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Energy Island sketch

Energy Island sketch
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The Energy Island concept will target tropical waters Energy Island sketch Image 3 of 5 from Energy Island: unlocking the potential of the ocean as a renewable power source Image 4 of 5 from Energy Island: unlocking the potential of the ocean as a renewable power source
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Article Summary
January 29, 2008 Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion uses the temperature difference between surface and deep-sea water to generate electricity – and though it has an efficiency of just 1-3% - researchers believe an OTEC power plant could deliver up to 250MW of clean power, equivalent to one eighth of a large nuclear power plant, or one quarter of an average fossil fuel power plant. Architect and engineer Dominic Michaelis and his son Alex, along with Trevor Cooper-Chadwick of Southampton University are developing the concept with plans of putting the theory to the test on an unprecedented scale by building a floating, hexagonal Energy Island that will harness energy from OTEC, as well as from winds, sea currents, waves, and the sun.

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