Perth wave project achieves new first: 10,000 hours continuous operation

The world’s first grid-connected wave energy array – the Perth Wave Energy Project off Garden Island in Western Australia – has achieved a new first: the longest continuous period of operation of any in-ocean wave energy project.

The project’s Australian developer, Carnegie Wave Energy, said the “significant milestone” was achieved last week, when the array clocked up 10,000 hours of cumulative, continuous operation.

Screen Shot 2015-06-24 at 10.17.32 am

The array, at one time comprising three of Carnegie’s home-grown 240kW CETO 5 units (see image above), had seen a wide range of sea states during this time, the ASX-listed company said, including waves of up to 5.7 metres in height.

“Achieving 10,000 hours of continuous operation is a significant milestone not just for Carnegie but for the wave energy industry as a whole,” said Carnegie Wave CEO, Michael Ottaviano.

“The industry has faced a lot of challenges, especially around reliability and survivability. By demonstrating the continuous operation of our product, we’re addressing these challenges.

“Our understanding is that this is the longest continuous period of operation any in-ocean wave energy project has ever achieved, anywhere in the world.”

In May, the first of the CETO 5 units deployed for the Perth array was retrieved from the ocean, having achieved more than 8,500 hours of operation,  validating Carnegie’s ‘hot swap’ maintenance strategy.

Carnegie is currently working on a large-scale CETO 6 project, for which it secured funding in February.

The CETO 6 array site will be located around 8km further offshore from the current Perth Project, the company says, with the exact location yet to be determined. Once installed, it is expected to yield some three times more energy than the existing array.

ceto 6 vs ceto 5

Comments

6 responses to “Perth wave project achieves new first: 10,000 hours continuous operation”

  1. lin Avatar
    lin

    Any data on the power output over this period?

    1. James David Lockhart Nelson Avatar
      James David Lockhart Nelson

      A significant event despite its possible cost.

  2. Clee Avatar
    Clee

    How can the array have clocked up 10,000 hours of continuous operation when there haven’t been 10,000 hours or even 8,500 hours since the first CETO 5 unit went operational in November 2014.

    http://arena.gov.au/media/first-ceto-5-wave-power-unit-operational/
    “25 November 2014 … the CETO 5 unit was successfully installed on the first attempt and has now been operating for a little over a week.”

    1. cadsey Avatar
      cadsey

      “Cumulative, continuous”. Eg across the multiple units. Similarly as to how accelerated life testing is done for other systems.

      1. Clee Avatar
        Clee

        I’ve heard of cumulative and I’ve heard of continuous, but “cumulative continuous” hours of operation seems suspicious. The new Solar Star PV power plant has about 1.7 million solar panels. After one hour of operation should I say that the array has operated 1 hour continuously, or should I say it has clocked up 1.7 million hours of cumulative, continuous operation? After only one hour of operation, I don’t think it shows anything from an accelerated life testing point of view. The one hour of continuous operation is more important that it being replicated a cumulative 1.7 million times. If you started hot swapping out each of the modules every 6 months or so, that would say even less about accelerated life testing.

  3. GSanto Avatar
    GSanto

    How much electricity was generated in those hours?

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