Croatian Center of Renewable Energy SourcesNews and Events May 03, 2013 |
Energy Department Offers $13 Million to Advance Ocean Energy Technologies
The Energy Department on April 30 announced up
to $13 million in funding to develop and test advanced components and
technologies to boost the performance of marine and hydrokinetic (MHK)
energy systems. The Energy Department plans to select up to 10 awards
aimed at developing advanced controls, power systems, and device
structures specifically for MHK applications, which harness energy from
waves, tides, or currents.
Through the new funding opportunity, the Energy
Department intends to support projects that increase the power-to-weight
ratio of MHK devices or improve system reliability through investment
in three component technologies. The Department will select up to six
projects to develop advanced control systems, including software or
hardware, and perform numerical modeling or testing to assess
performance improvements; up to two awards will be selected that focus
on developing lighter, more compact, and more efficient power take-offs
(PTOs) to increase system and component reliability and modularity and
to make PTOs longer-lasting and easier to repair; and up to two projects
will develop and test an advanced device structure that minimizes the
loads transmitted to other components and increases the device’s ability
to withstand extreme conditions. See the funding opportunity announcement at the Water Power Program Financial Opportunities Webpage.
The Energy Department also launched a new Energy
101 video on a range of innovative MHK technologies and the
Department’s research and development efforts to improve performance and
lower costs. Additional information on these efforts is available
through Open Energy Information’s new Water Power Gateway. See the Progress Alert and the Water Power Gateway.
New Battery Design Could Help Solar and Wind Power the Grid
Researchers from the Energy Department's SLAC
National Accelerator Laboratory and Stanford University have designed a
low-cost, long-life “flow” battery that could enable solar and wind
energy to become major suppliers to the electrical grid. The research is
a product of the new Joint Center for Energy Storage Research (JCESR),
an Energy Department Energy Innovation Hub. Established last November
and led by Argonne National Laboratory with SLAC as a major partner,
JCESR is one of five such Hubs created by the Energy Department to
accelerate energy research.
While solar and wind power make a substantial
contribution to the nation’s energy supply, they also create significant
power fluctuations, which can sometimes exceed the tolerances of the
electrical grid. “Flow” batteries can smooth those fluctuations.
Typically, flow batteries pump two different liquids through an
interaction chamber where dissolved molecules undergo chemical reactions
that store or give up energy, and have a membrane that only allows ions
not involved in reactions to pass between the liquids while keeping the
active ions physically separated. The new flow battery uses a
simplified design without a membrane, and is a less expensive design
compared to other batteries, which may improve its scalability and
cost-effectiveness. In laboratory tests, it also demonstrated excellent
energy storage performance through the equivalent of more than five and a
half years of daily charge and discharge cycles. See the Energy Department press release and the JCESR website.
Report Assesses Potential U.S. Hydropower Upgrades
The Energy Department on April 22 announced a
new study outlining key improvements that can be made to hydropower
production in the United States to provide more efficient and
cost-effective electricity to homes and businesses. Developed with
funding from the Energy Department, the Electric Power Research
Institute's (EPRI) report, "Quantifying the Value of Hydropower in the
Electric Grid," identifies and assesses the quantifiable benefits from
potential improvements. The report cites potential upgrades such as
installing turbines that can operate with lower water levels, utilizing
new power plant designs that can increase revenue and efficiency, and
monetizing the services hydropower provides to the nation's electric
grid.
Hydropower supplies about 7% of U.S. electricity
generation and is currently the nation's largest source of renewable
electricity. Hydropower is widely valued for the ancillary services, or
flexibility, it provides to the power grid—allowing storage
capabilities, enabling fast stops and starts, and responding rapidly to
imbalances of supply and demand to maintain power system stability. For
example, pumped storage hydropower plants can pump water uphill when
electricity supply exceeds demand, such as during nighttime hours or
times when renewable energy sources are generating more power than
consumers are using. This ability to store energy until it is needed—and
to absorb excess renewable energy generation—lowers electricity prices
and enables the generation of more renewable electricity.
The researchers looked at improvements that
could boost the efficiency and output of hydropower plants and at pumped
storage hydropower systems, particularly in their potential to be
integrated with variable renewable sources such as wind and solar power.
According to the report, hydropower plants could see their largest
revenue and efficiency increases by deploying new hydropower
technologies, making operational improvements, utilizing hydropower's
flexibility more in grid resource planning, and monetizing the energy
storage capability of pumped storage. Among the key findings from the
report: relying more heavily on hydropower to address changes in
electricity supply and demand could provide more flexible reserve power
options and reduce wear and tear on conventional thermal-generating
equipment; and expanding the effective operating range of hydropower
units by reducing the minimum amount of water needed to use the turbines
stably can increase the production value of plants by 60%. EPRI also
published nine accompanying case studies and supplemental reports that
discuss the elements covered in the final report in greater detail. See
the Energy Department Progress Alert and the complete report .
EIA Opens New State Energy Portal Online for Consumers
The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA)
announced on April 11 that it has launched a publicly available,
comprehensive online view of the U.S. government's national and state
energy data and information. The agency designed the new online portal
with a range of users in mind, including policy makers, energy analysts,
and the general public, who want to locate and compare state energy
data and rankings and customize their own maps and charts, using an
assortment of interactive tools.
Users can view an array of energy facilities and
resources, including information about renewable resource potential for
wind, solar, biomass, and geothermal energy. In addition to
customizable maps, the portal summarizes each state's ranking of its
energy production, consumption, prices, and more. The state energy
portal adds a unique visual dimension to each state's energy resources
and infrastructure. See the EIA press release and the state energy profile website.
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CROATIAN CENTER of RENEWABLE ENERGY SOURCES (CCRES)special thanks to U.S. Department of Energy | USA.gov |
A Renewable Boost for Natural Gas
The race to transition to cleaner, greener
natural gas power plants is getting a boost from an unlikely
source—solar energy. A new system developed by the Energy Department's
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) converts natural gas and
sunlight into a more energy-rich fuel called syngas, which will allow
hybrid solar-gas power plants to use about 20% less natural gas to
produce the same amount of electricity while also lowering the plant's
greenhouse gas emissions.
The system works through concentrating solar
power, which uses a reflecting surface to concentrate the sun's rays
like a magnifying glass. In the case of the new system from PNNL, a
mirrored parabolic dish directs sunbeams to a central point, where a
device absorbs the solar heat to make syngas.
The four-foot-long, two-foot-wide device
contains a chemical reactor and several heat exchangers. The
concentrated sunlight heats up the natural gas flowing through the
reactor's channels, where a catalyst helps turn the natural gas into
syngas. The heat exchangers recycle leftover heat from the chemical
reaction gas, increasing the efficiency of the system. In fact, tests on
an early prototype of the device demonstrated that more than 60% of the
sunlight hitting the parabolic dish was converted into chemical energy
contained in the syngas. For the complete story, see the Energy Blog.
Croatian Center of Renewable Energy Sources (CCRES) |
Friday, May 3, 2013
News and Events by CCRES May 03, 2013
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