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Four
renewable energy companies which will compete for the £10m Saltire Prize have
been named by Scottish ministers.
The
competition was set up to encourage the development of wave and tidal energy
devices in Scottish waters.
ScottishPower
Renewables, Aquamarine Power, Pelamis Wave Power and MeyGen will each attempt
to produce the most electricity over a two-year period, using only the power of
the sea.
Projects
will be launched off Lewis, in the Pentland Firth and Orkney waters.
The latest
phase of the contest will run until 2017.
The
announcement was made by Deputy First Minister Nicola Sturgeon in Orkney, where
members of the Scottish Cabinet will meet on Wednesday.
Ms Sturgeon
also announced plans for a Saltire Prize-sponsored doctorate to study how
marine energy projects can maximise economic energy production while protecting
the environment.
She said:
"With the European Marine Energy Centre (EMEC) in Orkney hosting an array
of devices, we should not lose sight of how far this vibrant young industry has
come in recent years.
"The
Saltire Prize sets a considerable challenge to competitors - reflecting the
huge potential of harnessing marine energy.
"The
four competitors have stepped up to the challenge, and in so doing can drive
each other still further and faster forward, towards the goal of large-scale
commercial electricity generation from the power of the world's seas and
oceans."
MeyGen's
chief executive, Dan Pearson, said: "The bar set by the Scottish
government for this prestigious award is a high one. The challenge requires
highly efficient devices, and a high level of resource and robust technical
capability that is comparable to conventional renewable energy power
stations."
Hornung Pedersen,
the boss of the Edinburgh-based firm Pelamis, said: "Pelamis was delighted
to be the first official applicant for the Saltire Prize and we're working
intensively to deliver the robust commercial technology required to win it, and
through that the compelling 'win-win' of renewable energy generation and
industrial opportunity that this sector represents for Scotland."
Aquamarine
Power chief executive, Martin McAdam, said the prize would act as a
"global catalyst... bringing together the best brains and financial muscle
to crack one of the great challenges of our age".
Alan
Mortimer, head of innovation at ScottishPower Renewables, said: "The
demonstration projects being developed now will be crucial in helping us
achieve larger commercial projects."
As well as
announcing the doctorate and the companies vying for the Saltire Prize, Ms
Sturgeon also launched a junior Saltire Prize photography competition called
The Power of the Sea, with renowned Scots photographer David Eustace among the
judges.
And funding
of £2.5m was pledged for a £9.2m pier plan for Stromness on Orkney.
The
Copland's Dock development will see construction of a new 100m pier and
associated access road.
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Isle of Wight Council to invest in tidal power
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