China unveils first system in giant 10GW marine energy project

Tom Young
BusinessGreen

China may be fast establishing itself as the global leader in wind and solar energy, but to date it has made little progress in the sphere of marine energy.

SDE-Energy - Power of Sea Waves

SDE-Energy - Power of Sea Waves

Now that looks set to change after Israeli marine renewables firm SDE Energy announced that it will complete construction of a 1MW wave power plant in China by the end of the month.

The plant – which cost around $700,000 to build – is in the city of Dong Ping in Guangzhou province, and is the first installation in a proposed 10GW renewable energy project to install wave energy systems along the coastline.

SDE is in the final stages of negotiations over other projects to be built near Zhanjiang City and in the province of Hainan.

China built its first small-scale wave power plant in 2006, but currently has very little expertise in the nascent technology when compared to its heavy investment in wind and solar.

But according to SDE, wave energy has the potential to supply four times more energy per square metre than wind in China.

The firm has already built eight model plants, all financed by the Israeli government and is now looking to rapidly expand in the Chinese market.

The company’s technology consists of a floating buoy in the sea, which is attached to a breakwater. As waves hit the breakwater, they move the buoy up and down driving a series of cylinders containing hydraulic oil and pistons. The pressurised oil is then directed to an electrical generator which produces energy.

China has a number of heavily populated coastal cities and such technologies are regarded as attractive, as power can be generated locally and does not have to be transmitted long distances.

The Dong Ping project represents SDE Energy’s second foray into the Asian market, after the company signed a deal with India’s Om Se Mantra Powergen and the government of the Indian state of Gujarat last year. This was to build a 5MW marine power plant using the same technology.

In 2008 the firm also announced that it had signed a 25-year agreement with an unnamed African country to build more than 100MW of wave power projects.

For the original article, see:

http://www.businessgreen.com/business-green/news/2261612/china-unveils-commercial-scale

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