UK: Part of GBP 20 Million Fund for Sea Generation Wales

UK Part of GBP 20 Million Fund for Sea Generation Wales

Sea Generation Wales Ltd has been awarded a share of £20 million funding under the government’s Marine Energy Array Demonstrator scheme (MEAD), launched in April last year, to support the development and testing of pre-commercial marine devices in array formations out at sea.

Besides Sea Generation Wales Ltd, MeyGen Ltd also received share of this fund.

Marine energy has huge potential as a clean green source of power and could provide up to 20% of current UK electricity demand by 2050, as well as help cut carbon emissions and support thousands of UK jobs. More investment is needed however to enable further testing of devices and drive the sector towards commercialisation, and that’s what the MEAD scheme is designed to do.

Energy and Climate Change Minister Greg Barker said:

“This £20 million will give MeyGen and SeaGeneration Wales the boost they need to leap to the next level and test their innovative turbines in formations out at sea.

“These projects will provide valuable insight into how best to harness the power of the sea and take us one vital step closer to realising the full potential of marine in our future energy mix.

“The UK, with its amazing natural resource and outstanding technical know-how is already leading the way on marine power for the rest of the world to follow, and I want to ensure we stay top of this table. I am delighted that MeyGen and SeaGeneration Wales are rising to the challenge and wish them every success.”

CEO of Siemens Energy Hydro & Ocean Unit Achim Wörner said:

“We are very pleased that the Skerries project being developed by Sea Generation Wales Ltd has been selected for the £10M Marine Energy Array Demonstration award.

“The Skerries project located in Anglesey, Wales, will be one of the first arrays deployed using the Siemens owned Marine Current Turbines SeaGen S tidal turbines. The marine consent for the project was recently awarded, the first tidal array to be consented in Wales. The 10MW array will be fully operational in 2015.”

[mappress]

Press release, February 27, 2013; Image: seagenwales