Slashdot Mirror


First Floating Wind Turbine Buoyed Off Norway

MonkeyClicker writes to tell us that the world's first large-scale floating turbine has been installed off the coast of Norway. A combined effort between Siemens and StatoiHydro, this marks the first foray into deeper waters due to restrictions in place that require offshore turbines to be attached to the sea bed. "The turbine in Norway will be 7.4 miles offshore where the water is 721 feet deep. It will be utility-size turbine, with a hub height of about 100 feet, capable of generating 2.3 megawatts of electricity. To address the conditions of the deep sea, the turbine will have a specially designed control system that will seek to dampen the motion from waves."

4 of 265 comments (clear)

  1. Reminds me... by nhytefall · · Score: 3, Funny

    Of an old saying... "There's power in the motion of the ocean". Though I think that quote referred to something completely different.

    --
    0100010001101001011001 0100100000011010010110 1110001000000110000100 1000000110011001101001 0111001001100101
  2. Re:Think of the whales :( by bentcd · · Score: 4, Funny

    One whale will die, whole project will be shot.

    This is Norway. We kill whales for a living.

    --
    sigs are hazardous to your health
  3. Re:Why not by catmistake · · Score: 2, Funny

    But wind is crazy dangerous. It can bury cities in sand, obliterate houses, knock down bridges and blow planes right out of the sky. And there is the lingering issue of what to do with all the spent wind. We should first solve the problems with wind before trying to harness such a volitile energy source. At least a nuclear reaction is reasonably predictable, and we can just bury and forget about the waste. /sarcasm

  4. dampen vs. damp by the_other_chewey · · Score: 2, Funny

    ...dampen the motion from waves...

    So the waves aren't wet enough yet? Norway has strange oceans.
    On the other hand, I think for the first time "inertial dampeners" is the right term to use...
    (Yes, to damp is a verb too. Heavily underused. As is "dampers")