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Some smaller experiments are being run with other consistent characteristics of oceans besides tides, like their major, slow-moving currents. Kilcher noted that research is underway off the coast of the southeastern US to examine how much power can be pulled out of currents before impacting heat circulation patterns in the North Atlantic.  

“You don’t want to be extracting so much energy that the Gulf Stream starts to shut down,” he said. “These are the kind of scientific research questions that we look at.”

Thar she blows

So far, effectively pulling power from the ocean has less to do with water than with the air above it. Offshore wind energy is by far the most productive source of power that we transfer from ocean to land. 

“Offshore wind is the most mature technology without a doubt,” Bryson Robertson, director of the Pacific Marine Energy Center at Oregon State University, told me. “We’ve been working on wind energy systems really since the birth of civilization. We were running sails [on boats], and we were using windmills to grind wheat.”

Large, power-generating wind turbines anchored to the seafloor have become a familiar sight off the coast of the northeastern states and other locales. Robertson says that floating offshore wind turbines are a newer, promising technology that could help scale up the amount of electricity we literally pull out of thin air.

Wind is more consistent offshore, and floating infrastructure can be deployed in more parts of the world and on deeper seas. And taller turbines could access high-altitude winds in locations that are out of the view of the public.

Robertson believes the opportunities to generate more wind power from floating infrastructure are significant enough to make a real dent in carbon emissions. 

A tough environment

Unlike developing a new mobile app or even a mobile phone, building the infrastructure to pull power from one of the most inhospitable and untamed environments on Earth can be a slow, difficult process. 

“We know less about these tidal raises, these big wave areas because we stay out of them,” Copping said. “That’s one of the reasons this is taking time. But just look at the ocean — it’s hard not to see the energy potential.”

There are also a number of other considerations, including the impacts marine energy infrastructure could have on wildlife, the broader environment, local populations, fishing and other industries.

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A research diver inspects a hydrophone lander deployed on the seafloor as part of ongoing research to improve the environmental monitoring of marine energy devices. 

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“I think the biggest issue is uncertainty,” Robertson added. “We haven’t done this at scale before, so what are the environmental impacts going to be?”

He says the policy process may be slow for good reasons, but the need for marine energy is still urgent.

“We need to find a way to deploy technology faster while being cognizant of the environment,” he said. “We just need to find a way to accelerate this process if we’re going to have a measurable impact on climate change.”

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