The first ever deep-water marina planned for the Irish Sea – at Ramsey, Isle of Man – will be protected by an artificial reef powered by renewable energy developed by CCell Renewables.
The UK company has built on its work over the past 18 months in the Gulf of Mexico, where it has deployed a 120-metre long reef.
CCell has started a nine-month trial of its reef technology in Douglas Harbour, which is just south of the proposed site for the Ramsey Marina.
The new 400 berth marina, conceived by Ramsey Marina, a local Isle of Man company, is located in a marine nature reserve and is being designed to be as ecologically sensitive as possible.
Plans include the incorporation of new reefs, seagrass meadows, electric vessel and vehicle charging, and the use of eco-concrete.
CCell’s reef will be placed at the base of the marina breakwater to protect the marina walls from erosion (scour protection) and to create a new habitat that will enhance marine bio-diversity.
The company will also be testing the integration of used scallop shells within the reef and, in due course, used mussel shells, both by-products from the Island’s fishing industry.
CCell will use energy from onshore solar installations and hi-tech electronics to create the artificial reef.
The company uses pulses of solar energy to drive an electrolytic process to extract seawater minerals that in turn causes the growth of mineral rock around a steel frame that forms the backbone of the reek.
This allows lightweight and intricate reef profiles to be created and placed around the marina, providing natural protection against the sea, it said.
CCell’s control systems also digitally connect the reefs, enabling the company to observe the marine environment and take regular measurements from its office in London.
The current plan is to have the first artificial reefs installed in 2024/25.
The reefs have been designed to have a lifespan of 40 years, but with the growth of rock and a thriving ecosystem they should live well beyond that.
CCell founder and chief executive Will Bateman (pictured) said: “Our reef technology – a ‘plug-in digital living reef – will provide the marina with natural protection from erosion and at the same time enhance the quality of the local marine eco-system.
“It’s great to be involved in a major project in UK and European waters – our first – and be part of such an exciting development that will boost the Isle of Man’s marine environment and its economy.”
RML director Robin Bromley-Martin said: “We are very excited that the Isle of Man should be the location for the “cold water” testing of CCell’s pioneering technology.
“Ramsey Marina will be the proof of concept for the technology on the Isle of Man and given the issues that the Island is facing with climate change and rising sea levels, it is hugely relevant to other parts of the Island.
“We are pleased that RML is in the vanguard of its application on the Island.”


