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  • Pilot project generates electricity at Port of LA
    Blue machinery sits on the water's surface, with port infrastructure across the water beyond.
    A pilot program by Eco Wave Power at the Port of Los Angeles generates electricity using the ocean's waves.

    Topline:

    The United States’ first onshore energy project using the ocean’s waves is up and running at the Port of Los Angeles.

    What’s new? Eco Wave Power has partnered with the nonprofit AltaSea to run a two-year pilot project at the Port of Los Angeles.

    How it works: Blue floats attached to the side of a wharf bob with the waves, sending fluid through pipes into tanks. When pressure builds in those tanks, that moves a motor and powers a generator to create energy.

    What’s next? The hope is to install these floats along 8 miles of breakwater off San Pedro — that would produce enough energy for up to 60,000 households, said Inna Braverman, co-founder and chief executive of Eco Wave Power. “The goal of his project is to be a demonstration … to show that it doesn’t harm the marine environment, [that] we’re not connected to the seabed, to show how to create the regulatory framework for it,” she said.

    Read on ... to learn more about how the technology works and see pictures.

    You can't generate solar power at night. And wind power is limited on days without a breeze. But what if you could create energy with ocean waves, which are always in motion?

    Listen 0:34
    Wave power project comes online at Port of LA

    That’s what Eco Wave Power wants to demonstrate. On Tuesday, it launched a two-year pilot project at the Port of Los Angeles, becoming the United States’ first on-shore wave energy program.

    How it works

    It’s a simple model: Seven blue floats that look like little boats are attached to the side of a dock. They bob with the waves, pushing a hydraulic cylinder that sends fluid through pipes into bright red tanks housed in a converted shipping container. Pressure builds in the tanks, turns a motor and powers a generator. Right now, it’s enough energy to power 100 households, said Inna Braverman, co-founder and chief executive of Eco Wave Power.

    The hope is to install these floats along 8 miles of breakwater off San Pedro — that would produce enough energy for up to 60,000 households, she said. The company, which partnered with the nonprofit AltaSea, has a two-year agreement with the Port of Los Angeles to run the pilot.

    “The goal of this project is to be a demonstration … to show that it doesn’t harm the marine environment, [that] we’re not connected to the seabed, to show how to create the regulatory framework for it,” Braverman said Tuesday at a dockside ribbon cutting for the project.

    A woman with light skin tone stands next to large red cylindrical tanks inside a blue room with industrial equipment.
    Inna Braverman is the co-founder and chief executive of Eco Wave Power.
    (
    Elly Yu
    /
    LAist
    )

    She said wave energy, which is still an emerging technology, has been done in the middle of the ocean, but creating on-shore stations is more cost effective. Building the pilot project cost about $1 million, she said — half of it funded by Shell.

    This type of new technology will help the port get to zero emissions over the next decade, said Michael Galvin, director of waterfront and commercial real estate at the Port of Los Angeles.

    “ We have to scale up the energy grid capacity that we have here in the port,” he said.

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