How Wave Power Could Be The Future Of Energy

2024 ж. 25 Мам.
1 197 908 Рет қаралды

How Wave Power Could Be The Future Of Energy. The first 100 people to use code UNDECIDED at the link below will get 60% off of Incogni: incogni.com/undecided. The ocean has an incredible amount of power potential. China’s brand new Wave Energy Converters has been making a lot of news recently. While this ocean power device isn’t the first of its kind, its sheer size represents a breakthrough for this underutilized but potent branch of the renewable energy family tree. What is wave energy generation, and how does it compare to other renewables like solar panels and wind turbines? And if wave energy is so great, then why is it lagging behind solar, wind and others? Let's dive into the ocean of renewable energy, where the waves may hold more untapped potential than the sun. Maybe the surfers were right all along.
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  • What do you think of catching waves for power? The first 100 people to use code UNDECIDED at the link below will get 60% off of Incogni: incogni.com/undecided. If you liked this, check out Why This NASA Battery May Be The Future of Energy Storage kzhead.info/sun/Zd6AXb6qemZ4gmg/bejne.html

    @UndecidedMF@UndecidedMF9 ай бұрын
    • What do you think about expressing generation capacity in MW in future videos instead of multiplying MW by 24000 kWh/MWh/day?

      @denverbraughler3948@denverbraughler39489 ай бұрын
    • What are the downsides of depleting wave energy? How does this impact coastal life, erosion, and beach creation? How would this impact life at sea such as whales? All in all, cool stuff, and likely a very important part of the cleaner (I hate the term clean energy) energy mix.

      @digiryde@digiryde9 ай бұрын
    • @@digiryde: Dampening waves would decrease erosion. But the energy extracted is an insignificant fraction. By what mechanism would there be consequences?

      @denverbraughler3948@denverbraughler39489 ай бұрын
    • Dude, your math skills need improvement. The average US household uses around 29kwH per day. This means you would not feed 1000 homes with the 24k powerplant... Unless you talk about China household, but then this is not mentioned and is quite misleading to your main audience...

      @luciusd7964@luciusd79649 ай бұрын
    • @@denverbraughler3948 "By what mechanism would there be consequences?" I do not know, but the one thing I have learned is there are always trade offs. Sometimes they are worth it and sometimes not. I suspect in this case, they will be worth it if it is not overdone (whatever that is). I do know there is research that has already been done on other devices and/or structures that impeded tidal processes that show detrimental effects. I do not think these devices would impede tidal action as much as a wall though. :)

      @digiryde@digiryde9 ай бұрын
  • Wave energy has great potential, but like many new technologies, it has it's ups and downs.

    @jopo7996@jopo79969 ай бұрын
    • 😂

      @boby115@boby1159 ай бұрын
    • Here take my like.

      @casimirojulianangelo4804@casimirojulianangelo48049 ай бұрын
    • I saw what you did there! 🤓

      @johnburn8031@johnburn80319 ай бұрын
    • Lets hope it's not a wipeout.

      @francisboyle1739@francisboyle17399 ай бұрын
    • I sea what you did there.

      @66BranDo@66BranDo9 ай бұрын
  • Just finished my degree in naval engineer, where we actually did som research and testing of wave generators. The elephant in the room of any energy harvesting is the efficiency, and we struggled to get even 1% efficiency. Meaning that when a wave passes, we extract 1% of it's energy. If you were to have 100% efficiency, then there wouldn't be any waves behind the device at all, which is speculated to be impossible (just like the wind turbine problem of 100% efficiency being physically impossible). But the energy density of waves is huge, so we should be happy to see even 5% efficiency. The best option we saw for minimizing cost was to keep all facilities adjacent to land, so only the kinetic parts was in water, and generators on land. Means that pretty much all maintenance is reduced and can be done from land, also reducing the cost by insane amounts

    @Lorgs1@Lorgs19 ай бұрын
    • I'd guess that another benefit of building them close to the shore is that the environmental impact of reducing the intensity of the waves is brought to a minimum. (Implying that the efficiency is high enough to have an impact at all)

      @imamalox@imamalox9 ай бұрын
    • Something along the lines of this is what I came to comment. Wave generation might work best in site specific locations where all the hardware except the float would be based on land. Channel locations where a long- arm can dangle over and drop a float into the waves leaving just a fiberglass float in the water would be a very durable solution. I could even see small-scale devices mounted on piers to capture shipping traffic waves in harbors.

      @coffeeshangarworkshop8051@coffeeshangarworkshop80519 ай бұрын
    • On the other hand, that approach limits the technology to coastal sites where waves reach the shore in sufficient strength, and the facilities don't bother anyone...

      @richardmetzler7909@richardmetzler79099 ай бұрын
    • @@richardmetzler7909 Second part matters less, people can suck it up, but the first bit is a bit of a limiter

      @Skumm93@Skumm939 ай бұрын
    • The best form of WECs has to be the Oscillating Water Column. Zero moving parts in the water and the "spring like effect" of air trapped inside in the OWC minimizes the energy losses between energy conversions. Only problem however is the bidirectional airflow. Current turbines have ~14% efficiency in the most optimal conditions.

      @drizzylmg752@drizzylmg7529 ай бұрын
  • There's been wave power research in the Shetlands and Orkneys, north of Scotland, for over twenty years now. I vaguely remember something from the early/mid 90's where someone showed off technology at the time. What was interesting about it was that the technology actually dissipated some of the wave power so that the waves reaching the shore were less powerful and damaging than they had been before.

    @_starfiend@_starfiend9 ай бұрын
    • The oil price crisis of 1976 triggered UK interest in renewable energy for several years from then. Wind, wave and geothermal were studied but work on wave energy was mostly cancelled after about 1983. Wave was seen as too difficult and too expensive relative to the other two, except for work to support small island communities.

      @derekp2674@derekp26749 ай бұрын
    • They have just announced that a HVDC cable will be built to connect the Orkneys to the mainland to transmit wind and tidal power to the mainland. I've seen underwater turbines be tested lately.

      @the_lost_navigator7266@the_lost_navigator72669 ай бұрын
    • I think you have hit the nail on the head there. A massive added benefit could be the potential to protect delicate shoreline by tamping down the waves. Parts of the UK coastline are being washed away, especially around Norfolk, with the authorities under pressure to spend billions in protecting houses and coastline. An option of putting wave power mats along those coasts which both generate power and reduce the waves and surge would be a tempting way of spending money to protect the coast rather than having to put massive concrete defences in place.

      @Flange-lw9sp@Flange-lw9sp9 ай бұрын
    • Pelamis Wave Power. They built 2 devices, one of which remains. They sadly went out of business in 2014. I remember the initial publicity, it was sometimes called the "sea snakes".

      @jamesfx2@jamesfx29 ай бұрын
    • was about to say something similar then saw your post, I think it was "Tomorrow's World" that showcased it

      @jacksmith4460@jacksmith44609 ай бұрын
  • In 1980, when I started a vo-tech program to be an electrician, my instructor challenged us to figure out how to harness waves to generate electricity. He said there are a lot of things to overcome but the possibilities were limitless.

    @gregmontalvo2737@gregmontalvo27379 ай бұрын
    • There is nothing the sea will not break.

      @Deontjie@Deontjie8 ай бұрын
    • Steam is still a highly used power producer from burning fuels as well as using starling generators.. Geothermal can be used to skip those steps as long there is enough water present in those areas however its not very controllable and can be just as dangerous as nuclear fission and also produces toxic water from the vapors just as nuclear power does. There are plenty of outlets to create, but many of them are either bad for everything or just not able to be tamed enough to be worth while.

      @IloveJellow@IloveJellow8 ай бұрын
    • The possible failures are endless :)

      @tilapiadave3234@tilapiadave32346 ай бұрын
  • I think its really cool that they made the device smart enough to dive when seas and waves are too powerful to generate power with out damaging the device. THATS GENIOUS! In places where hurricanes are frequent that is a massive protection of your investment.

    @jehiahmaduro6827@jehiahmaduro68279 ай бұрын
  • I have never seen a project with a specific sim that has produced such a wide array of solutions and mechanical styles. I supposed the unpredictability of the waves, and the salt water make this so much more challenging. But wow this is mindblowing.

    @Robisquick@Robisquick9 ай бұрын
    • Check out tow in surfing to see massive waves

      @ScottDieken@ScottDieken5 ай бұрын
  • I love the variety of solutions shown in this video! Reminds me of the “glory days” of automotive and aviation development allowing non-scientists see lots of creative solutions and predict the winners. Kind of like season 1 of Battlebots. Measuring environmental impact looks challenging…. Seems to me there is great potential for coastal areas though I had not considered your point about these systems increasing complexity to the grid. Comparing costs might be tricky using optimized solar and wind designs to the comparatively newer tidal/wave systems. Somehow you need an offset for predicted reductions from development of the newer systems (assuming they prove to be technically and financially feasible). Your videos are consistently interesting to me! Thank you for producing them!

    @boxlessthinker1973@boxlessthinker19739 ай бұрын
    • I was your seventh like

      @SomuaSomua@SomuaSomua8 ай бұрын
    • i agree with you the comparing cost

      @congnguyenvo5117@congnguyenvo51174 ай бұрын
  • There was some testing done in Orkney in the north of Scotland. After about a decade of testing, both systems were retired. One thing that caught my eye was that neither system returned in the course of its lifetime the energy spent in making it… I spoke to an engineer who was involved in the project and he explained that the harsh marine conditions, on the one hand, and the slow speeds but great forces exerted, on the other hand, make it very difficult to make a resilient and reliable system. It’ll be brilliant, of course, if a good way was found to harvest wave energy, but I am less optimistic than I used to be that this is a worthwhile approach to renewable energy.

    @oronjoffe@oronjoffe8 ай бұрын
  • Love the power of the ocean. Couple corrections: sometimes the sea is calm - not often, but sometimes. And weather bouys are a great example of tech that's handled the harsh conditions for decades.

    @debscamera2572@debscamera25729 ай бұрын
    • But most waves are from the power of wind.

      @homewall744@homewall7449 ай бұрын
    • @@homewall744 im not sure thats correct. tides aree driven by the moon

      @PazLeBon@PazLeBon9 ай бұрын
    • @@PazLeBon tides are driven by the moon, waves by wind. They’re 2 different things.

      @sjsomething4936@sjsomething49369 ай бұрын
    • The trouble is that most buoys don’t have complex machinery as a part of them, other than sometimes electronics to measure wave height, temperature etc. which can all be well protected and internal to the buoy thus don’t have to deal with fouling or corrosion. Keeping the moving parts moving and not corroding is tough, any maintenance makes the cost of the technology and by extension the energy that is produced more expensive.

      @sjsomething4936@sjsomething49369 ай бұрын
    • @@sjsomething4936 how are they 2 different things? There are two driving forces producing one event, a wave... whether large or small. Its like you are saying there a 2 different waves?

      @Michael1ndonli@Michael1ndonli9 ай бұрын
  • I actually had a renewable energy course where one of our homework assignments was calculating energy output from waves. It depends on the coastline but most coastlines of developed nations are more like 5-10kw/m. The US has an estimated 1170 TWh per year of potential wave energy on the coastlines but 50% of that is in the Alaskan coastline in specific spots and that isn't considering conversion efficiency and transmission. Even including the heavily inflated Alaskan numbers, the US coastline is an estimated 153,646km long from NOAA. So that's 7614.9MWh/km of annual production. Assuming a combined conversion and transmission efficiency of around 80% it would be 6091.92MWh/km. So to power a state like IL which uses 197.6TWh annually you are going to need 32,436.4km of pure wave generation on the coast in high wave areas to power one state, not including spacing between the units and maintained access. You're going to need to consume an absurd amount of the coastline to power just a city. 80% efficiency WITHOUT considering transmission and conversion, just pure kinetic absorption is also insanely high because it would mean you are taking a 10m high wave and turning it into a 2m high wave. Real world efficiencies seem to be in the single digits right now. Realistically, after spending money on marine resistant materials, bearings, and maintenance I have an extremely hard time believing the low cost/kw these start ups are promising. I think this is why all of the actual wave generation facilities deployed have produced far under target or were shutdown or converted to research facilities only. I'd like to be proven very wrong but I just don't think there is that much cheap energy in readily available in waves compared to something like solar and batteries.

    @g.4279@g.42799 ай бұрын
    • Spot on, the short wavelength is part of the problem.

      @jimgraham6722@jimgraham67227 ай бұрын
  • Love the the videos and learning about the good things happening. Newer to the podcast with your brother and throughly enjoy it as well as they augment each other very well.

    @dwaynemcsloy4213@dwaynemcsloy42139 ай бұрын
  • In the mid 70’s, I saw a wave-power device that looked remarkably like a single pair of those yellow slats with a single flex-point (?) between them to generate a current. How encouraging that it’s only taken us 50-odd years to string twenty or so of them together. _Go humans!_

    @thruknobulaxii2020@thruknobulaxii20209 ай бұрын
    • Yeah, if we were revisiting the really bad ideas every 5 years instead of 50, it would be pretty depressing.

      @ColonelSandersLite@ColonelSandersLite9 ай бұрын
    • @@filip9564 why

      @creativecipher@creativecipher9 ай бұрын
    • ​@@filip9564 Please share your academically backed research that concludes that please.

      @GroteGlon@GroteGlon8 ай бұрын
  • Great video Matt! The resource is diverse and market needs vary, which can lead to more than one winner.

    @laminarscientific4971@laminarscientific49719 ай бұрын
  • There is room for wave power on sites of coastal errosion. I think the best design for this are air rams where the waves act like pistons in tubes and drive tesla turbines to generate electricity. Taking the power out of the wave thereby reduces errosion. The sites would be good for battery storage as well.

    @grahamgresty8383@grahamgresty83839 ай бұрын
    • Possibly could be pared with desalination plants?

      @victoriasimpson6808@victoriasimpson68089 ай бұрын
    • Yeah.. Hydraulic and Pneumatic.. Small to medium.. Then scale up..

      @finddeniro@finddeniro9 ай бұрын
  • Always the most interesting and thought provoking videos to be found on the subjects that you cover. 👍🏽

    @sandyt4343@sandyt43439 ай бұрын
  • Excellent analysis Matt. Thanks

    @paulballard304@paulballard3049 ай бұрын
  • We need to be developing these for the Great Lakes Now.

    @paulk6947@paulk69479 ай бұрын
  • What happened to the submersible buoys attached to water pumps anchored to the ocean floor? These buoys are 40 meters or so below the surface - out of the way for most boats and protected from storms. The pumps then pressurize water for turbines on the land. I was very impressed with this strategy - began in Australia in early 2000’s.

    @matthewkramer8578@matthewkramer85789 ай бұрын
    • If it began in Australia you could safely wager that our government (Australian) intervened and either cut funding or sold it to a foreign government or corporation.

      @erazer5685@erazer56859 ай бұрын
  • I've been fascinated with this for a long time. Great video.

    @carsgunsandguitars@carsgunsandguitars9 ай бұрын
  • Thank you Undecided for another great videos, I always enjoy the quality of your videos, thank you for the great work you do to put all of this together. One topic you might find interesting for another video. I remember a few years ago about a thermoelectric in Finland that burns trash, since of all the collected recycled plastic only 5-9% is actually recycled it might be a better solution. Thanks

    @MarcosFerreira-nz5ei@MarcosFerreira-nz5ei9 ай бұрын
    • Was that the one with a ski slope built into the design? Such an innovative solution. Prof Mark Jacobson in "No Miracles Needed" goes into the pros & cons of all our energy options. There's a few major problems with burning rubbish. First being it produces greenhouse gases which we need to reduce asap to mitigate global heating & there's the issue of toxins & black carbon released into the environment. Not all can be captured. I think that facility has a very high chimney stack which help the pollution to dissipate, but doesn't solve the issue of pollution. Jacobson also talks about the garbage patches in our oceans, which are 3x the size of France. We need to keep plastics out of our oceans. Reducing use of plastics & recycling more of it will help. Burying in landfill is one of the least problematic ways of dealing with plastic waste. Maybe there needs to be a tax on plastic use, as they are ridiculously cheap to buy, considering the cost of environmental impacts. We could develop alternatives which have been around for ages, such as hemp bioplastics...which could even be used for car panels. As a bonus growing the hemp sequesters 50% more CO2 per hectare than forest. Hemp also provides high quality nutrition with a seed that contains complete protein & oil, and the fibres of hemp can also be used for paper (so we could stop logging old growth forests for wood chipping to make paper) & durable carbon negative building products. Many solutions. We could do with policies that would help implement them. A carbon fee & dividend, as advocated by James Hansen for decades as the best way to reduce GHGs, would help towards less use & more recycling of plastic, as plastic making is carbon intensive, and currently it costs less to make new plastic than to recycle existing plastics.

      @annabel5200@annabel52003 ай бұрын
  • I've seen many wave-related energy videos, but not all of them are perfect solutions. Waves can be endless, but harnessing them is tough.

    @arrowghost@arrowghost9 ай бұрын
  • Thank you and good morning!

    @mnhtnman@mnhtnman9 ай бұрын
  • Super Video. Many Thanks.

    @iwanttotelltheworld1564@iwanttotelltheworld15649 ай бұрын
  • Nuclear Power is already perfect, it can hardly become better. Anything else needs a lot more effort and the result is "random electricity" no one needs.

    @TheoGottwald@TheoGottwald8 ай бұрын
    • Perfect isn’t the word I’d use lol

      @jayg6138@jayg61383 күн бұрын
  • Love your channel, from hydraulic jumps to future tech, such a diverse range of engineering topics and really accessible. You're awesome. It seems like a readily exploitable energy supply; certainly one to keep an eye on.

    @ianbd77@ianbd779 ай бұрын
    • Every video I watch on this channel is engineering fluff. As an engineer, I hate seeing content spreading excitement for a technology that all signs point to being a terrible, unprofitable method of power generation.

      @AuxiliaryPanther@AuxiliaryPanther9 ай бұрын
    • @@AuxiliaryPanther well at least you brought another suggestion along instead of just whinging, oh wait

      @phutureproof@phutureproof9 ай бұрын
    • @@phutureproof lol, touché. Real Engineering and Practical Engineering do a fantastic job of covering engineering topics. They focus less on the newsflashy engineering topics because most of those are newsflashy. For example, many channels posted videos about how K-99 was probably not a room temperature semiconductor, but many other baity channels announced how great this could be without any dive into the issues surrounding the paper or its research.

      @AuxiliaryPanther@AuxiliaryPanther9 ай бұрын
  • I love all of the cool different ways of generating electricity that you cover. I know you or someone else also covered a partly submergible device that was quite large in scale that used turbines in the water. It will be fascinating to see what gets deployed where.

    @mas13ish1@mas13ish19 ай бұрын
  • Great review of Wave energy generation tech. One company I was hoping to hear you mention or speak about it EcoWave Power which utilizes the coast to collect the energy whilst avoiding most of the harsh conditions of at-sea tech systems. According to them, this saves a ton of cost on deployment and just yesterday they've connected to the grid with the country of Israel. I'd love to hear your take and see your coverage of their technology.

    @InnerG84@InnerG849 ай бұрын
  • Thanks Matt! Cheers :)

    @beautifulgirl219@beautifulgirl2199 ай бұрын
  • It is always astounding how good you can explain all those interesting topics, it is clear you put a lot of effort in it!❤

    @ralph7349@ralph73499 ай бұрын
  • Good to hear you discuss environmental impacts. Biggest problem, I think, is the ocean is unrelenting. So yes it has potential but the installation and maintenance cost are going to keep it at the high end of renewable energy.

    @MarkBarrack@MarkBarrack9 ай бұрын
  • Great video Matt

    @sebastianag2966@sebastianag29669 ай бұрын
  • I love hearing about new tech like this. Very exciting for the future.

    @Tahj88@Tahj889 ай бұрын
  • What's amazing to me is that Humans managed to engineer and build huge offshore oil rigs to drill and extract oil and gas but we struggle to do the same to harvest wave energy. I'd say there is a use case for utilizing old offshore rigs for harvesting stations.

    @joet6619@joet66199 ай бұрын
    • I am sure there a bunch of off shore drilling locations that can't be harvested because conditions don't allow it. Oil is still king of energy per barrel of oil the amount of KWatts produced is staggering and blows away renewable energy. But I agree if we put our energy into it the ocean could help us...if we take care of it.

      @OneOfDisease@OneOfDisease9 ай бұрын
    • Because they made billions of profits from a single offshore oil rigs. While these machine that harvest wave energy only generate tiny bit of profit.

      @nntflow7058@nntflow70589 ай бұрын
    • The waves in these locations are just too powerful they would destroy form of energy extraction device. Besides it would be very difficult to maintain. See the Pico OWC Wave Energy Converter that was destroyed by powerful waves. Funny thing is that it was actually an on-shore installation. Waves are just way too powerful.

      @drizzylmg752@drizzylmg7529 ай бұрын
    • well when the gov keeps giving gas/oil billions of dollars in handouts.....it's not that surprising at all. the only reason it even works at all is because they are funded by the gov, if that money went to any other energy sector it would produce the same and honestly better results.

      @rocksfire4390@rocksfire43909 ай бұрын
    • It took millions of years for solar energy to eventually produce underground hydrocarbons that are very energy dense. After burning through centuries of solar energy fixed in wood, humans switched to extracting and burning through all that stored energy in decades. Fossil fuel producers and consumers don't pay for the massive worsening global harms that arise from making then burning their product.

      @skierpage@skierpage9 ай бұрын
  • Interesting stuff :) Just a minor thing on units, in particular energy and power which are related via P = E / t At 8.20, 100kW is enough power for 100 apartments (1kw is often enough for an apartment) Also 24,000kwh/day = 24,000kwh/24 h = 1000kw = 1MW ..thats probably a better way to representing the energy generation potential of these devices.

    @fruityoverlord9937@fruityoverlord99379 ай бұрын
    • better way to describe is ,,,, waste of time AND MONEY

      @tilapiadave3234@tilapiadave32346 ай бұрын
  • This is really awesome!

    @x-STORMXX-x@x-STORMXX-x9 ай бұрын
  • I want to extend a warm welcome to Vancouver Matt!! My beautiful city is so happy to receive you and I live only a few blocks from our beautiful convention centre that I am sure you will enjoy with its own Apiculturist on the living roof!

    @BradMcPhee@BradMcPhee9 ай бұрын
  • I like the idea of harvesting the oceans infinite movement. I guess harvesting wave power is an obvious way to do it, but perhaps there's a better way. What about harvesting ocean currents? They are strong, they're out of the surf zone, and they're out of the way of being seen. Seems to me, that's where we should focus our attention. Venturi technology could be used to boost the efficiency.

    @TexLogan-du2yi@TexLogan-du2yi9 ай бұрын
    • An old idea. Saw it in Popular science (or mechanics?) magazines from the 60/70s. But maintenance, corrosion, and the massive construction costs are still an issue.

      @Bigrignohio@Bigrignohio9 ай бұрын
    • The problem would be the effect on the ocean currents. Disrupting the currents which mix earth's oceans would likely result in catastrophic changes to marine life. Just like how we wouldn't put giant turbines in the sky to harness the jet stream in north america because it would catastrophically change our weather patterns, making it much harder to live.

      @baileescott401@baileescott4019 ай бұрын
    • Do these things have unintended consequences?

      @tomr6955@tomr69559 ай бұрын
    • @@baileescott401It would require an absolutely insane rollout of this technology to have any kind of ecological impact. And practically anything we do is looking better than the consequences of our current most popular mode of energy production, where we just light stuff on fire and pretend that smoke doesn’t exist.

      @davew2040x@davew2040x9 ай бұрын
    • Some climate models are now suggesting that the AMOC may be shutting down very soon. We might be a little late?

      @thruknobulaxii2020@thruknobulaxii20209 ай бұрын
  • Hopefully the scientists and engineers have been in contact with the marine seismic exploration companies, such as PGS, TGS and Shearwater, that have been towing huge amounts of technical equipment through the oceans for several decades. I am sure they have a huge amount of experience that could be hugely informative if shared.

    @matttyrer1445@matttyrer14459 ай бұрын
  • Another excellent video!

    @ellenorbovay5226@ellenorbovay52269 ай бұрын
  • Wow, the Segway Portable PowerStation Cube Series sounds like an incredible device! It's perfect for outdoor enthusiasts like us who value quality family time and need reliable power on our camping trips. The massive capacity, fast recharging, and waterproof design are definitely impressive features. Thanks for sharing this recommendation!

    @user-hh6ex9md4w@user-hh6ex9md4w6 ай бұрын
  • I've been thinking up ways to harness wave/tidal energy for YEARS. I used to do thought experiments, imagining machines and strategies for doing this as a way to fall asleep, the way some might count sheep. It's fascinating to see how it may actually be accomplished.

    @alden1132@alden11328 ай бұрын
  • Years ago they tried wave energy and found that taking the energy out of the waves created ecological damage further along the coast. All forms of energy come with a cost to the environment one way or another, even if it is not obvious.

    @Themanincumbent@Themanincumbent9 ай бұрын
    • Not nearly as bad as people drilling into the earth for oil.

      @Wis_Dom@Wis_Dom9 ай бұрын
    • “They”?

      @frederickheard2022@frederickheard20229 ай бұрын
    • Isn't it though? What I've seen of the local ecosystem impact at each is that the renewables are harder on local habitats.

      @danielchin8073@danielchin80739 ай бұрын
    • Any links or anything? Every single form of energy we humans use has environmental impact. I am having a hard time believing that taking the energy out of waves is going to be worse that shading from solar panels, bird deaths from wind turbines, various forms of degradation from oil, and nuclear waste from nuclear energy. It's not like we have the option to just stop having energy. Not in the real world we don't.

      @mckenziekeith7434@mckenziekeith74349 ай бұрын
    • seems like there's a plethora of different types of wave power devices though.....so what they did "years ago" probably has no relevance to what they're thinking about now

      @wadexyz@wadexyz9 ай бұрын
  • This is amazing!

    @pokeethan@pokeethan8 ай бұрын
  • Man every time I find myself coming back to your videos because I really like the content! And each time I seem to forget they are riddled with infuriating puns...

    @gogollama@gogollama9 ай бұрын
  • What did the sea say to the sand ? Nothing he just waved 😂

    @Joshayyy@Joshayyy9 ай бұрын
    • Why did the sand blush? Because the sea weed :)

      @richardd9634@richardd96349 ай бұрын
  • You need to minimize the amount of movable parts and make the few parts needed in the power plant durable enough to stay in or close to the corrosive ocean chemistry and harsh weather. It is just so much easier to put up some static solar panels with no movable parts in a dry desert.

    @estraume@estraume9 ай бұрын
    • A dry desert is not the ideal place for solar panels. Dust is very detrimental for solar panels and deserts tend to be very dusty and with little water available for cleaning that dust off the panels. Deserts are also usually hot and heat reduces the output of solar panels.

      @KarelGut-rs8mq@KarelGut-rs8mq9 ай бұрын
  • Really Excited For Future!! If we find something that will give the whole world unlimited energy, we have to keep on searching and support whoever finds the idea.

    @mgyaan9000@mgyaan90009 ай бұрын
  • I really love this one 💪

    @joaogunza7281@joaogunza72819 ай бұрын
  • The biggest problem with wave energy is the maintenance due to marine growth.

    @DominicNSX@DominicNSX9 ай бұрын
  • Great as always. Quick question on costs; you mention the LCOE could be about $0.30 per kWh. Seems relatively high compared to current rates. I’m currently paying ~$0.09 per kWh (Georgia). How does LCOE translate into consumer rates?

    @tandar@tandar9 ай бұрын
    • What you pay mainly comes down to where the power comes from. You still have solar, wind, coal, and other methods that also makes power. This would just add to it so hard to say how much you would actully pay for it, but the benfit is when solar or wind stops - you can continue to produce power over the waves vs having to burn more coal for example.

      @adr2t@adr2t9 ай бұрын
    • Yeah, I was also struck by how expensive that is. I'm paying about $0.07/kWh for supply at retail rates so imagining what that kind of cost (if wholesale is even $0.30/kWh) would do to my monthly bill is scary.

      @danielchin8073@danielchin80739 ай бұрын
    • @@danielchin8073 Yea most of that would be past along to business than you. Plus they wouldnt charge like that, it would normally either a set fee that the energy company would have to pay at or be set around time frames.

      @adr2t@adr2t9 ай бұрын
    • I wish I was paying that. Here in California it is already .30 per kWh for end consumers. Or thereabouts. And it goes up every year.

      @mckenziekeith7434@mckenziekeith74349 ай бұрын
    • @@mckenziekeith7434 Cali is a different beast, there are other issues going on there xD

      @adr2t@adr2t9 ай бұрын
  • thank you

    @larryl43@larryl439 ай бұрын
  • Excellent episode, and a compelling topic! What a timely subject as well. Keep up the great series! First comment. I have been reading things like Nat Geo, Popular Mechanics, etc. since I was old enough to read. I recall, somewhere back in the 60s to 70s, reading about a project, somewhere in the Scandinavian countries, possibly Holland, that utilized tidal energy by constructing a "collector" across a bay mouth and captured the WPE of tide and wave by lifting buoyant 'floats' which converted to torque, which was eventually converted to electricity. Think of it as the great-great...kin to the "Windmill". Bottom line... the idea has been around for a good long while, and the current renaissance should probably better been enjoyed back in those years. Who knows where we would be today, and how much better off our world and we would be, as a global civilization, had the minds of foresight been heeded then . Second, a question. In calculating the amount of Potential Energy (E sub P) on a planetary scale, it seems that the majority of it is based on geography of coastal areas, and is also necessitated for wave creation/accentuation by loss of depth (or gain in shallowness as waves reach the shores. But let us now consider the "open seas". Could there not be far greater potential energy in the 'open seas'? True, the tethering would be far more complex, due primarily to ocean depths at the anchoring locations, not to mention costly, and setting aside the collection & distribution costs of converted energy as a "common factor". This, of course, relates back to Tesla/Edison problem of long-distance transmission. Perhaps this last might be the topic of another episode?

    @kelvinnance8371@kelvinnance83719 ай бұрын
  • Aren't waves the energy of wind transfered into the water? Wouldn't we be getting the wind's sloppy seconds?

    @jcaique@jcaique9 ай бұрын
    • Yeah but there is a lag. The waves continue for a while after the wind dies down. Also, the waves travel vast distances. So a storm in the middle of the pacific ocean could power homes in California a couple of days later.

      @mckenziekeith7434@mckenziekeith74349 ай бұрын
    • I heard the Moon pulling on the water was responsible for it.

      @flameofthephoenix8395@flameofthephoenix83959 ай бұрын
    • Turns out the Moon creates tides; the wind creates waves.

      @flameofthephoenix8395@flameofthephoenix83959 ай бұрын
    • @@flameofthephoenix8395 the moon (and sun also) pulling on water is responsible for the tides. But not the waves. Waves are created by wind blowing over the surface of the water. Earthquakes and/or underwater landslides can also cause waves but that is a different thing (tidal wave, aka tsunami).

      @mckenziekeith7434@mckenziekeith74349 ай бұрын
    • @@mckenziekeith7434 Yes, but tides and waves are still interconnected, and affect each other. They don't have a huge effect, but it's still there. And it certainly can be picked up by electrical generators.

      @flameofthephoenix8395@flameofthephoenix83959 ай бұрын
  • Not sure that comparing LCOE of Solar/Wind vs LCOE of WPC are a good measure, although Solar PV/Wind is cheaper they need to be supported with storage infrastructure due to intermittency - when considered together, this will significantly change the LCOE number. Storage is less likely to be required for WPCs because waves are generating most of the time, as you have mentioned. So I would consider that WPCs will reach price parity before it reaches the same level of LCOE as Solar/Wind.

    @HemonDey@HemonDey9 ай бұрын
  • I always wondered what it would be like to use waves for energy but I never imagined it would look like this.

    @September2004@September20049 ай бұрын
  • 12:10 There are a lot more square meters of land than there are meters of coastline. The country isn't 1 meter across

    @keco185@keco1859 ай бұрын
  • 1:34 It doesn't really make sense to say that the US coasts could generate any amount of kWh because of course they could if you wait long enough. I'm guessing you mean something like "per year" but then you need to _say_ that and also at that point your multiplying by time and then dividing by time, so why not just give a figure in TW or something.

    @unvergebeneid@unvergebeneid9 ай бұрын
    • Yeah, I was also wondering why on earth they used "tillion kWh" instead of just "TWh". There's some unit tomfoolery going on

      @Mulakulu@Mulakulu9 ай бұрын
  • I hope that you realize that’s a 1 MW generator - which is easier to understand than 24,000 kWh/day.

    @denverbraughler3948@denverbraughler39489 ай бұрын
    • Pretty sure he used kW instead of MW for casual viewers who are less informed. He knows his stuff.

      @josevazquez1042@josevazquez10429 ай бұрын
    • @@josevazquez1042: Apparently you didn’t watch the video: elsewhere, he used MW. You cannot even begin to comprehend 24,000 kWh/day and you are one of he less-informed folks. He just as well should have written 1 MW. Either way, it’s way out of your knowledge base.

      @denverbraughler3948@denverbraughler39489 ай бұрын
  • It sounds like a smart move to make. Also tidal generators are in the works as well as wave generators and current generators. Like the one in Norway. Or maybe it was Sweden. A teathered slightly submerged turbine, turned by the flow from a large bay. Enjoying the channel. You have a new subcriber.

    @fritz1990@fritz19908 ай бұрын
  • I always wanted to either do this or somehow capture ocean currents, both are tremendous transfers of kenetic energy right? Maybe one of the devices can welcome the barnacles, and maybe coral to grow on them. We kind of need more of that right now.

    @Rimpala@Rimpala9 ай бұрын
  • 2 problems: 1) As you discussed, they are still looking for the best design. 2) Because the Wave Generators are limited to coastlines, it will require a lot of grid updates and repair costs. Rooftop Solar power actually takes pressure off of the grid. Wave Generation adds pressure.

    @FreddieVee@FreddieVee9 ай бұрын
    • Wave Generation adds grid pressure? how? It's new and requires the infrastructure, but not seeing it beyond that. Rooftop solar is certainly good but has the Duck Curve problem - and it can actually destabilize grids if it's un-managed variability. i.e. partly cloudy will cause rolling waves of changing generation levels; that the operator *has* to handle. If the grid operators can get near realtime reports of rooftop generation it's fabulous, but most people aren't hooking their systems up that way - giving grid operators access to their stats.

      @pixelpusher220@pixelpusher2209 ай бұрын
    • The best way would be to harness power as locally as possible in each area, according to what's most available in each region. Decentralized power is more secure and efficient power. No single point of failure to deny energy to large areas and no huge losses transporting it over large distances. And ownership of power generation should properly reside in each community using it.

      @julialerner3322@julialerner33229 ай бұрын
    • ​@@pixelpusher220 They don't need "most people" to allow access. Maybe one every few dozens of miles is largely enough. It's not like sunlight is going to vary on a house per house basis. Also utilities providers tend to over exaggerate the impact of roof solar on the grid because they want to justify increasing their rate despite less and less centralized production being needed to service homes.

      @Alarios711@Alarios7119 ай бұрын
    • @@Alarios711 partly cloudy days will affect houses differently. Perhaps not individually but definitely in small numbers and that has to be accounted for by the grid operators. As more residential solar comes online it increases the delta sizes that need to be handled.

      @pixelpusher220@pixelpusher2209 ай бұрын
  • While I'm encouraged to see that there are other options for capturing sustainable Electricity I believe the real danger is the prevailing storage methods which i believe is mainly "batteries"...Anyone with half a brain should be able to understand that the creation and proper maintenance of batteries is sadly short sighted and is damaging our environment in that they deteriorate and their disposal is so dangerous to the ground water because of decaying polymers and toxic chemicals 😢

    @williamdurham7722@williamdurham77228 ай бұрын
  • Some time recently read a article about wave power in Australia, from Perth WA to Melbourne there is enough potential wave power to supply all of Australia with power, this article used a concrete tube attached to a cliff as the water goes up the tube the are spins a turbine same in revers, the only part in the salt water is the bottom of the tube, maintenance is at the top so no in water maintenance. The Southern Ocean has more than enough movement all year around, add some solar and wind power, limitless uninterruptible power, day and nigh.

    @FredRose2001@FredRose20019 ай бұрын
  • We could definitely use one of those in Milwaukee. I think the milder conditions would allow a wave generator to flourish in the great lakes. As for salt water, an anode can only do so much. I saw the spot of rust on the generator towards the end of the video.

    @jasonhill9088@jasonhill90889 ай бұрын
    • The Salter Duck was trialed successfully on lake Windermere in England in the 70s/80s.

      @malcolmnew8973@malcolmnew89739 ай бұрын
  • Whats cool is that most countries have access to oceans of some sort. Its not really like Oil in that way.

    @arshadrehman24@arshadrehman249 ай бұрын
  • I love the wave energy idea but as you said in the video seawater is terrible on stuff. I pictured an idea on big ships fitted with outriggers on pivots and as the waves push them up and down they generate energy to save fuel for the ship. (And since they’re on pivots they can be lifted clear for docking and canals.)

    @steveschritz1823@steveschritz18239 ай бұрын
  • I usually give you a thumbs up towards the end of videos but you got me to click it at 7:37 with lubes and oils 🙂. Great video and a very interesting subject

    @admspk@admspk9 ай бұрын
  • Tidal energy is not good if there's aquatic life forms around where it is being used. It causes underwater noise, electromagnetic fields, changes in habitats, entanglement, and displacement which can negatively and severely affect the aquatic life. There's an argument for it to be used in hydro electric plants but it is still under scrutiny due to its potential impacts on the performance of hydro generation.

    @bruhder5854@bruhder58549 ай бұрын
    • Ok.. Lets not consider what fossil fuels are doing to the globe.. Never go Full

      @Rhythmattica@Rhythmattica9 ай бұрын
  • The only thing I hardly ever hear anyone think about is the immense impact that altering the currents would have on the environment. Ocean currents have one of the largest impacts on the global climate. If you’re “absorbing” the kinetic energy from the current, you’re weakening that current beyond the power generation system. Why is this impact never expressed or asked about when most people talk about this? Especially given the push for environmental protections and climate change solutions.

    @clo8076@clo80769 ай бұрын
    • It's a matter of "how much" not "if". In principle you are correct, it would be catastrophic to alter ocean currents, but I think you are overestimating the effect of this device relative to the strength of the currents. It's like being worried that a breeze could bring down a building because you just saw a leaf fluttering in the wind - it's all about scale :)

      @panosgeorgopoulos9153@panosgeorgopoulos91539 ай бұрын
    • Considering that in order for the deployment of wave energy converters to affect currents it would have to be so wide that it would affect shipping lanes and marine life long before that, don't forget that there are many artificial structures in the sea such as ships, drilling sites, buoys and of course breakwaters that all absorb energy from the waves, they Just don't convert them to electricity. This is as ridiculous an argument as saying wind farms will stop the wind

      @eliadkatz5129@eliadkatz51299 ай бұрын
    • I think currents are deeper and flow like large under surface rivers on very long timescales and are generally driven by differences in temperature and salinity(solar input and icemelt). Waves are more ephemeral surface phenomena more driven by wind(atmosphere). So in that case they should be unrelated enough for it not to be a concern. My guess is that what’s most likely to be of interest is case by case local ecosystem effects.

      @not_your_raccoon@not_your_raccoon9 ай бұрын
    • The waves are not the (ocean) current. Waves are mostly water going up and down, caused by wind. The waves propagates in a cetain direction, but the water is not flowing with it like that.

      @kedrednael@kedrednael9 ай бұрын
    • 10:52

      @ScottHz@ScottHz9 ай бұрын
  • I’m concerned about our hasty transition to ‘clean’ energy. A century ago, coal-powered power stations were seen as groundbreaking. However, we now understand the repercussions of using coal. These consequences can be readily quantified with the data we have today. But what about renewables? How significantly are we impacting the ecosystem by halting wind with our turbines, disrupting waves with floating devices, and preventing sunlight from warming the earth with our solar farms? How will these actions affect our environment in 100 years? Or in 1,000 years?

    @daspisch@daspisch8 ай бұрын
  • I was excited about

    @ludwigwinter6795@ludwigwinter67959 ай бұрын
  • The background music on this video 😍😍😍😩😩😩🏆🏆🏆 Do you do all your editing yourself?

    @ebubeawachie@ebubeawachie9 ай бұрын
  • I cant help but wonder about the wear and tear from the parts moving up and down not only constantly, but in salt water and rough seas.

    @everythingsalright1121@everythingsalright11219 ай бұрын
  • That's a bright idea !!

    @rolandalcid7127@rolandalcid71279 ай бұрын
  • I've seen a lot of different groups try to tackle wave energy but a few common issues always crop up. First, the ocean is unpredictable. You can set up a generator in a pool and get decent results but in the ocean you have multiple different waves with different periods. In short a WEC that works with small waves gets ruined by large waves, if it works with large waves its ineffective with small ones. Storms bring debris which often wrecks cables or jams moving parts. The harshness of the ocean can not be understated, it destroys everything given enough time. Second, as mentioned around 4:30, things break down in the ocean. Paints and coatings always wear away and when combined with moving parts they invariably have a shorter lifespan than anticipated. Maintenance also tends to be a sticking factor, both in cost as well as accessibility. Finally, cost is a major factor. 12:50 you explore the cost per megawatt hour and that it will likely take at least 30 years for wave energy to get close to current solar capabilities. I wonder how far solar will get in that time? If you have limited funds to work with offshore doesn't really make sense. It MIGHT make some sense if you don't have the land area for large solar farms but even then we have many buildings, parking lots, and spaces that can still support solar with a little creativity for far less than wave energy. I hear a lot about what "might" happen in the future, I keep thinking of wave energy like "clean coal". Like, sure, we COULD burn coal and use carbon capture and in a perfect world it wouldn't pollute, OR we could use solar and get more power for less cost with less work. At the end of 20 years I feel the grant money given to the CalWave project will have been used with nothing to show for it where a solar installation would have paid for itself multiple times and still be outputting power. I don't see a reality where wave energy is the future no matter how hard they try to force it.

    @Pileot@Pileot9 ай бұрын
  • I made several inventions in this field, and I even found a manufacturing company which wanted to make a prototype. Fortunately, we had enough common sense to withdraw from this immature project. There are four problems with wave energy: 1. The contraption must be hidden below ocean surface because it looks ugly and may collide with ships. 2. The contraption must dive to avoid destructive storms. 3. The contraption must be made of material which is cheap, strong, and does not corrode. Such material does not exist, but I invented basalt foam which may be suitable for this purpose. 4. High power density (>60kW/m) is available only in southern Australia, southern New Zealand, southern Africa, Scotland and Ireland. Global electricity production is ~3TW. Global wave energy is ~0.5TW - not much. Thermal gradients at the poles provide ~1TW. Solar energy in deserts is controversial because it will compete with huge hydroponic greenhouses. (The greenhouses must be huge to stabilize their internal temperature.) I like geothermal energy and high altitude (>1km) wind energy because they seem to be inexhaustible.

    @polka23dot70@polka23dot709 ай бұрын
    • Instead of diving, it could be pulled out of the way, you could have a more secure protective box for it to tuck itself away into in the case of storms.

      @flameofthephoenix8395@flameofthephoenix83959 ай бұрын
  • That's awesome that you'll be at the Fully Charged event. The company I work for works with BC Hydro and Powertech labs so we will be there too. It would be so cool to get to meet you, I love the channel.

    @jasonspeer1964@jasonspeer19649 ай бұрын
  • Matt: Idea for new video: COMPARE ALL WAVE POWER TECH/COMPANIES and provide the BEST/ranked list when it comes to LCOE, efficiency, scalability and durability and practicality and also SPEED of which tech could be scaled and deployed!! I'd love to see that list : ))))))

    @TeslaEVolution@TeslaEVolution9 ай бұрын
  • You converted me from undecided to crystal clear on water energy Matt.

    @GabrielSBarbaraS@GabrielSBarbaraS9 ай бұрын
  • Matt, funny how my brain works. Well watching I thought, how many trains run in America on any given day? What brought me to this is possibly capturing some of that energy to reproduce energy into a mobile charge station that can later discharge into the grid. Love your channel. 👍👍

    @joeblow3939@joeblow39399 ай бұрын
  • I think it's fascinating, and so long as the proper measures are taken to avoid more pollution, I think it has great pottential

    @4shotpastas@4shotpastas9 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for the cool content. By the way, you have two J-pieces in your modular Tetris-piece lamp. 😬 You should flip the red piece around to make an L-piece.

    @Cz4rM4tt@Cz4rM4tt9 ай бұрын
  • ducking the waves seems like the best way to get around the thrashing. I had not heard of this at all before, and it is pretty cool. Maybe the tech that rides on the surface, could adjust physically and duck the waves as well somehow. or maybe could be under some bridge type thing that could then be raised up when storms a brewin'

    @deareeMusic@deareeMusic9 ай бұрын
  • I remember reading an article about the US Navy having a hydroelectric testing base in Hawaii. They test the latest tech to power remote naval installations.

    @mattjones3217@mattjones32179 ай бұрын
  • This could be a great technology to help reduce beach erosion and potentially replace lost barrier islands, especially in hurricane prone areas. However, as the moon and earth, and by extent oceans are tidally locked, it would be potentially concerning how mass adoption would affect this balance. As the moon is currently moving away, it is slowing down the earths rotation. It is curious how this would play out on massive scale, and I would love someone to extrapolate it or a possible episode of it. We know that the 3 Gorges Dam had a minor effect on the rotation as it created a substantial new mass where it wasn't before. Could systems like this be used to counteract that affect or make it worse, and what would it mean for future massive hydropower if possible? Great episode and I hope my rambling thoughts will lead to interesting debates. Thanks to you Matt for the channel and scientific forum!

    @nilspaar1999@nilspaar19998 ай бұрын
  • My school was right next to the National Institute for Oceanographic Research, so I did a project on wave power, and its potential, for my Physics CSE. Yes, that’s right, CSE. Back in 1978. That’s 45 years ago. And we’re still talking about it’s potential. I’m not holding my breath.

    @LeoDragon34@LeoDragon349 ай бұрын
  • Thanks, still seems a huge engineering challenge. Here in UK we have at least 2 huge tidal potential sites, Severn estuary and Morecambe bay, but also huge environmental consequences for wildlife, maybe one day. Tidal seems an easier engineering challenge but bigger environmental challenge.

    @johndoyle4723@johndoyle47239 ай бұрын
  • I love this idea! You could attach these to the bottom of floating cities to provide power.

    @phillipeisenberg8215@phillipeisenberg82159 ай бұрын
  • Ooh, how exciting. Not sure I could make it over to the Fully Charged Live event, but since you'll be there you might get a chance to check out Harbour Air's fully electric seaplane, or if you had enough time to pop over here to Victoria, we have the world's first all electric tugboat. I hope you have a great time at the even in Vancouver. :)

    @tigershirew7409@tigershirew74099 ай бұрын
  • Sounds good. Here in the U.K, we have plenty of suitable sites including the long sea lochs of Scotland where the storm waves are moderated.

    @theotherandrew5540@theotherandrew55409 ай бұрын
  • This is one of those things that never pops into you mind until someone says it and it just makes so much sense

    @church323@church3239 ай бұрын
  • I’m sure that you have a scheduled video of releases, but I saw that Amazon was approved for a fiber optic cable off the coast of Oregon. It would be interesting to know more about these long stretches of fiber optic cables, running across the pacific ocean,and what they are for

    @_MattyG_@_MattyG_9 ай бұрын
    • Click on a website in Australia. Poof! You’ve utilized an undersea fibre optical cable. Another use is running parallel to a coast. Think of the thousands of easements needed to run an on land cable.

      @billsmith5109@billsmith51092 ай бұрын
  • Wave energy is almost unlimited. However, the same applies for wind and sun energy, which are both much easier to access. Its all about which source is the most efficient and wave energy can simply not compete with wind energy.

    @corne1717@corne17178 ай бұрын
  • my mom knew the guy who was inventing tech based on making energy from waves years ago in Africa. It went through and helped the region in West Africa get energy which was difficult to maintain due to people stripping clean anything they can reach. But since the people there are afriad of the ocean its been a good way to prevent looting.

    @jonahbutterfield5792@jonahbutterfield57928 ай бұрын
  • Minor thing, don’t quote the tax rebate adjusted number on solar. Rebates are temporary and don’t show actual market cost.

    @matthewjackson9274@matthewjackson92748 ай бұрын
  • Any video about any renewable energy generation technology must speak about the storage issue. Renewable energy is intermittent, so unless you accept that you laptop/fridge/traffic light/hospital would run only on sunny or windy days, You need to acknowledge that you could have the best wind or solar or wave farm, but without a dependable nuclear/gas/hydro power station the electric grid will collapse.

    @cepavrai@cepavrai8 ай бұрын
  • This is very interesting, probably the only one I saw after one from another popular UK channel. Wouldn't it be brilliant to have wave harnessing in between offshore wind farm to maximise the use of ocean space, concentrate and limit impact to marine life?

    @SPSp-kl7tt@SPSp-kl7tt9 ай бұрын
  • I love that they claim the devices, which have yet to last one year, would last 20... as mechanically-driven devices exposed to the ocean. You barely get 20 years with solid-state energy devices from quality manufacturers.

    @SangoProductions213@SangoProductions2139 ай бұрын
  • You should of titled it “A New Wave of Energy Could Power the Future!”

    @wcsii@wcsii9 ай бұрын
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