China / Cover Story

Inventor looks to generate waves of interest

By Sun Li and Hu Meidong (China Daily) Updated: 2014-05-12 07:36
Greener development

"Wave energy is obviously an alluring idea because it's renewable and doesn't cause pollution," said Dai Shugeng, a professor of economics at Xiamen University, who added that Wu's efforts are worthy of great attention especially as China is restructuring its energy industry with the aim of achieving greener development and cleaner energy.

Inventor looks to generate waves of interest
Inventor looks to generate waves of interest
At the first meeting of the incumbent National Energy Commission in April, Premier Li Keqiang said China will push forward with reforms in energy production and consumption, make energy use greener in line with the 12th Five-Year Plan (2011-15), which highlights the scientific exploration and utilization of ocean resources, to accelerate the development of the marine economy.

He Hongzhou, a researcher at the Fujian Provincial Energy Research Society, said that while the ocean contains a huge amount of untapped energy, wave and tidal power only account for a very small percentage of the nation's energy structure.

The development of marine energy is particularly attractive to Fujian because the province has a long coastline and a large number of islands, he said.

The province will invest 760 million yuan in marine-based renewable energy projects, including two offshore windfarm programs in Putian city, this year, according to the Fujian Provincial Development and Reform Commission.

You Yage, chief researcher with the Ocean Energy Laboratory at the Guangzhou Institute of Energy Conversion under the Chinese Academy of Sciences, said despite the huge market, the development of wave and tidal power has been hampered because the technology on offer is unpopular.

A range of ocean-power projects are run by institutes or State-owned companies, which are heavily subsidized by the government, but the technology they offer hasn't been widely accepted because the cost is too high, You said.

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