================================================= EREN NETWORK NEWS -- April 24, 2002 A weekly newsletter from the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Network (EREN). <http://www.eren.doe.gov/> =================================================
Featuring: *News and Events DOE, Ronald Reagan Building Buy Green Power for Earth Day Bid on a Toyota Prius, the Top-Selling HEV, for Earth Day Long Island Could Draw on 5,200 Megawatts of Offshore Wind Architects Award the Top "Green" Building Projects for 2002 More Record-Breaking Solar Power Systems in California Company Produces Bright White LED Light Source *Site News managEnergy *Energy Facts and Tips Global Temperature Hits New Record for March *About this Newsletter ---------------------------------------------------------------------- NEWS AND EVENTS ---------------------------------------------------------------------- DOE, Ronald Reagan Building Buy Green Power for Earth Day DOE celebrated Earth Day on Monday by buying electricity from renewable energy sources for its headquarter buildings. DOE is buying enough green power to provide 17 percent of the electricity needs at its headquarters facilities in Washington, D.C., and in Germantown, Maryland. Pepco Energy Services will provide 6 million kilowatt-hours of green power per year to the facilities, of which 25 percent will be generated from wind energy and 75 percent will come from landfill gas. The green power purchase -- enough to power 600 homes -- comes at no additional net cost to DOE. See the DOE press release at: <http://www.energy.gov/HQPress/releases02/aprpr/pr02068.htm>. The DOE green power purchase was actually part of a larger purchase arranged by the Government Services Agency (GSA). According to GSA, it will purchase a total of 24 million kilowatt-hours of green power over 17 months, of which half will go to DOE and half will go to the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center. GSA says the power will cost less than a penny more per kilowatt-hour than conventional power sources, amounting to an added cost of about $230,000 over the 17-month period. See the April 22nd press release on the GSA Web site at: <http://w3.gsa.gov/web/x/publicaffairs.nsf/publicnews>. The Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center is home to more than 5,000 federal employees and is the largest government building in Washington, DC. It houses trade-related government agencies as well as a variety of private businesses and non-governmental organizations. See the Web site at: <http://www.itcdc.com/>. Earth Day also marked the first day for many Georgians to buy green power from their utility. Sixteen electric cooperatives in Georgia started offering green power to their customers on Monday. The cooperatives are currently selling a total of 8 megawatts of power produced from landfill methane gas. See the Walton Electric Membership Corporation press release at: <http://www.waltonemc.com/News/press98.html>. Bid on a Toyota Prius, the Top-Selling HEV, for Earth Day Toyota Motor Sales and eBay, the popular internet-based auction site, have a new way for you to support Earth Day: bid on a Toyota Prius. The high bidder takes home a low- emissions, high-mileage hybrid electric vehicle (HEV), and the proceeds go to the Earth Day Network. Toyota donated the vehicle, which has an average retail value of $21,897. Bids close on Saturday; at press time, the high bid was $21,550. Sorry, the Prius can only be delivered within the United States. See the eBay Web site at: <http://members.ebay.com/ebaymotors/aboutme/priusearthday>. According to the Earth Day Network, nearly 800 Earth Day events occurred across the United States on Monday. See the April 11th press release on the Earth Day Network at: <http://www.earthday.net/pressroom/pressreleases/>. Toyota has reason to be proud of its achievements: the company announced on Earth Day that its cumulative global sales of hybrid vehicles have topped 100,000. Customers in more than 20 countries have purchased more than 89,000 Priuses, while the company's lineup in Japan has expanded to include a hybrid electric sport utility vehicle and minivan. Combined, the company's sales give it a 90 percent share of the hybrid electric vehicle market. See the Toyota press release at: <http://www.toyota.com/about/news/index.html#environment>. The Prius, of course, has new competition in the form of the Honda Civic Hybrid. According to the American Council for an Energy Efficient Economy (ACEEE), the new Civic Hybrid earns the same "green score" for emissions and efficiency as the Prius. The Honda Insight is still in first place. See the ACEEE press release at: <http://greenercars.com/pr8.html>. See the latest rankings at: <http://greenercars.com/gc2000.html>. For more information on the Civic Hybrid, see the new Honda Web site at: <http://civichybrid.honda.com/>. Need to know more about hybrid vehicles? See the new "Frequently Asked Questions" page on the Web site for DOE's Hybrid Electric Vehicle Program at: <http://www.ott.doe.gov/hev/faqs.html>. Long Island Could Draw on 5,200 Megawatts of Offshore Wind A study released on Earth Day suggests that offshore wind turbines could supply much of Long Island's power needs in the future. The Long Island Power Authority (LIPA) is acting on the study and plans to solicit wind energy proposals by year-end. The study, commissioned by LIPA and the New York Energy Research and Development Authority, determined that the best wind option for Long Island is a 314-square-mile area of shallow ocean waters located east of Montauk Point and three to six nautical miles off Long Island's south shore. According to the study, as much as 5,200 megawatts of wind capacity could be built there with minimal environmental impact. In response to the study, LIPA is holding a pre-proposal meeting with interested wind energy developers on June 25th. The utility anticipates additional studies to examine environmental impacts and costs before determining the scale of its proposed wind plant. Based on the local, state, and federal approvals needed to construct an offshore wind plant, LIPA estimates that at the earliest, a wind plant could be built by 2005. See the LIPA press release at: <http://www.lipower.org/newscenter/pr/2002/april22_02.html>. How does Long Island's wind potential compare to its power needs? The worst case occurred last August, when LIPA's peak summer power demand hit a record 4,906 megawatts. Power demand is much lower during the rest of the year: last week's heat wave caused a new April record demand of 3,355 megawatts, compared to a peak demand of about 2,700 megawatts for a typical April day. Of course, wind plants don't necessarily produce peak power during times of peak energy demand -- most wind plants produce about a third of their total capacity on average. See the LIPA press releases at: <http://www.lipower.org/newscenter/pr/2001/aug14_01.htm> and <http://www.lipower.org/newscenter/pr/2002/april19_02.html>. Architects Award the Top "Green" Building Projects for 2002 The American Institute of Architects (AIA) marked Earth Day by awarding its Top Ten "Green" Projects for 2002. The winners range in scale from a 950-square-foot renovated cabin to a 125,000-square-foot office building, and from strawbale construction to metal roofs, but all include energy efficiency among their green features. The ten projects comprise a panoply of energy technologies, including daylighting, high-efficiency lighting, solar power systems, solar heating and hot water systems, passive solar heating, natural ventilation, natural-gas heat-pump air conditioning, under-floor air distribution, high-efficiency pulse boilers, geothermal heat pumps...well, you get the picture. For all the details on these innovative projects, see the AIA press release at: <http://www.aia.org/MEDIA/releases/042202.asp>. Several green builders earned kudos at last month's National Green Building Conference, organized by the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) and the NAHB Research Center. During the conference, attendees selected the Outstanding Green Product Award, which went to TR Strong Building Systems, distributor of GFX Drainwater Heat Recovery Systems. The units can recapture up to 60 percent of the energy from hot wastewater that goes down the drain, using it to preheat fresh water before it enters a hot water heater. See the March 26th press release on the NAHB Research Center Web site at: <http://www.nahbrc.org/press3.asp?TrackID=&CategoryID=1781>. More Record-Breaking Solar Power Systems in California Helped by generous financial incentives, California continues to rack up news of large-scale solar power installations. Berkeley-based PowerLight Corporation is responsible for the largest two systems: a 127-kilowatt roof-integrated system at the U.S. Postal Service's mail processing and distribution center in Marina del Rey, and a 1.18-megawatt system on the roof of the Santa Rita Jail in Dublin. PowerLight claims that the jail system, dedicated on Earth Day, is largest rooftop solar power system in the United States. See the PowerLight press releases at: <http://www.powerlight.com/pr/april-12-2002-usps.html> and <http://www.powerlight.com/pr/april-22-2002-santaritajail.html>. Santa Cruz is also in the news with its Earth Day dedication of a 14-kilowatt solar power installation on City Hall. See the Santa Cruz press release, in PDF format only, at: <http://www.ci.santa-cruz.ca.us/press_release/solardedic.pdf>. In Lincoln, California, a new housing development will feature at least 50 rooftop solar power systems, thanks to an agreement between AstroPower, Inc. and Premiere Homes. AstroPower's 2.4-kilowatt system will be a standard feature in the new homes, and buyers will have the options of adding a battery storage system and expanding the system to 3.2 kilowatts. The companies plan to build 250 homes that include solar power by 2003. See the AstroPower press release at: <http://www.astropower.com/press_releases.htm>. The Mt. Tam Racquet Club in Larkspur, California, is also joining the solar power ranks. The club plans to meet most of its power needs by installing a 150-kilowatt solar power system on its roof. The system will use solar panels manufactured by BP Solar. See the press release on the BP Solar Web site at: <http://www.bpsolar.com/DisplayNews.cfm?id=34>. Company Produces Bright White LED Light Source Lumileds Lighting, a manufacturer of high-power light- emitting diodes (LEDs) for lighting applications, announced in mid-April that it has achieved a record brightness from a white LED, producing 120 lumens of light from a 5-watt LED source. The new device produces four times more light than the company's previous white-light LED, and the company claims it is the brightest white LED produced to date. For comparison, a 60-watt incandescent bulb produces about 900 lumens of light, so eight of the new white LEDs could be combined together to replace one bulb. That wouldn't save much energy -- using about 40 watts, where a compact fluorescent bulb would use less than 20 watts -- but it shows that it is possible to produce white-light LEDs at a brightness practical for use in lighting. See the Lumileds press release at: <http://www.lumileds.com/newsandevents/releases/press04-14-02.htm>. As solid-state devices, LEDs have long been recognized as efficient light sources with extremely long lifetimes, but were limited in brightness and in color choices. A breakthrough in LED technology in recent years led to the development of brighter LEDs and new colors like red and yellow, allowing them to be used in new applications, such as traffic lights. These new LED traffic lights have caught on quickly -- in March, for instance, the California Energy Commission (CEC) reported that more than one-third of the traffic intersections in the state now feature LED traffic lights. See the March 14th press release on the CEC Web site at: <http://www.energy.ca.gov/releases/>. Despite the success of LEDs for traffic lights, the white-light LED -- a light that could be used for room lighting or reading -- has remained the elusive holy grail of LED lighting, which is why the Lumileds announcement is significant. Researchers at DOE's Sandia National Laboratories announced in mid-April that they are also pursuing the white LED goal. The Sandia team expects to eventually produce a white LED that uses half the energy of compact fluorescent lights, which would be one-quarter the energy use of the current Lumileds product. See the Sandia press release at: <http://www.sandia.gov/media/NewsRel/NR2002/LEDS2.htm>. The Sandia team has also established a new Solid State Lighting Web site, located at: <http://lighting.sandia.gov/>. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute's Lighting Research Center (LRC) also has a Solid-State Lighting Program and provides extensive information on LED technologies. See the LRC Web site at: <http://www.lrc.rpi.edu/solidstate/leds.htm>. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- SITE NEWS ---------------------------------------------------------------------- managEnergy <http://www.managenergy.net/> The European Commission has established the managEnergy initiative to encourage the intelligent use of energy in European Union member states and other European countries. The managEnergy Web site features case studies and reports of successful energy efficiency and renewable energy projects, as well as event information. For this and other recent additions to the EREN Web site, see: <http://www.eren.doe.gov/new/whats-new.html>. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ENERGY FACTS AND TIPS ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Global Temperature Hits New Record for March March 2002 was the warmest March on record, placing 2002 in a dead heat with 1998 in the competition for the warmest year on record, according to new data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). March global temperatures averaged 1.39 degrees Fahrenheit above the 122-year average. The period from January through March was 1.3 degrees Fahrenheit above the long term, tying with 1998, which is the warmest year on record thus far. See NOAA's National Climatic Data Center Web site at: <http://lwf.ncdc.noaa.gov/oa/climate/research/2002/mar/global.html>. Meanwhile, NOAA continues to predict an El Nino event, which tends to elevate global temperatures. NOAA is not yet able to predict the intensity of the event, but expects that the United States will feel its effects by mid-summer. See the NOAA press release at: <http://www.noaanews.noaa.gov/stories/s886.htm>. In the United States, March was actually cooler than normal, although anyone on the East Coast could tell you that April appears to be compensating for that shortfall. The East and parts of the Midwest experienced record-breaking temperatures this past week. As noted in the Long Island story above, LIPA experienced record demand for April due to last week's heat wave. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ABOUT THIS NEWSLETTER ---------------------------------------------------------------------- You can subscribe to this newsletter using the online form at: <http://www.eren.doe.gov/newsletter/subscribe/>. This Web page also allows you to update your email address or unsubscribe to this newsletter. 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