Ocean waves can power Australia’s future, scientists say

SINGAPORE,  (Reuters) – Waves crashing on to  Australia’s southern shores each year contain enough energy to  power the country three times over, scientists said yesterday  in a study that underscores the scale of Australia’s green  energy.

The research, in the latest issue of the journal of  Renewable and Sustainable Energy, comes as the nation is  struggling to wean itself of years of using cheap, polluting  coal to power the economy and to put a price on carbon  emissions.

Oceanographers Mark Hemer and David Griffin from the  state-funded research body the CSIRO looked at how wave energy  propagates across the continental shelf and how much is lost.  The aim was to build a picture of the amount of energy on an  annual basis and how reliable that source is.

The government has passed laws that mandate 20 percent  renewable electricity generation by 2020 to curb carbon  emissions and wind power is likely to make up the bulk of the  green energy investment. Wave power is still in early  development.

“So what we’re saying is that we can achieve that target if  we harness 10     percent of the available wave energy resource,”  Hemer told Reuters from Hobart.

Hemer and Griffin used complex computer models to map how  the energy in the waves attenuates near the shore. They looked  at the annual cycle both in terms of mean wave conditions and  the 10th and 90th percentiles.

This means that 10 percent of the time waves are smaller  than the mean and for the 90th percentile the waves are  larger than that value for 10 percent of that time.

“Basically what this means is that there is still a fairly  large resource for 90 percent of the time,” said Hemer. And  this is crucial because some types of renewable energy, such as  wind and solar panels, are limited because they can’t generate  steady power 24 hours a day, unlike coal or gas.
Wave power has much greater potential to deliver steady  power supplies, but connecting it to the grid in remote areas  could be a problem.

“Averaged over the whole year, Australia’s southern  coastline has a sustained wave energy resource of 146 gigawatts  (1,329 terawatt-hours/year),” the researchers say in their  study, or three times Australia’s total installed generation  capacity.

The government, facing an election on Saturday, is under  pressure to put a price on planet-warming carbon emissions and  further boost investment in cleaner energy.

The country is one of the developed world’s top carbon  emitters and relies on coal to generate about 80 percent of its  electricity.

Hemer and Griffin’s work has created a series of maps of  the coastline that helps wave power investors find the right  sites and design projects that can cope with calm and stormy  conditions and how frequent these might be.

Their work is different from some past studies, which used  wave data from deep-ocean waters.
The researchers don’t advocate any particular wave power  technology.

But there are three firms in Australia developing  technologies, including Fremantle-based Carnegie Wave Energy,  which has a system based on large buoys suspended just below  the surface near the shore.

Hemer and Griffin’s estimates are based on the amount of  energy along the coast at 20 metres deep, since many emerging  wave power systems are likely to be at that depth or less.

Ideal sites included Portland in Victoria and Albany in  southern Western Australia because of easy grid connections