Ocean observatory due to be located in Galway Bay

Observatory will provide marine tech and ocean energy developers with ‘real time’ data

Impression of the sub-sea observatory at the Galway Bay test site, connected back to shore by a cable which has already been installed. Photograph: SmartBay
Impression of the sub-sea observatory at the Galway Bay test site, connected back to shore by a cable which has already been installed. Photograph: SmartBay

A sub-sea observatory is due to be installed in Galway Bay when weather permits, as part of a significant development of the State's ocean energy testing capability.

The observatory will be able to provide marine technology and ocean energy developers with “real time” data on how their devices are performing.

A cable to feed power to the site and receive data has been laid from Spiddal, Co Galway, by the State's research ship RV Celtic Explorer.

The project is being spearheaded by the Marine Institute and the Sustainable Energy Authority of Ireland (SEAI) with partners SmartBay Ltd, University College Cork's Marine Renewable Energy Ireland (MaREI), and Dublin City University.

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Test site

Based in Galway, SmartBay Ireland manages the quarter-scale marine test site located 1.5km off Spiddal in a water depth of up to 23 metres. It also manages data buoys which collect wave and weather information as part of its focus on technical and software development in the marine environment.

SmartBay Ireland Ltd general manager John Breslin said the Spiddal location allows for less exposed trials of smaller scale ocean energy devices, and those at an earlier stage of development. The observatory installation will transform the location into a world-class ocean energy test site, he says.

SmartBay strategic funding and project co-ordinator Diarmuid Ó Conchubhair said the cable-end offshore will house a suite of sensors and environmental monitoring equipment and a floating “sea station”.

The equipment will have 23 ports, 15 of which will be dedicated to the testing of new sensors. Four of the 23 ports will be optical, 18 electrical and there will be one coaxial port for high definition camera and lights.

The cable project is funded in part by Science Foundation Ireland (SFI) under its 2012 research infrastructure call which contributed €2.2 million.

Funding

The Department of Agriculture Food and the Marine contributed €600,000 last year, and the

Department of Communications

,

Energy and Natural Resources

will fund additional infrastructure and the continuing operations of the test site through the SEAI ocean energy programme.

Government support for ocean research, development and demonstration has been increasing, Minister for Energy Alex White has said, with €16.8 million added to his department's multi-annual ocean energy development budget between 2013 and 2016, bringing the total cumulative funding to more than €26 million.

In a related development, two public consultation documents published by Mr White last week seek views on the renewable energy technologies that currently receive financial support from the State, and whether the Government should broaden the range of technologies it supports.

The 2009 EU Renewable Energy Directive set Ireland a legally binding target of meeting 16 per cent of its energy requirements from renewable sources by 2020.

Lorna Siggins

Lorna Siggins

Lorna Siggins is the former western and marine correspondent of The Irish Times