Croatian Center of Renewable Energy SourcesNews and Event May 03, 2012 |
||
Energy Department Boosts Initiative for Women in Clean Energy
The Energy Department announced on April 26 a
three-part plan to help implement the Clean Energy Education and
Empowerment (C3E) Women's Initiative aimed at attracting more women to
clean energy careers and advancing their leadership positions. The new
program, in partnership with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
(MIT) Energy Initiative, is designed to translate the goals of C3E into
action in the United States.
The new components of the U.S. C3E action plan
were announced at the Clean Energy Ministerial, a global forum of the
energy ministers and leaders promoting clean energy technology and the
transition to a global clean energy economy. Australia, Denmark, Mexico,
Norway, South Africa, Sweden, the United Arab Emirates, the United
Kingdom, and the United States each committed to undertake meaningful
activities to advance women in clean energy. The U.S. C3E plan includes
drawing together ambassadors, a cohort of distinguished senior
professionals sharing an interest in broadening the recruitment,
retention, and advancement of highly qualified women in the field of
clean energy. Also, the DOE C3E Awards program will recognize mid-career
individuals who advance the leadership and accomplishments of women in
clean energy by offering six awards, including a cash prize of $10,000.
Finally, an invitation-only symposium will be held on September 28,
2012, bringing together women and men to help build a strong national
and international community of professionals who support women in clean
energy. The MIT Energy Initiative, in partnership with the Energy
Department, will sponsor this event. See the Energy Department press release and the inaugural C3E Ambassadors.
Online Energy Department Tool Helps Consumers Cut Bills
The Energy Department announced on April 30 that
it has launched the Utility Data Access Map tool, an interactive Web
platform that enables electric utilities across the country to show
customers, in a simple way, the data they can access on their
electricity use. DOE has already received responses from more than 500
participating utilities.
Many consumers do not have enough data or they
are not aware of the data they can access to make informed decisions
about energy efficiency measures that could save them money. Among those
who do have access to their data, some lack the ability to share it
with service providers who might help them identify energy savings
opportunities and verify savings once improvements have been made.
The Utility Data Access Map tool provides
"crowd-sourced" maps in user-friendly formats based on information
gathered from electricity providers nationwide. It highlights local
access to electricity data and allows consumers to compare their
electricity data access to others in their state and across the country.
The data access maps display different features of consumer electricity
data, including the time period and timeliness of data—informing
consumers, for example, whether their utility supplies same-day
electricity use information—and the extent to which the data can be
shared. By helping consumers better understand their energy use and
providing new ways to compare, local utilities are adopting "smart grid"
technologies. See the DOE Progress Alert, the Utility Data Access Map, and the DOE OpenEI website, a collaborative system managed by DOE's National Renewable Energy Laboratory.
Limited Global Progress on Renewable Energy: IEA Report
The International Energy Agency (IEA) on April
25 released an annual progress report highlighting the rapid progress
made in some renewable energy technologies. The report, Tracking Clean Energy Progress,
noted the gains are due to solar photovoltaic (PV) panels being easily
installed by households and businesses as well as gains in onshore wind
technologies. IEA said that onshore wind has seen 27% average annual
growth over the past decade, and solar PV has grown at 42%, albeit from a
small base. Even more impressive is the 75% reduction in system costs
for solar PV in as little as three years in some countries.
According to the IEA, estimated energy use and
carbon dioxide emissions would increase by a third by 2020 and almost
double by 2050. The report notes that many technologies with great
potential for energy and emissions savings are making halting progress
at best. Vehicle fuel-efficiency improvement is slow, and significant
untapped energy-efficiency potential remains in the building and
industry sectors. The IEA is an autonomous organization that works to
ensure reliable, affordable, and clean energy for its 28 member
countries and beyond. See the IEA press release and the complete report.
University of Pennsylvania and Pac-12 Win Green Power Challenge
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
recently announced that the University of Pennsylvania won the 2012
College and University Green Power Challenge for the fifth consecutive
year. The winner beat out 72 other schools across the country by
purchasing more than 200 million kilowatt-hours of green power, which is
48% of its total power purchases. And at the conference level, the
Pac-12 conference topped the list with more than 228 million
kilowatt-hours, the largest total purchase among all conferences, and
earned EPA recognition as the 2011-2012 Collective Conference Champion.
Green power is generated from renewable
resources such as solar, wind, geothermal, biomass, biogas, and
low-impact hydropower. Penn's green power purchases represent reductions
in greenhouse gas emissions of approximately 27,000 passenger vehicles
each year. See the EPA press release, the list of winners, and the Green Power Partnership website.
EPA Awards $1 Million to Colleges for Environmental Solutions
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
announced on April 25 that it has awarded more than $1 million in grants
to 15 university and college teams. The awards went to teams from
across the country that participated in the eighth Annual National
Sustainable Design Expo on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., for
their innovative environmental solutions. EPA's People, Prosperity and
the Planet (P3) award competition was held at the expo and featured more
than 300 college innovators showcasing their sustainable projects
designed to protect the environment, encourage economic growth, and use
natural resources more efficiently.
The P3 team projects include a new process that
uses spinach to capture and convert the sun's energy to electricity, as
well as a partnership with a local landfill to design a process that
uses waste heat and drainage to grow algae for biodiesel production.
Following an initial peer review process, this year's winners were
selected from 45 competing teams after two days of judging by a panel of
national experts convened to provide recommendations to the American
Association for the Advancement of Science. Each P3 award-winning team
will receive a grant of up to $90,000 to further develop its design,
apply it to real-world applications or move it to the marketplace.
Previous P3 award winners have started successful businesses, and they
are marketing technologies in the United States and around the world.
See the EPA press release and the list of P3 award winners.
|
||
CROATIAN CENTER of RENEWABLE ENERGY SOURCES (CCRES)special thanks to U.S. Department of Energy | USA.gov |
||
HVAC Efficiency Controls Could Mean Significant Savings
According to a new report from the Energy
Department's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL), commercial
building owners could save an average of 38% on their heating and
cooling bills just by installing a few new controls onto their HVAC
systems.
These findings mean significant potential
savings for building owners who use commercial rooftop systems, but
there's just one problem: the controls aren't currently commercially
available.
Srinivas Katipamula, the PNNL engineer leading
the study, says the report makes "a convincing case for manufacturers to
produce more advanced HVAC controllers and for building owners to adopt
these energy-saving methods." The PNNL team hopes the report will
encourage manufacturers to begin producing the four different control
methods. Three companies currently manufacture HVAC controllers, but
only one company offers a product with all the control options that
resemble the team's simulations. To help the manufacturers better
understand their market, PNNL's report examines potential pricing
options for the controllers and how long it would take building owners
to recoup that cost. Since packaged HVACs regulate more than 60% of the
commercial building floor space in the United States, the potential
savings from retrofitting advanced controls on these systems is
enormous. See the complete story on the DOE Energy Blog.
Croatian Center of Renewable Energy Sources(CCRES) |
četvrtak, 3. svibnja 2012.
News and Event by CCRES May 03, 2012
Pretplati se na:
Objavi komentare (Atom)
Nema komentara:
Objavi komentar