Formerly CNM - Carnegie Corporation
Old CNM thread here.
Wave power station deal signed
Source: 7pm TV News WA
Published: Monday, December 7, 2009 8:50
Expires: Sunday, March 7, 2010 8:50
West Australian company Carnegie Wave Energy has signed a deal with the State Government to build Australia's first commercial scale wave power station, off Garden Island.
ASX/Media Announcement
7 December 2009
Licence for Perth wave energy site signed
Wave energy developer Carnegie Wave Energy Limited (ASX: CWE) is pleased to advise that it has executed a deed of licence with the State of Western Australian Government for access to a designated area of seabed in waters to the west of Garden Island off Perth, Western Australia.
- Carnegie & WA Government sign wave energy license
- Allows the installation of commercial scale CETO unit off Garden Island
- This will be the first commercial scale wave power unit deployed in Australia
Carnegie has been working with the Department of Regional Development and Lands (DRDL) who manage Crown Land in Western Australia, along with other State Government Departments, to process Carnegie’s license application over recent months. Execution of the licence provides Carnegie with permission, subject to specific covenants, to install and operate a commercial scale, autonomous CETO wave energy device to verify its energy delivery performance for a period of up to 3 years.
The activities to be undertaken under the licence form part of Carnegie’s 5MW commercial demonstration project supported by $12.5m of State Government Low Emissions Energy Development (LEED) funding.
Activities in the licence area are well progressed. Deployment of the first commercial scale, autonomous CETO wave energy unit will begin shortly with the installation of the unit’s mooring system. This will be the first commercial scale wave energy unit to be deployed in Australia.
About CETO:
The CETO system distinguishes itself from other wave energy devices by operating out of sight and being anchored to the ocean floor. An array of submerged buoys is tethered to seabed pump units. The buoys move in harmony with the motion of the passing waves, driving the pumps which in turn pressurise water that is delivered ashore via a pipeline.
High-pressure water is used to drive hydroelectric turbines, generating zero-emission electricity. The high-pressure water can also be used to supply a reverse osmosis desalination plant, replacing greenhouse gas emitting electrically driven pumps usually required for such plants.
CETO Technology characteristics include:
- CETO converts wave energy into zero-emission electricity
- CETO is environmentally friendly, has no visual impact and attracts marine life
- CETO is fully submerged in deep water away from popular surf breaks
About Carnegie:
Carnegie Wave Energy Limited is an Australian, ASX-listed (CWE) wave energy and clean technology developer. Carnegie is the owner and developer of the CETO Wave Energy Technology intellectual property.
Hi Leetv,
correct me if i am wrong but the 100% exclusive rights to the CETO tech is still in the pipeline !!!!!
Hi Bigukraine. All speccys are risky that's the nature of the game but with risk also come reward. The fall in sp due to them not getting the grant via the Renewable Energy Development Program was unjustified. Fundamentals have not changed and the fall was a knee jerk reaction imo. I bought in post REDP rejection luckily enough but have been watching this stock for quite sometime with interest as I live close by to the testing facility in Fremantle and Garden Island is right on my door step.Hi Leetv,
Mate not a bad company but a bit of a risky share to hold imo. Held the stock around the .22c mark awhile ago and as soon as news came out of not getting a gov grant the shares fell to now around .135c . Good to see them going forward now and correct me if i am wrong but the 100% exclusive rights to the CETO tech is still in the pipeline !!!!!
After all, shouldn't we all have at least one green play in our commodity portfolio.
A relative of mine who keeps in close contact to the boys at cwe contacted me the other day to explain the recent depression of the share price. He told me that a big shareholder has gone bankrupt and the litigators have been selling off cwe whenever they can. He believes that once the litigators have finished the sale then the price can go back to more accurate market values.
Oh yeah, this is a true story, I heard it from a friend of a friend of mine whose sister is married to the butcher who sold CWE’s CEO his lamb chops for Australia day this year. So it must be true.
Tukker, I’m glad you at least qualified that one by saying ‘he believes’.
Your right...and that play at today's prices should probably be GDY.
Well seriously it should probably be a toss up between these 2 and maybe DYE thrown in for good measure....all showing great entry's at the moment.
...wave power is certainly among the most attractive of the range of possible renewable energy technologies. Unfortunately, it is also one of the most nascent in its development cycle (along with engineered geothermal systems, which is probably even further behind
...From the technical data (table 3.7), you can work out that if the 50 MW unit was dedicated just to desalination, it could output ~90 GL/year. Actually, at 11 l/sec average output, each unit would produce 350 ML of fresh water per year (on average), and a 300-unit field’s output would be 104 GL/year. So, a figure of 90 to 105 GL/year seems for a 50 MW plant seems to be right, if the technical report is to be believed.
The 100 GL/year Port Stanvac RO desalination plant in Adelaide will cost $1.83 billion in capital costs, and then has to pay for its electricity. A direct-cost scaling-up of the 5 MW CETO plant to 50 MW, which is anticipated to produce ~100 GL/year (see above), is $500 million (a slightly lower figure is cited here), with no electricity costs (or greenhouse gas emissions). Am I missing something here??
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