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Tech

Gloucestershire tech company secures MoD contract to develop underwater renewable energy device

WITT Limited has been awarded hundreds of thousands of pounds to develop a device to support º£½ÇÊÓÆµ security operations

WITT Limited's device during trials at Turnchapel Wharf in Plymouth.(Image: WITT Limited)

A Gloucestershire tech company has secured a £350,000 contract with the Ministry of Defence (MoD) to develop a renewable energy device that will support underwater national security operations.

WITT Limited, based at Gloucestershire Science and Technology Park in Berkeley, has created ground-breaking technology that captures energy from all planes of movement and turns it into storable electrical power.

The company will now tailor its eponymous WITT (Whatever Input to Torsion Transfer) device for the subsea environment.

Vortex induced vibrations (VIV) created by ocean currents will be converted into electricity stored in the WITT, which is contained within a sealed vessel, providing a low maintenance source of off-grid power to remote and hard-to-reach locations.

WITT Limited has recently been trialling the technology at Turnchapel Wharf in Plymouth, a cutting-edge hub for marine robotics.

The business secured the funding through the Defence and Security Accelerator (DASA) - a cross-Government organisation and part of the MoD that finds and funds innovation to support º£½ÇÊÓÆµ defence and security.

Mairi Wickett, business development director and co-founder of WITT Limited welcomed the DASA’s backing as a “huge boost.”

Ms Wickett said: “[The funding] will facilitate additional development of the technology and enable us to investigate new applications for the system subsea - such as providing power for sensors, data gathering and mammal and temperature studies.