Since the speed of the surfer is greater after the reaction, it is clear that his energy has increased. Some of the increase is due to gravity and some is due to the waves. It's certainly possible that the waves actually did negative work on him, they could have slowed him down a little bit during the reaction. So the answer is not neccesarily positive. But it turns out that the waves did actually do positive work.
m = mass
v_{1} = initial speed
v_{2} = final speed
h = height
g = acceleration due to gravity
The conservative work done is the gravitational work done, all other work is nonconservative, so:
Total Work Done - Gravitational Work Done = Nonconservative Work Done
To find the Total Work Done, you take the difference of the kinetic energies before and after.
Total Work Done:
= \frac{1}{2}mv_{2}^{2} - \frac{1}{2}mv_{1}^{2}
= \frac{1}{2}m(v_{2}^{2} - v_{1}^{2})
Now from the Total Work Done, you subtract the Gravitational Work Done, which is equal to the Gravitational Potential Energy an object has when it is 2.05m off the ground.
Gravitational Potential Energy for 2.05m = Gravitational Work Done = Conservative Work Done = mgh
Total Work Done - Conservative Work Done = Total Nonconservative Work Done
= \frac{1}{2}m(v_{2}^{2} - v_{1}^{2}) - mgh
= m(\frac{v_{2}^{2} - v_{1}^{2}}{2} - gh)
I get a positive value > 10kJ
That help at all?