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Colin Bennett

Underwater Wind Turbines? bioWAVE System Designed to Create Energy from Ocean Currents ... - 0 views

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    Picture a kelp bed on the ocean floor swaying in the current. Done? Now picture an underwater field of bioWave turbines (pictured to your left) doing the same
Colin Bennett

Technology opens promise of ocean mining - 0 views

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    BOSTON - There's gold in the sea floor. Silver, copper, zinc and lead, too. The problem is, it's a mile or two underwater and encased in massive mineral deposits that layer a dark, mysterious world. But new technology and worldwide demand have combined to make mining for these metals economically feasible for the first time. A breakthrough project is moving forward in New Guinea, and new rules to govern deep ocean mining will be set by an international authority this spring.
Colin Bennett

Lockheed Martin Thermal Energy China - 0 views

  • Lockheed Martin recently entered into an agreement with Reignwood to develop and build a 10-megawatt Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion (OTEC) pilot power plant off the coast of southern China. The memorandum of agreement between the two companies was signed in Beijing on April 13.
Colin Bennett

INFOGRAPHIC: Is deep sea mining worth the risk? - 0 views

  • The team at 911 Metallurgist takes a look at mining the ocean floor in their newest infographic
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Ocean Power: Europe's Next Green Thing - 0 views

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    Ireland's OpenHydro and Germany's RWE are spending millions to try to turn the power of waves into electricity With oil prices hitting almost daily record highs and global warming climbing up the public agenda, the need for alternative energy sources has never been more urgent. But while wind and solar have dominated the recent rush to invest in renewables, market watchers reckon it could now be marine energy's turn to shine. Ocean power-using the energy from waves or tidal flows to produce electricity-is quickly coming of age as a viable green resource that could help meet ambitious global targets to reduce greenhouse gases and dependency on fossil fuels. European and North American power companies such as Canada's Emera (EMA.TO) and Germany's RWE (RWEG.DE) are spending millions to fund wind and tidal projects. This investment has led to a new generation of more efficient technologies, with dozens of prototypes expected to be ready for commercial deployment within the next five years. "There's huge interest in both wave and tidal technology," says Thomas Boeckmann, clean tech analyst at market research firm StrategyEye in London. "It's gaining a lot of attention from energy companies, which will be able to offer financial backing and technical expertise to these startups."
Colin Bennett

Deep-Sea Mining Technology - Nautilus Minerals Extracts Copper from Ocean - 0 views

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    Rocketing metal prices have prompted miners to seek out deposits in nearly all corners of the globe, but Canada's Nautilus Minerals is gunning to be the first to pull gold and copper from the ocean floor.
Hans De Keulenaer

Mining the Oceans: Can We Extract Minerals from Seawater? - 0 views

  • Our society cannot survive without a cheap supply of minerals; so, it may not be too early to look for new sources. If mines on land are gradually becoming depleted, could the oceans become our new mines? There have been several proposals for mining the oceans' floor, but that is just an extension of conventional mining and, besides, the task has proved to be complex and expensive. The real change of paradigm, instead, is in extracting ions dissolved in seawater.
Glycon Garcia

House & Senate Leaders Support US $250M for Ocean Energy - Renewable Energy World - 0 views

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    Leadership in both the U.S. House of Representatives and Senate are calling on the Department of Energy (DOE) to allocate US $250 million of the $2.5 billion in stimulus funding for renewable energy research and development to the emerging marine renewable energy industry. The funding would help develop wave, current and tidal energy technologies
Hans De Keulenaer

Charged EVs | Critical battery metals could be mined from polymetallic nodules found on... - 1 views

  • DeepGreen Metals recently acquired Tonga Offshore Mining Limited (TOML), giving the company exploration rights to a 75,000-square-kilometer block of seabed believed to contain some 756 million wet tons of polymetallic nodules.
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    A story which sounds too good to be true usually is :-). Checking this story through CRM4EV.
Colin Bennett

Greenpeace takes on deep sea mining - 0 views

  • A new report from the environmental activist group has found that the potential impact of deep sea mining is not properly understood.
Colin Bennett

Deep Seabed Mining - 1 views

  • As land-based minerals become depleted and prices rise, the search for new sources of supply is turning to the sea floor. This emerging industry, facilitated by advances in technology, poses a major threat to our oceans, which are already suffering from a number of pressures including overfishing, pollution, and the effects of climate change.
Colin Bennett

Valuing the Ocean: Preview Summary - 0 views

  • This book hopes to guide policy-makers, accelerate the implementation of new management tools and systems, and – most importantly – encourage people to ask themselves what the oceans are really worth to them and to the future of our planet.
Colin Bennett

Ferraris for all: geo-engineering - 0 views

  • some are arguing that things are getting so bad that geo-engineering might be necessary despite the possibility of damaging unintended consequences. On the other hand, others are worried that discussing geo-engineering could shift the discussion away from decarbonisation. An added worry seems to be that developing countries such as China and India – those that most need
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    the most detailed popular discussion of geo-engineering I have come across so far. In broad terms three possible techniques were identified:\n\n* Removing carbon dioxide from the oceans.\n* Removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.\n* Using lenses or mirrors to divert sunlight from the planet.\n\nHowever, the discussion is still wracked with anxiety. On the one hand, some are arguing that things are getting so bad that geo-engineering might be necessary despite the possibility of damaging unintended consequences. On the other hand, others are worried that discussing geo-engineering could shift the discussion away from decarbonisation. An added worry seems to be that developing countries such as China and India - those that most need great increases in energy supply - could take a lead in developing the technology.\n
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US Renewable Energy Tax Credits Could Be Voted On This Week - 0 views

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    A vote could come as early as this week in the U.S. Senate on a bill introduced by Senate Tax Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-MT) and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) containing a one-year renewable energy production tax credit (PTC) extension and a small wind turbine investment tax credit. The Senate bill, S. 3335, contains a one-year PTC extension at its current value. After December 31, 2009, any further extension would include the "presumption" of a cost cap, which would, through a complex formula, put a ceiling on the value of the credits of no greater than 35% of project value. The small wind ITC has a cap of US $4,000 per system.The 10-year cost for the PTC, including all technologies to which it applies, is projected to be approximately US $7 billion, while the ITC, which includes solar, would cost approximately US $907 million over 10 years. The bill also includes provisions to extend through 2014 the tax credits for solar energy, fuel cell and microturbine property, as well as the residential energy efficient property tax credit. Marine renewable energies could also benefit from the bill as credits to build wave, tidal, current and ocean thermal energy conversion systems of at least 150 kilowatts (kW) are extended through the end of 2011.
Colin Bennett

Hunt for sea minerals drives Indian navy - 0 views

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    According to the Goa-based National Institute of Oceanography, India has surveyed an area of nearly 4m sq km in the central Indian Ocean basin that has led to findings of "significant commercial grades" of copper, nickel, iron and cobalt deposits.
Colin Bennett

Gujarat National Law University to draft two key laws on deep sea mining - 0 views

  • The Union ministry of earth sciences has asked Gujarat National Law University (GNLU) to prepare two draft laws that will lay the guidelines for deep sea mining in the Indian Ocean off India's territorial waters, and in Antarctic Ocean.
Colin Bennett

Seabed mining dreams shattered by New Zealand latest decision - 0 views

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    "New Zealand's recent decision to oppose another deep sea mining venture off its coasts has poured cold water on advocates of searching for and digging up valuable minerals including copper, gold and manganese from the ocean floor."
Colin Bennett

Video: Deep sea mining plan for minerals - 0 views

  • UK Seabed Resources, a subsidiary of the British arm of Lockheed Martin, hopes to extract so-called nodules - small lumps of rock - from the ocean floor.
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