E.ON withdraws from Wave Hub project

Wave Hub will be built about 10 miles offshore and be connected to the National Grid. The hub will act as a giant ‘socket’ into which wave energy device developers can plug their devices and carry out pre-commercial testing.
Wave Hub will be built about 10 miles offshore and be connected to the National Grid. The hub will act as a giant ‘socket’ into which wave energy device developers can plug their devices and carry out pre-commercial testing.

The withdrawal follows E.ON’s purchase of the Pelamis wave power device, with E.ON saying it “decided to withdraw from Wave Hub for the time being so that other developers could take advantage of the project.”

E.ON was one of four developers looking at using Wave Hub to ‘plug in’marine power projects, with E.ON and Ocean Prospect looking at using the Pelamis wave power device at the site, which is due to be built next year.

“Our aim is to concentrate on testing our Pelamis device, which means that it was unlikely we'd be in a position to connect to Wave Hub in the short term,” says Dave Rogers, Regional Director of Renewables for E.ON. “We still believe Wave Hub is an excellent project - and we may well return to it in the future - but our initial goal is to get a machine into the water as quickly as possible, which we'll be able to do in Orkney.”

Nick Harington, Head of Marine Energy at the South West RDA (Regional Development Agency), which is developing the Wave Hub, says: “It's entirely understandable that E.ON wants to test a single next generation device at the European Marine Energy Centre rather than an array of devices which is what wave hub is designed for. We wish them well and hope to welcome them back in the near future.

“Wave Hub is on course to be built and commissioned next year. We are currently in detailed negotiations with three wave device developers and look forward to the first device being deployed at Wave Hub in 2011.”