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The power of the ocean: Wave Swell Energy turns to equity crowdfunding to top up $7.5 million raise

Renewable energy startup Wave Swell Energy is on track to close a $9 million funding round, including $1.5 million from an equity crowdfunding campaign.
Tom Denniss Wave Swell Energy
Wave Swell Energy founder Tom Denniss. Source: Supplied.

Renewable energy startup Wave Swell Energy is on track to close a $9 million funding round, which includes $1.5 million from an equity crowdfunding campaign.

The startup uses technology to glean energy from the ocean, converting it into power on land.

Founder Tom Denniss tells StartupSmart the startup has already been pledged about $7.5 million in equity investment and is looking to raise the final 20% of the target capital through equity crowdfunding platform Equitise.

โ€œWe thought there were good synergies between the type of investors that would normally go through crowdfunding and our type of renewable energy company,โ€ he says.

Raising capital for a new technology is always difficult, Denniss says, especially when you donโ€™t have a big public profile.

โ€œCrowdfunding is a great alternative,โ€ he says.

โ€œIt broadens your potential clientele, and opens it up to many small-scale investors rather than a few large ones,โ€ he adds.

The startup was founded in 2016, but Denniss and his team have been working on the technology for almost three decades.ย Dennissย actually proposed an early version back in 1990.

The business, however, was launched to commercialise the product, and the team are working towards the first commercial demonstration project on King Island in the Bass Strait.

The total $9 million raised will be โ€œ100% directed at this projectโ€, he says.

โ€œAfter that, we expect to be fully-fledged commercial and doing profitable projects.โ€

The product is beyond the research level, however, the past two years have been about securing IP and completing final testing. The most recent iteration of the product was verified at the Launceston-based Australian Maritime College, which is part of the University of Tasmania.

Denniss describes the tech as โ€œa big static chunk of concrete below the waterโ€. It has no moving parts aside from an air turbine eight metres above the water level, he says.

Having nothing moving below the water level means there is not a whole lot that can go wrong, which keeps operational and maintenance costs low. More importantly, perhaps, it means thereโ€™s little to no risk to marine life.

โ€œIt doesnโ€™t disrupt any more than having a rock there,โ€ Denniss says.

Weโ€™re not going back

Denniss sees wave energy as being a big part of the renewable energies drive, and suggests it could already provide a cost-effective source of power for island nations.

For energy on the mainland, โ€œit will take five or 10 years to drive the cost down below other sourcesโ€, he says.

Wave energy is also more predictable and more consistent than other natural energy sources such as solar or wind energy.

โ€œYou can be much more confident about the consistency over a long period of time, and it can be predicted five to 10 days ahead,โ€ he said.

โ€œThat enables us to produce much more reliable power that has a higher value.โ€

In the energy space, โ€œitโ€™s a very good time to start a startupโ€, Denniss says, just as long as you have a technology that has the potential to be cost-effective.

Interest in alternative energy sources is only going to increase, he says.

While some may believe renewable energy could lead to higher energy prices, โ€œthatโ€™s really not the caseโ€, Denniss says.

โ€œThereโ€™s no turning back, weโ€™re not going back to a fossil fuel society, although some politicians donโ€™t believe that,โ€ he adds.

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