will be the first utility-scale, grid-connected wave energy test site in the U.S. It鈥檚 been about a decade of permitting, siting, and design, according to OSU Oceanography professor Burke Hales. He鈥檚 the chief scientist with PacWave.
鈥淲e will have a large vessel. It's called the Seacor Lee (and) she鈥檚 out of Anacortes, Washington,鈥 said Hales. 鈥淪he will make a brief stop in Newport鈥檚 Yaquina Bay. And then be out on site for most of the rest of August. Initially, she鈥檒l be very close to shore, just about a mile offshore of Driftwood Beach State Recreation Site, which is just south of Seal Rock, just north of Waldport on the Oregon Coast.鈥
Portions of the parking area at Driftwood Beach State Recreation Site will be closed to the public while the work is underway.
鈥淔rom the beach, that vessel will appear very very close. The vessel will be anchored out there and will be supporting divers who will be preparing the ends of those conduits to be conducive to pulling the cables in next summer,鈥 said Hale.
Hales said workers will prepare undersea floor conduits for installation of power and data cables. The cables, each about 12 miles long, are being manufactured in Norway, by the Paris-based firm Nexans. PacWave, once built, will provide wave energy developers a way to test their devices.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 what the test facility allows users to do,鈥 said Hale. 鈥淚s to build their devices, bring them out there, anchor them, connect them to the cable, which connects back to the grid and then start putting power back into the power grid.鈥
Hale said the test facility is being set up so the amount of power produced by wave energy can be quantified.
鈥淭he really tricky part is how efficiently does the device extract that power from the waves?鈥 Hales asked. 鈥淗ow efficiently does it convert it to electricity? And how efficiently does it transmit that electricity back to the grid where it can be used?鈥
Once tested, those devices will likely be moved somewhere else, to produce energy, like Southern California, or off the coast of Alaska.
Hales said the The PacWave test facility is permitted by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, or FERC, and the property is under lease for 25 years. He added that the permitting process included a number of federal and state agencies, including NOAA, Oregon Parks, the Army Corps of Engineers, and the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality. They also consulted with marine researchers to ensure the facility will not disturb marine life.
Hales said they have a long term commitment to monitoring the environment, including acoustic conditions. He said the facility shouldn鈥檛 be making noise that would affect marine mammal life.
鈥淏ut, we have an extensive array of devices, cutting edge technology that will assess the background acoustic signature and how it changes in response to new devices being brought on site,鈥 said Hale. 鈥淲e鈥檝e got acoustic thresholds which, if exceeded, we have to respond.鈥
Another concern they鈥檙e addressing is entanglement. Hales said the devices are on taut tethers and anchors so that it should be very hard for marine mammals to get tangled in them.
He added that the project is working with the commercial fishing industry. The PacWave facility is outside of fishing areas, but in stormy conditions, crab pots may get moved around into the site and could get tangled into a wave energy device. That could be a problem for the crab fishers and for the test facility.
鈥淲e have plans to mitigate the potential for entanglement,鈥 said Hale.
The ship is scheduled to arrive on August 7 at Yaquina Bay then make its way to the PacWave site several days later. Hales said to hope for calm seas while the work is underway.
PacWave South is supported by grants from the U.S. Department of Energy, the state of Oregon and other public and private entities. Oregon State鈥檚 College of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Sciences is managing the construction and operation of the more than $80 million facility.
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