The Problem: Static Grids & High Costs
Conventional Wave Energy Converters (WECs) are crippled by static mooring. When front-line generators extract energy from incoming ocean swells, they create a "wave shadow." Trailing WECs are left in zones of destructive interference (flat water), severely capping the total energy capture of the grid.
Furthermore, traditional systems require every single WEC to be individually moored to the seabed with its own heavy-duty cabling. This creates a massive operational footprint and exorbitant upfront capital expenditures (CAPEX).
The Real-World Cost: Remote coastal communities are paying the price. In British Columbia alone, BC Hydro is forced to subsidize off-grid coastal communities by approximately $400 Million annually to run diesel generators, simply because extending the main power grid is impossible, and current static wave technologies are too inefficient and expensive to deploy.