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The Life Scientific

Deborah Greaves on wave power and offshore renewable energy

The Life Scientific

BBC

Technology, Personal Journals, Society & Culture, Science

4.61.4K Ratings

🗓️ 8 August 2023

⏱️ 29 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

If you’ve ever seen the ocean during a storm, you’ll understand the extraordinary power contained in waves. On an island nation like Britain, that power could well be harnessed to produce clean energy; so why have we barely begun to tap this bountiful resource? Deborah Greaves is trying to change that. As Professor of Ocean Engineering at the University of Plymouth, she combines physical wave tanks with sophisticated computer modelling to test how well wave power devices respond to stormy seas. And as Director of the Supergen ORE Hub, she brings together researchers in offshore renewable energy to imagine a future of widespread, eco-friendly ocean power. Deborah tells Jim Al-Khalili about growing up in Plymouth fascinated by the sea, and about breaking from the norm in her arts-focused family, to pursue a degree in engineering. But she spent years as a civil engineer building tunnels for the London Underground - and going on expeditions to the Arctic with her husband - before undertaking a PhD at Oxford University, exploring what happens when waves crash into solid structures. She eventually returned to Plymouth and set up the institute’s Coastal, Ocean and Sediment Transport (COAST) Laboratory - a building with a swimming-pool-sized wave tank for testing new technologies. As Jim hears, these wave devices have an extraordinary diversity of uses - and could help to propel Britain into a greener energy future. Produced by Phil Sansom.

Transcript

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around, you know, center court.

0:09.4

The daily podcast featuring women's voices.

0:12.1

It seems that I'm a threat and they scared all women like me who can say no to this barbaric

0:17.6

regime talking about women's lives.

0:20.1

You're doing what every other girl is doing, just going out at night, having fun and they

0:25.2

again, villainized us for it.

0:26.9

Woman's Hour.

0:27.9

First, on BBC Sounds.

0:29.9

BBC Sounds, Music, Radio, Podcasts

0:34.9

Hello, and welcome to the podcast edition of The Life Scientific.

0:38.2

I'm Jemal Khalili, and this is the show where I get to talk with some of the world's

0:41.8

leading scientists and you get to find out what drives them, so sit back, get comfortable

0:47.0

and enjoy the episode.

0:49.1

My guest today grew up on the English South Coast in Plymouth, where her childhood love

0:53.7

of the sea and its power has fed into a remarkable career, during which she's worked on harnessing

0:59.3

that power to hopefully change the world.

1:02.6

Deborah Greaves has spent much of her life working in the field of fluid dynamics, simulating

1:07.7

what happens when ocean waves crash into solid structures, which can be both a destructive

1:12.8

force, of course, and a means of providing renewable energy.

1:16.6

Today as Professor of Ocean Engineering at the University of Plymouth, Deborah knows better

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