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OWEB Map
The 1954 Dymaxion Sky Ocean World Map was chosen to plot baseline OWEC® Ocean Wave Energy Converter networks. Initiated 1936 by R. Buckminster Fuller, this important map
edition should replace Cartesian coordinate maps in all
classrooms. Fold-in world globe is an icosahedron having twenty equilateral triangular facets with just 5% overall distortion from spherical reality.
Fold-out map configures two preferred ways- a one world land
mass or one world ocean. Smaller triangle networks are superposed to show most possible areas for OWEC® deployment. In actual use, within small triangles, large quantity OWEC® fields are arranged to provide essentially "porous" OWEB Ocean Wave Energy Webs over several miles.
Minor shipping lanes and open areas
maintain freedom of movement while other
lattice configurations may also
protect MPA marine protected areas. Major shipping lanes and national waters are excluded from the grid thereby retaining a semblance of the oceans' great expanses.
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OWEB scheme on One
World Ocean Dymaxion® Map
full-size
OWEB world map enhancements will activate data links between near real time wave energy reporting buoys and associative OWEC®
electrical power generation. As deployment expands, OWEB
telemetric devices manifest point to point hydroface and
module reports allowing Internet control of OWECŪ system
functions. Accurate correlation to resource equivalents of
diverse interest provide, for example, the electrical
product of the number of modules required to power aids to
navigation equipment and other remote facilities,
desalinate water, produce hydrogen and oxygen via
electrolysis, and projections of daily fresh water and
attendant hydrocarbon pollution abatement in a worldwide
"hydrogen economy". With working growth of both real and
virtual realms, the OWEB map will become a practical
template for accurately monitoring deployment techniques
and managing worldwide
OWEC® site configurations, wave field and electrical energy routing, and total available energy conversion products. In this manner, the OWEB grid develops as symbiotic extension of the Internet web.
U.S. Vice President Al Gore, author of Earth In The Balance,
then stated "a global energy network makes enormous sense if we are to meet global energy needs with a minimal impact on the world's environment. Such advances in long distance transmission may even make possible Buckminster Fuller's vision that Eastern and Western hemispheres be joined by cable to assist each other in managing peak energy demand, since the high daytime use in one hemisphere occurs at precisely the low night time consumption by the other". Interconnection of vast OWEC® arrays will manifest this illumination.
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