Jason
Bak, an applied physicist by training, found gold and diamonds in the Canadian
arctic in the late 1990s using electromagnetic techniques. In Ireland, he worked for a gold mine
that sold for 30-times its purchase price.
But it
was a less ostentatious money-making prospect that inspired him to launch Finavera
Renewables, a Vancouver-based startup that sees a business opportunity in producing
electricity from wind and ocean waves. Unlike gold, whose price can be
extremely volatile, electricity generated by wind mills and offshore wave farms
is a commodity whose future is always bright, argues CEO Mr. Bak.
“Electricity
only gets more expensive,” he said. “It never gets cheaper. It’s a commodity
that’s always growing in price.”
Finavera’s
approach is to use wind projects to generate revenue, while the company works
to develop its wave energy technology, according to Mr. Bak.
That fledgling
technology took a couple of baby steps last week a few miles off the coast of
Newport Beach, Oregon, where Finavera put the latest version of its wave energy
converter device, dubbed AquaBuOY, into the Pacific.
The
device floats atop the ocean and uses rubber hose-pumps to convert the vertical
motion of the waves into pressurized seawater. That pressurized seawater, in
turn, powers the turbines that drive an electrical generator. Previous
versions, according to Mr. Bak, used metal rods, which were more costly and more
trouble to maintain.
This
stepping stone “allows us to prove the concept,” said Mr. Bak. “The next step
is simply increasing the power output of our technology [which would] reduce
our unit cost of energy.” AquaBuOY generates a maximum of 250 kilowatts at any
instant in time, he said.
Finavera
Renewables -- which was formed when Mr. Bak’s original company, Dublin,
Ireland-based Finavera, split into two entities in 2005 -- raised capital on
the TSX Venture Exchange, where it listed in January. The other company is
natural gas firm, Finavera Gas.
Finavera’s
system is moored, rather than mounted, to the ocean floor. That simple feature
means less red tape and fewer headaches, as regulations for seafloor-mounted
installations can be complicated, the company said.
Next year
the company plans to develop and test the third-generation of AquaBuOY and, by
2009, it hopes to put four of the devices in the water and connect them to the
grid via an undersea transmission line, Mr. Bak said.
In
addition to the Newport Beach test site,
Finavera has a demonstration site in Makah Bay, Washington, and is developing projects in Coos County, Oregon; Figueira da Foz, Portugal;
Ucluelet, Canada;
and South Africa.
Finavera,
however, is further along in building wind projects, including a 20-megawatt
wind farm in Germany that is
scheduled to go online this fall and a 150-megawatt wind project in Canada
that it expects to finish in 2009, Mr. Bak said.