Fleets of low-cost single wave energy devices could power MILLIONS of homes

Fleets of low-cost energy generators could power MILLIONS of homes within decades, Scottish research suggests A team at the University of Edinburgh has been working with researchers in Italy Each of the devices could generate enough power for 100 homes, they say Fleets of the gadgets could be deployed worldwide to power cities globally The device costs less than conventional designs and has fewer moving parts

By Press Association

Published: 00:02 GMT, 13 February 2019 | Updated: 11:18 GMT, 13 February 2019

7

View
comments

A new cut-price wave energy device that could help power homes and businesses is being developed by experts at a Scottish university.

Researchers from the University of Edinburgh have been working with institutions in Italy to come up with the renewable energy system.

They say their design is cheaper than more conventional alternatives, is made of durable materials and has fewer moving parts.

Small-scale experiments in an ocean simulator have indicated a single full-sized device could generate the equivalent of 500 kilowatts of electricity – about enough to power 100 homes.

Fleets of the gadgets deployed across the globe could therefore potentially power millions of homes.

Scroll down for video 

A new cut-price wave energy device that could help power homes and businesses is being developed by experts at a Scottish university. Researchers from the University of Edinburgh have been working with institutions in Italy to come up with the renewable energy system (stock image) 

A new cut-price wave energy device that could help power homes and businesses is being developed by experts at a Scottish university. Researchers from the University of Edinburgh have been working with institutions in Italy to come up with the renewable energy system (stock image) 

Engineers believe the new Dielectric Elastomer Generator (DEG) device could be installed within decades, providing fleets of low-cost, easy to maintain power producing units.

Professor David Ingram, of the University of Edinburgh's School of Engineering, who took part in the study, said: 'Wave energy is a potentially valuable resource around Scotland's coastline and developing systems that harness this could play a valuable role in producing clean energy for future generations.'

The team hopes their design could take the place of conventional wave power generators, which have complex systems and expensive moving parts.

The device costs less than conventional designs, has fewer moving parts

read more from dailymail.....

NEXT PlayStation 5 Pro will be an 'enormous' jump in tech with 8K resolutions and ... trends now