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MARMOK-A-5 is an offshore electrical power generator that uses
wave energy Wave power is the capture of energy of wind waves to do useful work – for example, electricity generation, desalination, or pumping water. A machine that exploits wave power is a wave energy converter (WEC). Waves are generated primarily by w ...
to create electricity. This device is a
spar buoy A spar buoy is a tall, thin buoy that floats upright in the water and is characterized by a small water plane area and a large mass. Because they tend to be stable ocean platforms, spar buoys are popular for making oceanographic measurements. Adju ...
installed in the maritime testing site BiMEP, in the
Bay of Biscay The Bay of Biscay ( ) is a gulf of the northeast Atlantic Ocean located south of the Celtic Sea. It lies along the western coast of France from Point Penmarc'h to the Spanish border, and along the northern coast of Spain, extending westward ...
. It is the first grid-connected maritime generator in Spain, and one of the first in the world. Developed by the Basque company Oceantec Energias Marinas inside the European project OPERA or Open Sea Wave Operating Experience to Reduce Energy Cost, it is delivering electrical energy to the
grid Grid, The Grid, or GRID may refer to: Space partitioning * Regular grid, a tessellation of space with translational symmetry, typically formed from parallelograms or higher-dimensional analogs ** Grid graph, a graph structure with nodes connec ...
since December 2016. The buoy is located in the ocean, 4 km from the coastline and is connected to the sea with a submarine electrical cable. With a nominal power of 30 kW, the principal aim of the MARMOK-A-5 device is obtaining results in the way of designing a new generation cost effective high power marine energy generator.


Principle

The operation principle of MARMOK-A-5 is a point absorber OWC ( Oscillating Water Column). The device is in diameter and a length (or height) of , with above the water. It has a weight of 162.2 tons. The buoy is floating in around 90 m water depth and is tied to the
sea bed The seabed (also known as the seafloor, sea floor, ocean floor, and ocean bottom) is the bottom of the ocean. All floors of the ocean are known as seabeds. The structure of the seabed of the global ocean is governed by plate tectonics. Most of ...
with a mooring system based on anchors. This wave energy converter has demonstrated its robustness surviving difficult environmental conditions with waves as big as . The "Karratu" mooring system used is one cell of a shared mooring system. This is designed to allow each device to move freely while reducing the number of moorings needed for an array or wave farm, thereby reducing costs.


History

As noted above, the concept was initially developed by Oceantec within the European OPERA project. The 30 kW device was first deployed in October 2016 until June 2018, when it was refurbished and redeployed in October 2018 for a further year. The device was installed in approximately water depth. In 2018, Oceantec was acquired by Spanish engineering company IDOM.


Further development in EuropeWave programme

IDOM were one of seven companies awarded pre-commercial procurement funding in December 2021 for Stage 1 of the EuropeWave programme, to further develop the device concept. In September 2022, they progressed to Stage 2 with additional funding for a Front-End Engineering and Design study of a scale-prototype to be tested at sea. IDOM were one of three concepts that progressed to Stage 3, with a share of the €13.4m budget to develop and test a device at BiMEP for a year. In December 2024, IDOM announced they were planning to re-deploy the MARMOK-A-5 at BiMEP in summer 2025.


References


External links

* {{Coord missing, Spain Wave energy converters Wave power