Electrification: Leading the “charge” Written by
By Michael D. White
The clock is ticking down as the maritime industry is racing to implement innovative technologies to meet the net-zero emissions by 2050 set by the International Maritime Organization (IMO) in 2023.
To meet the challenge, electrification is being folded
Scottish firms Ocean Kinetics and Green Marine (UK) have formed a Joint Venture Partnership to decommission OpenHydro’s tidal energy platform in the Orkney Islands.
Work is rapidly advancing to remove the steel superstructure installed in 2006 at EMEC’s Fall of Warness test site, which OpenHydro used to streamline
[By: Green Marine (UK)]
Scottish firms Ocean Kinetics and Green Marine (UK) have formed a Joint Venture Partnership to decommission OpenHydro’s tidal energy platform in the Orkney Islands.
Work is rapidly advancing to remove the steel superstructure installed in 2006 at EMEC’s Fall of Warness test site which
[By: Green Marine (UK)]
Scottish firms Ocean Kinetics and Green Marine (UK) have formed a Joint Venture Partnership to decommission OpenHydro’s tidal energy platform in the Orkney Islands.
Work is rapidly advancing to remove the steel superstructure installed in 2006 at EMEC’s Fall of Warness test site which
The Maritime Executive (June 13, 2024, 12:01 a.m.)
Northern California has some of the strongest offshore winds in the U.S., with immense potential to produce clean energy. But it also has a problem. Its continental shelf drops off quickly, making building traditional wind turbines directly on the seafloor costly if not impossible.
Once water gets more than about
Matthew Lackne– (The Conversation)–Northern California has some of the strongest offshore winds in the U.S., with immense potential to produce clean energy. But it also has a problem. Its continental shelf drops off quickly, making building traditional wind turbines directly on the seafloor costly if not impossible.
Once water