Reports demonstrate major potential for wave and tidal energy production near U.S. coasts, Alaska & Hawaii.
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) today released two reports
detailing the country's ocean wave and tidal resource energy potential.
Mapping and Assessment of the United States Ocean Wave Energy Resource
report is a follow-up to the Electric Power Research Institute's (EPRI)
2004 study, with the most recent evidence suggesting a 26 percent
increase in wave energy resources.
The Assessment of Energy Production Potential from Tidal Streams in the United States,
led by researchers at Georgia Tech Research Corporation in
collaboration with DOE, is the first of its kind in the U.S. and
includes a geographic information systems (GIS) tool available for public use. The
report data concludes that U.S. water power resources, including ocean
wave, tidal and conventional hydropower, have the potential to provide
15 percent of our nation's electricity by 2030.
"The release of both reports demonstrates the attainable energy
potential of our nation's vast ocean resources,” said Sean O'Neill,
OREC's President. "DOE's investment in these studies, as well as the
corresponding results, is a testament to the importance of our unique
opportunity to pursue a diverse energy portfolio that includes wave and
tidal energy in an effort to secure our energy supply, create jobs and
lower greenhouse gas emissions.”
The reports are the most rigorous assessments thus far undertaken by
DOE and its collaborative partners, and show the significant renewable
energy contributions that waves and tidal currents off of U.S. coasts
could provide to the grid. DOE announced the information in the resource
assessments could "help to further develop the country's significant
ocean energy resources, create new industries and new jobs in America,
and secure U.S. leadership in an emerging global market.”
The wave energy assessment concludes that the Pacific Ocean off the
West Coast (Washington, Oregon and California) and Alaska encompass the
greatest available wave energy resources in the U.S. The report also
outlines the wave energy potential along the East Coast from Maine
through North Carolina, and from South Carolina through Florida as well
as in the Gulf of Mexico, Alaska's Bering Sea, Hawaii and Puerto Rico.
The tidal energy assessment designates and details data for energy
resource 'hot spots' across the U.S. including Alaska, Maine,
Washington, Oregon, California, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, New York,
New Jersey, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia and Florida.
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