Scenario’.

The meeting, on November 14 and 15 at NIOT premises here, would be held for the first time in India.

Rajeevan, along with Chairman of OES Henry Jeffrey and its MemberSecr­etary Ana e Brito Melo, also inaugurate­d an Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion (OTEC) desalinati­on test facility at the NIOT premises.

Head of Energy and Fresh Water, NIOT, Purnima Jalihal told reporters that the buoy, designed for a life span of about 15-20 years, is fully indigenous and it costs less than imported buoys.

About how many wavepowere­d navigation­al buoys could be produced annually, Rajeevan said, “We have to team up with industry.”

He said commercial­isation was a focus area.

Asked if there was any time frame for commercial­isation, Rajeevan said it depended on several factors including approvals.

Ocean Energy Systems Technology Collaborat­ion Programme is an intergover­nmental collaborat­ion between countries. It operates under the framework establishe­d by the Internatio­nal Energy Agency, an NIOT release said, adding India became a member of the forum in April this year.

With the membership, India would have access to advanced research and developmen­t teams, technologi­es and data in the area of ocean energy across the world, it said.

India would join working groups to partner with other countries in developing ocean energy technologi­es and this would help in testing indigenous prototypes in accordance to internatio­nal requiremen­ts and norms, the release said.

OES brings together countries in advancing research and developmen­t of conversion technologi­es to harness energy from renewable resources such as tides, waves, currents, and temperatur­e gradient for electricit­y generation and other uses such as desalinati­on.

The buoy’s beacon, for guiding ships, is powered bywave energy while convention­al ones use solar power

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India