The FLASC prototype being transported into the Grand Harbour.
A Maltese team has won the PowerUp! regional final in Greece with an innovative start-up. This can pave the way for further developments in the energy sector, Daniel Buhagiar from FLASC team tells Simonne Pace.
A Maltese company, made up of a team of engineers and researchers from different fields, recently impressed judges at the regional final of the PowerUp! competition by InnoEnergy. This to the extent that it saw off seven Greek companies to win the final.
“Taking part was a fantastic experience. Being the only Maltese team in the competition, we were considering ourselves to be the underdogs. However, we were made to feel welcome by all and we persevered during the bootcamp to deliver a strong pitch,” said an excited Daniel Buhagiar from the winning team FLASC, based at the University of Malta.
“We hope that our patented technology – an integrated energy storage system that allows offshore renewables to better meet their energy demands – will be licensed out in the near future,” added the young engineer, who is working on the construction of a small-scale working prototype.
FLASC will be competing against the winners of other regional editions in Budapest on November 22. A grand €20,000 prize is up for grabs, as well as participation in the prestigious InnoEnergy Highway, which helps transform start-ups at an early development stage into successful businesses.
Work on the FLASC technology started in 2014, during Dr Buhagiar’s first year of his PhD studies, during which he discovered the growing field of energy storage for large-scale renewables.
“I started to observe the need for storage, particularly with high percentages of renewables on the grid. I saw an opportunity to develop a system that would not rely on batteries but would use compressed air and pressurised water. This results in a technology with a much longer lifetime that can be scaled up to larger storage capacities,” explained Dr Buhagiar, who from a young age was fascinated by how things work, from washing machines to guitar amplifiers.
Encouraged by Tonio Sant, his supervisor and a senior academic at the University, the team embarked on developing this technology at a conceptual level and the Floating Liquid-piston Accumulator using Seawater under Compression (FLASC) was born.