| US Researchers Hope to Tap Ocean Flows for 
    Electricity   Key West, Florida - Mar 07, 2008 -- Voice of America News/ContentWorks
 Researchers in the United States are set to begin testing underwater turbine 
    systems that can produce electricity from ocean water flows. The projects in 
    Florida are the latest efforts to find alternative forms of energy to reduce 
    the nation's dependence on oil and other fossil fuels. VOA's Brian Wagner 
    has more in this Searching for Solutions report.
 
 The same energy that drives ocean waves and currents may be a rich source of 
    electrical power. Researchers in Florida say even gentle flows of two or 
    three knots are enough to drive a propeller attached to an underwater 
    turbine. Advocates say ocean power could be cheap and help replace oil or 
    coal-based systems that are blamed for global warming.
 
 Douglas Bedgood is president of Keys Hydro Power and says he wants to build 
    a turbine farm in the Florida Keys, "We could upscale this to 10 feet [three 
    meters] across and it would be perfect."
 
 The goal is to harness the energy produced by the rise and fall of waters 
    during the tidal cycle. His group is working on a test turbine that it plans 
    to submerge in a site about nine meters under water between two islands.
 
 "By the end of 2008 or early 2009, we will have several [turbines] just to 
    see how we can manage them as a group. Then another year after, it will be 
    several hundred," Bedgood said.
 
 The first step, however, is to show authorities that the groundbreaking 
    project will not damage wildlife or coastal resources in the popular tourist 
    area. Bedgood says marine life should be unharmed. "For manatees and 
    turtles, our turbines will be mounted up off the [ocean] floor, so they can 
    maneuver through them. And the leading edges of any moving part will have 
    foam rubber cushions on them," he explains.
 
 Alternative energy projects like this one aim to reduce existing strains on 
    the earth's resources, but they do raise concern about causing new problems. 
    Kenny Broad is a professor at the Rosenstiel School for Marine and 
    Atmospheric Science near Miami. He says new initiatives should proceed with 
    caution.
 
 "Take small steps at first, try to favor things that are reversible, as 
    opposed to just going for it," recommends Broad. "We are all attracted to 
    clean technologies, and we need to develop and promote clean technologies, 
    but in a responsible way."
 
 Similar projects are planned in Europe and other U.S. cities. Just 300 
    kilometers from Key West, researchers at Florida Atlantic University want to 
    tap the powerful Gulf Stream current that brings warm water north into the 
    Atlantic Ocean.
 
 "So it is a significant velocity with the equivalent energy of some of the 
    world's richest energy sites," says Rick Driscoll, who is head of the 
    university's Center for Ocean Energy Technology. He says one of the biggest 
    challenges is developing equipment that can withstand the intense forces of 
    the current. "It is a lot more challenging to put something in the ocean, 
    and certainly any energy system to go in there has to work and be 
    competitive with existing land-based technologies," notes Driscoll.
 
 He says more investment is needed for new technologies. "There is a lot of 
    significant potential, but there is a limited supply of money out there 
    right now," he adds.
 
 Driscoll says federal and state funding could help U.S. researchers perfect 
    the new technologies and bring the benefits to other countries around the 
    world.
 
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