Categories: CommentaryRenewables

Where can wave energy be cost competitive?

Published by

Australia’s Carnegie Wave Energy may well be celebrating the fact that government grants will enable its first commercial-scale, grid connected wave energy plant to be built in Australia, but it seems clear that at least its medium-term opportunities will likely lie elsewhere.

The most obvious of these are in island grids, where wave energy is already competitive with the cost of imported diesel. But opportunities also lies in European countries, such as the UK, Ireland, France and Portugal, which are all providing healthy incentives as they compete to attract new wave energy technologies.

Carnegie Wave Energy, which is currently working on the installation of the 2MW installation near Fremantle, says its CETO technology will shortly have a levellised cost of energy of around 35c/kWh, which means it will be able to compete with the cost of diesel on island grids – hence its focus on opportunities in places such as Reunion Island, Bermuda, and in the Pacific – and also in the UK, which offers a 5 times multiplier on renewable obligation certificates (the local equivalent of RECs).

According to this graph below, made in a presentation to a Sydney conference last week, over the medium term, Carnegie expects its costs to fall to around 25c/kWh, making it cost competitive with offshore wind, and making it an interesting proposition for other wave-rich European countries such as Ireland, Portugal and France, while over the longer term, the aim is to bring the cost down to match that of onshore wind, or around 10c/kWh, where it will be competitive in countries such as Chile.

Carnegie Wave Energy expects to begin construction of its Perth Power Project – near the naval base at Garden Island – in the first quarter of 2013 and make its first power sales into the grid in the fourth quarter of 2013. The project recently attracted a $9.9 million grant from the federal government’s Emerging Renewables Program and a $5.5 million grant from the WA government, and the company is currently negotiating a power purchase agreement with local offtakers.

Later this year, the company is expecting that a pilot unit of its CETO 4 technology will be deployed on Reunion Island by French energy giant EDF and French construction company DCNS.

Giles Parkinson

Giles Parkinson is founder and editor of Renew Economy, and of its sister sites One Step Off The Grid and the EV-focused The Driven. He is the co-host of the weekly Energy Insiders Podcast. Giles has been a journalist for more than 40 years and is a former deputy editor of the Australian Financial Review. You can find him on LinkedIn and on Twitter.

Share
Published by

Recent Posts

Australian researchers hope to put fresh spin on next-gen vertical wind turbines

Flinders University will trial a next-generation vertical wind turbine south of Adelaide in a research…

14 January 2025

AI and electricity: Are data centres the new aluminium smelters of demand – and how will we power them?

In Australia, AI-driven data centres are starting to approach the current industry leader for electricity…

14 January 2025

Gina Rinehart-backed, geothermal powered “pit to battery” project marks key milestone

ASX-listed Vulcan Energy Resources is marking a milestone in developing a sustainable EV battery supply…

14 January 2025

Compressed air storage pioneer secures billion-dollar loan to deliver 8 hours back-up to California grid

The outgoing Biden Administration commits to help fund the deployment of a novel long-duration energy…

14 January 2025

Peter Dutton’s “always on” nuclear power is about as reliable as wind and solar – during a renewables drought

New analysis finds modern nuclear power plants are, on balance, about as "always on" as…

14 January 2025

Much of Australia has the same climate as LA. When it comes to bushfires, that doesn’t bode well

The catastrophic fires burning in one of the most densely populated parts of the United…

13 January 2025