Croatian Center of Renewable Energy SourcesNews and Events August 30, 2012 |
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Universities to Lead Energy Department-Funded CSP Projects
The Energy Department announced on August 28 new
investments totaling $10 million for two university-led projects to
advance innovative concentrating solar power (CSP) system technologies.
The five-year projects are under the Department's SunShot Initiative, a
collaborative national effort to make solar energy cost competitive with
other forms of energy by the end of the decade.
CSP technologies use mirrors to reflect and
concentrate sunlight onto receivers that collect solar energy and
convert it to heat that can be used to produce electricity. Heat
transfer fluids are a key component of CSP systems that transfer heat
from a receiver to the point where the heat is needed to drive a
turbine. The investments will improve heat transfer fluids to increase
efficiency and lower costs for CSP systems.
Two university teams were selected to develop
new heat transfer fluids. The University of California–Los Angeles will
lead a team with researchers from Yale University and the University of
California–Berkeley to investigate liquid metals as potential heat
transfer fluids with the ability to withstand higher temperatures. And
the University of Arizona, the second awardee, is teaming with
researchers from Arizona State University and Georgia Tech to develop
and demonstrate new, molten salt-based fluids as possible alternatives
to traditional heat transfer fluids.
The projects will focus on making dramatic
improvements to fluids that gather thermal energy from the sun and
transport it to the power block, where the energy is used to drive a
turbine that generates electricity. Today's state-of the-art heat
transfer fluids are capable of operating at temperatures up to about
1,050 degrees Fahrenheit. Temperatures in excess of 1,200 degrees
Fahrenheit are needed to reach efficiencies greater than 50%, which
allow CSP plants to capture more energy from solar power. The selected
projects are working to develop heat transfer fluids that can operate at
temperatures up to 2,350 degrees Fahrenheit, while simultaneously
maintaining high levels of performance. See the Energy Department press release.
Energy Department Announces University Appliance-Design Winners
The Energy Department on August 23 announced
that a University of Maryland team has won the Department's first Max
Tech and Beyond Appliance Design Competition. The student challenge,
which involved nine teams, aims to inspire students to pursue energy
efficiency improvements in home and commercial appliances, helping to
develop innovative ultra-efficient products.
The University of Maryland team chose to
simplify the design of a standard wall-mounted air conditioner by
separating the systems that remove humidity and provide cooling. After
the students tested a fully functional prototype, they found that the
design reduced energy use by 30% compared with typical wall-mounted air
conditioners already on the market. Because the current largest consumer
of electricity in most homes nationwide is the air conditioning system,
this innovative design has the potential to substantially decrease
residential energy use and save consumers money.
The runner-up team from Marquette University in
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, developed a prototype of a natural gas-fired
combination water heater and clothes dryer that can use the waste heat
from the clothes dryer to heat water for the next washing load. The team
demonstrated that with this approach, they could get a 10% dryer
efficiency improvement compared to the best comparable products on the
market.
The nine faculty-led student design teams were
competitively selected and funded with up to $20,000 by the Energy
Department to design, build, and test their prototypes during the
2011-2012 academic year. A panel of Energy Department experts along with
those from the Department's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
judged each team's prototype based on its demonstrated ability to reduce
energy use by 10% or more compared to best on-market products, or based
on the prototype's ability to reduce production costs compared with
typical high efficiency products already on the market by 20% or more.
See the Energy Department Progress Alert and the Max Tech website.
EPA Awards $9 Million to 13 Universities for Climate Change Impacts Research
The EPA announced on August 22 that it awarded
$9 million in grants to fund 13 universities for technologies that can
help predict and prepare for the impacts of extreme weather triggered by
climate change may have on air and water quality.
The Massachusetts Institute of Technology was
awarded $749,931 to examine the ability of models to represent the
presence of extreme air pollution and the weather conditions. The
project at MIT, based in Cambridge, Massachusetts, will use advanced
statistical techniques to identify the drivers and occurrence of
historical and future extreme air quality events in the United States
from observations and models. The project combines the work of
statisticians and atmospheric scientists. The other 13 grants were
awarded to researchers at Columbia University, Cornell University,
Georgia Institute of Technology, Michigan State University, Michigan
Technological University, Mississippi State University, Ohio State
University, Oregon State University, University of South Florida (two
grants), Public Policy Institute of California, University of Texas at
Austin, and the University of Washington. See the EPA press release and the list of projects.
New York Offers $107 Million for Large Solar Power Projects
New York Governor Andrew M. Cuomo on August 9
announced that $107 million is available for a major solar power
incentive program that will increase the amount of electricity generated
by photovoltaic (PV) systems throughout New York. The NY-Sun
Competitive PV Program, administered by the New York State Energy
Research and Development Authority, seeks proposals for PV systems
greater than 50 kilowatts to be installed at larger commercial and
industrial customer sites.
The newly established NY-Sun Competitive PV
Program will make $36.4 million available in 2012 and $70.5 million in
2013. This phase of the program is available through the end of 2013 for
PV projects in New York City and upstate New York at eligible customer
sites. This is an expansion of a two-year-old program that previously
focused on large PV systems for the commercial, industrial, and
municipal sectors exclusively in New York City, Westchester County, and
the lower Hudson Valley. All projects will require co-funding to best
leverage state resources with funding capped at $3 million per project.
See the New York press release and the NY-Sun Competitive PV Program initiative website.
The governor also signed a series of bills on
August 17 as part of the NY-Sun initiative that will make solar energy
more affordable for homeowners and businesses. The new laws include
statewide tax credits for the lease of solar equipment and power
purchase agreements, statewide sales tax exemptions for commercial solar
equipment, and an extension of the real property tax abatement in New
York City for solar installations. See the New York press release.
National Solar Tour Kicks Off in September
The American Solar Energy Society (ASES)
National Solar Tour officially takes place on October 6, but several
events kick off as early as mid-September, and some offer weeklong
action. Now in its seventeenth year, the annual showcase allows
participants the opportunity to see innovative green homes and buildings
that use solar energy, energy efficiency, and other sustainable
technologies. ASES estimates that more than 165,000 participants will
visit some 5,500 buildings in 3,200 communities across the United
States.
Kicking off the nationwide series of tours, the
Michiana Solar Tour is scheduled to take place on September 15 at Goshen
College in Goshen, Indiana. The following day, the BRING Home &
Garden Tour bus will take ticketholders to a variety of sustainable
sites in Eugene, Oregon. Most tours will take place on or around October
6, but there are events scheduled through October 27. See the ASES National Solar Tour website and the list of tours.
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CROATIAN CENTER of RENEWABLE ENERGY SOURCES (CCRES)special thanks to U.S. Department of Energy | USA.gov |
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Energy Efficiency Upgrades Part of a Winning Formula for Oregon School District
A while ago, we wrote about the quiet, rural
community of Vernonia, Oregon, which had been through its share of hard
economic times. After two “500-year floods” in an 11-year period
devastated the area, damaging its schools and the community core, the
town finally started to rebuild its school last April. More than a year
later, residents of Vernonia had reason to celebrate when Former
Governor Ted Kulongoski joined United States Senators Ron Wyden (D-OR)
and Jeff Merkley (D-OR), and several other federal- and state-elected
officials last week for the ribbon cutting of a new energy efficient
K-12 school and community center.
The "barn raising" mentality of the Vernonia
community helped make the new school and community center a success. The
energy efficiency upgrades were made possible using a combination of
state, federal, private sector, and non-profit funds—paired with a $13.6
million municipal bond measure passed by the town’s voters.
A $1 million grant from the Energy Department’s
Energy Efficiency and Conservation Block Grant (EECBG) program helped
the school district incorporate energy efficiency measures, including an
energy efficient integrated heating and cooling system. This feature,
along with upgrades to the building envelope and lighting, are estimated
to reduce the school district’s annual energy usage by 43%—saving
taxpayers more than $62,000 per year for the 135,000 square-foot school.
The energy efficient upgrades provide not only a healthier learning
environment for students and faculty but bolster the school district’s
application for LEED Platinum designation. For the complete story, see
the Energy Blog.
Croatian Center of Renewable Energy Sources (CCRES) |
četvrtak, 30. kolovoza 2012.
News and Events by CCRES August 30, 2012
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