The island nation, vulnerable to the whims of the Atlantic, has officially signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Danish firm Wavepiston to turn those crashing swells into a 50 MW power source.
The agreement was finalized with the government agency Export Barbados (BIDC), marking a strategic milestone in the effort to launch commercial wave energy across the Caribbean.
Aftel43 on
If this succeeds, it would effectively mean humanity has begun eliminating lack of drinking water. This, would absolutely be, THE technology of this millennium. If it under delivers, well, depending on how badly it under delivers of course, just refine the tech and try again.
HugsandHate on
And it was never heard from again.
Tale as old as time.
One-Arachnid-2119 on
While this sounds great, that article feels like it was written by AI. Mostly a word salad with a bunch of cliches and business jargon, and very light on details.
What’s the cost (installation and ongoing maintenance)? How much space (and where) will it take up? Will the area need to be off limits to boats/people? Will it require some form of battery backup? When will it start / come online? And on and on…
KuriousAndFurious on
someone about to be found with two bullets in the back of the head and ruled a suicide
5 Comments
Barbados is trading oil for waves.
The island nation, vulnerable to the whims of the Atlantic, has officially signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Danish firm Wavepiston to turn those crashing swells into a 50 MW power source.
The agreement was finalized with the government agency Export Barbados (BIDC), marking a strategic milestone in the effort to launch commercial wave energy across the Caribbean.
If this succeeds, it would effectively mean humanity has begun eliminating lack of drinking water. This, would absolutely be, THE technology of this millennium. If it under delivers, well, depending on how badly it under delivers of course, just refine the tech and try again.
And it was never heard from again.
Tale as old as time.
While this sounds great, that article feels like it was written by AI. Mostly a word salad with a bunch of cliches and business jargon, and very light on details.
What’s the cost (installation and ongoing maintenance)? How much space (and where) will it take up? Will the area need to be off limits to boats/people? Will it require some form of battery backup? When will it start / come online? And on and on…
someone about to be found with two bullets in the back of the head and ruled a suicide