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==External links== ==External links==
Ocean Energy Council: [http://www.oceanenergycouncil.com
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Revision as of 23:10, 4 December 2008

The oceans have a tremendous amount of energy and are close to many if not most concentrated populations. Many researches show that ocean energy has the potentiality of providing for a substantial amount of new renewable energy around the world.

Renewable ocean energy

The oceans remain a vast and largely untapped source of renewable dikes in the form of fluid flow (currents, waves, and tides) and thermal and salinity gradients. Several means of extracting energy from the ocean have been tried. Some are currently in deployment stage.

Sometimes Wind power (offshore) is also included in the list of renewable ocean energies.

Theoretical potential of renewable ocean energy

The theoretical global ocean energy resource is estimated to be on the order of:

  • 2.000 TWh/year for osmotic energy
  • 10.000 TWh/year for ocean thermal energy (OTEC)
  • 800 TWh/year for tidal current energy
  • 8.000 – 80.000 TWh/year for wave energy

This theoretical potential is several times greater than the actual global electricity demand, and equivalent to 4000 – 18000 MToE MToE (million tons of oil equivalent).

Non-renewable ocean energy

Petroleum and natural gas beneath the ocean floor are increasingly important sources of energy. An ocean engineer directs all phases of discovering, extracting, and delivering offshore petroleum (via oil tankers and pipelines), a complex and demanding task. Also centrally important is the development of new methods to protect marine wildlife and coastal regions against the undesirable side effects of offshore oil extraction.

References

  1. Carbon Trust, Future Marine Energy. Results of the Marine Energy Challenge: Cost competitiveness and growth of wave and tidal stream energy, January 2006
  2. International Energy Agency, Implementing Agreement on Ocean Energy Systems (IEA-OES), Annual Report 2007

See also

External links

Ocean Energy Council: [http://www.oceanenergycouncil.com

]

Marine energy
Wave power Tidal power conceptual barrage
Tidal power
Other
Electricity delivery
Concepts Portal pylons of Kriftel substation near Frankfurt
Sources
Non-renewable
Renewable
Generation
Transmission
and distribution
Failure modes
Protective
devices
Economics
and policies
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