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COVER STORY | IN THE NEWS | OFF THE PAVEMENT | ARTBEAT November 8, 2007
Can We Extract Energy from Waves?by Don Garlick PG&E is seeking permits to investigate the feasibility of producing energy from waves off Humboldt Bay. The potential is high off our coast because of our winter storms and summer winds. Waves approaching shallow water begin to break and lose energy, so most schemes target waves in water deeper than the “wave base” (about half the wave length) but close enough to shore to minimize the cost of transmitting power via submarine cables.
A simple experiment is recommended: Tape a quarter to the end of a wine cork. Float this buoy in a glass of water and observe its behavior as you accelerate the glass up and down. It behaves as though set in concrete! Even a submarine’s periscope would not submerge if an earthquake were to suddenly lift the sea floor many meters. That’s because the inertial mass of a buoy or submarine is exactly equal to that of the water it displaces.An obvious way to extract energy from the buoy is to connect the bobbing buoy to a stationary “object” and use their relative motion to generate energy. The stationary “object” could be the sea floor, but a more resilient “object” would be the water mass below wave base. One could use a deeply submerged, neutrally buoyant tank to push and pull a magnetized rod through a coil fixed in a bobbing buoy.
Energy can certainly be extracted from waves, but whether or not that happens here depends upon the involvement of interested stakeholders, including fishermen and public agencies.
Don Garlick is a geology professor retired from HSU. He invites any questions relating to North Coast science, and if he cannot answer it he will find an expert who can. E-mail dorsgarlick@yahoo.com.
COVER STORY | IN THE NEWS | OFF THE PAVEMENT | ARTBEAT Comments? Write a letter! © Copyright 2007, North Coast Journal, Inc. |