A weekly newsletter from the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) 
<http://www.eere.energy.gov/>Office of Energy Efficiency and 
Renewable Energy (EERE).

January 21, 2004

<#news>News and Events

<#6598>U.S. and Philippines Join Forces on Sustainable Energy Projects
<#6600>International Builders Show Showcases Energy-Efficient Homes
<#6601>Companies Examine New Ways to Keep Buildings Cool
<#6602>Manhattan Skyscraper Owner Makes Large Green Power Purchase
<#6603>BPA Draws on Hydropower to Make Wind Energy More Attractive
<#6604>Altamont Wind Plants Sued for Failing to Prevent Bird Deaths

<#energy>Energy Connections

2003 and 2002 Tied as Second-Warmest Years on Record



News and Events

Editor's Note: Today's issue marks the launch of the EERE Network 
News in HTML format, which allows you to jump easily to a story of 
interest by clicking on the headline in the index, and provides 
better links to other Web sites. We'll also include a photo or two 
when appropriate. We hope you like the new, improved EERE Network 
News!

U.S. and Philippines Join Forces on Sustainable Energy Projects

U.S. Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham and Philippine Secretary of 
Energy Vincente Perez signed a memorandum of understanding on January 
13th to strengthen the Sustainable Energy Development Program between 
the two countries and to promote the use of cleaner-burning fuels in 
vehicles. The Sustainable Energy Development Program is a $5 million 
project sponsored by DOE, the Philippines Department of Energy, and 
the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID). It includes 
efforts to develop a renewable energy bill for the Philippines and to 
expand the use of cleaner alternative fuels such as natural gas.

While in the Philippines, Secretary Abraham also participated in a 
"Lights On" ceremony for the Alliance for Mindanao Off-Grid Renewable 
Energy (AMORE) Program. By December, the AMORE program aims to bring 
electricity to more than 5,000 homes in 160 remote communities. The 
program presently supplies electricity to more than 2,500 households 
in 84 communities using solar-powered battery chargers. Mirant 
Philippines is providing equipment worth approximately $3.2 million, 
while USAID is providing $6.4 million to strengthen the ability of 
local communities to operate, maintain, and protect the renewable 
energy systems. See the 
<http://www.energy.gov/engine/content.do?PUBLIC_ID=14766&BT_CODE=PR_PR 
ESSRELEASES&TT_CODE=PRESSRELEASE>DOE press release.

The USAID's Philippines Web site provides additional information on 
the <http://www.usaid-ph.gov/environment%20amore_usaid.htm>AMORE 
program and 
<http://www.usaid-ph.gov/environment%20eept_usaid.htm>sustainable 
energy development efforts.

International Builders Show Showcases Energy-Efficient Homes

Two highly energy-efficient model homes-the "New American Home" and 
the "2004 NextGen Demonstration Home"-are now being showcased at the 
International Builders Show, underway at the Las Vegas Convention 
Center in Las Vegas, Nevada.

 
The New American Home.
Credit: Paul Norton, NREL

The New American Home is designed for Nevada's hot and dry climate 
and cuts by half the energy used for air conditioning and water 
heating. The home achieves its energy savings through insulated 
concrete forms, used in the foundation and exterior walls; windows 
that limit solar heat gain; and highly efficient structural 
insulating panels (SIPs), which form the roof. The house is cooled 
with high-efficiency air conditioners and is ventilated with a 
heat-recovery ventilator, which cools incoming air using the exhaust 
air from the home. DOE's Building Technologies Program and DOE's 
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) contributed to the 
project. The home is in the Sahara Lake community, just west of 
downtown Las Vegas. See the 
<http://www.nrel.gov/news/press/2004/0204_new_american_home.html>NREL 
press release.

The NextGen Demonstration Home is actually in the parking lot of the 
Las Vegas Convention Center, and features such energy-saving 
technologies as Icynene spray insulation, radiant barrier roof 
sheathing, low-E windows, and a high-velocity heating and cooling 
system. Tankless water heaters produce hot water on demand for the 
house's low-flow plumbing fixtures, and Energy-Star-rated appliances 
save electricity throughout the house. Once the home is placed on a 
permanent foundation, it is expected to earn an Energy Star label as 
well. All American Homes built the NextGen home in association with 
the Partnership for Advanced Technology in Housing. See the 
<http://www.nextgen04.com/>NextGen04 Web site.

The <http://www.buildersshow.com/>International Builders Show runs 
through January 22nd.

Companies Examine New Ways to Keep Buildings Cool

With the <http://www.buildersshow.com/>International Builders Show in 
progress in Las Vegas, Nevada, you can be sure a lot of building 
professionals are thinking about how to keep buildings cool, and 
companies throughout the country are examining a range of techniques 
to accomplish that goal.

SPD Technologies, Inc. is at the show, displaying a new line of 
"smart" windows that can be electronically dimmed to filter out 99 
percent of the ultraviolet light entering a room. The windows are 
suspended particle devices (SPDs), which use an applied voltage to 
align suspended particles in a thin-film coating, causing the windows 
to change from nearly opaque to slightly tinted. Research Frontiers, 
Inc. developed the SPD technology, which in the past has mainly been 
applied to sunroofs and various privacy-window applications , 
although it has been licensed to a number of window companies. See 
the <http://www.smartglass.com/pr.cfm>Research Frontiers press 
releases.

Meanwhile, the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating, and Air 
Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE) is gearing up for its 2004 Winter 
Meeting, at which one seminar will examine the use of deep, cold 
water in lakes and rivers for cooling. Although such cooling projects 
are rare, according to ASHRAE, they yield large energy savings: a 
lake-source cooling project in Ithaca, New York, cut energy use by 87 
percent. See the 
<http://www.ashrae.org/template/AssetDetail/assetid/30283>ASHRAE 
press release. The 
<http://www.ashrae.org/template/MeetingLinkLanding/category/1718>ASHRA 
E Winter Meeting runs from January 24th to 28th in Anaheim, 
California.

 
The Coolerado Cooler demonstration in Denver.
Credit: Idalex Technologies

The International Air-Conditioning Heating Refrigerating Exposition, 
or <http://www.ahrexpo.com/>AHR Expo, is also taking place in Anaheim 
in late January, and will feature two products that use an innovative 
thermodynamic process called the "Maisotsenko Cycle." Though the 
process is too technical to explain here, the results are astounding: 
Idalex Technologies, Inc. claims its prototype condenser for air 
conditioners, refrigerators, and freezers is 57 percent more 
efficient than today's high-efficiency products. And its air 
conditioner, marketed as the Coolerado Cooler, is a commercial 
product that the company claims is the most efficient air conditioner 
ever made, with an SEER of 40. The air conditioner is powered only by 
a fan (there's no compressor) and was demonstrated at a school in 
Denver in October 2003, in partnership with the Colorado Governor's 
Office of Energy Management and Conservation (OEMC). To learn about 
the Maisotsenko Cycle and Idalex's products, see the 
<http://www.idalex.com/>Idalex Technologies Web site and the 
<http://www.state.co.us/oemc/press/031020.htm>OEMC press release.

Manhattan Skyscraper Owner Makes Large Green Power Purchase

The Durst Organization-owner of seven high-rise office buildings in 
Manhattan-became New York State's largest commercial buyer of wind 
power last week, when the company agreed to buy 10.5 million 
kilowatt-hours of wind power per year. Community Energy, Inc. (CEI) 
will generate the wind power at its 30-megawatt Fenner Wind Power 
Project, located east of Syracuse. See the 
<http://www.communityenergy.biz/cei_pr_durst.html>CEI press release.

DOE's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) is also buying a 
large amount of green power: its Marine Sciences Laboratory is 
drawing on a landfill gas power plant for all of its power. PNNL is 
buying nearly 2.7 million kilowatt-hours of green power for the 
Marine Sciences Laboratory and another 9.3 million kilowatt-hours of 
power from wind energy and small hydropower systems for its main 
campus. Other recent purchases of green power include Connecticut 
College, which doubled its purchase of wind energy certificates from 
EAD Environmental LLC to 13.3 million kilowatt-hours over two years, 
and Eastern University in Pennsylvania, which is buying wind power 
from CEI for 37 percent of its power needs. See the press releases 
from <http://www.pnl.gov/news/2003/03-48.htm>PNNL, 
<http://www.enviroactiondesk.com/news/index.asp?n=429>EAD 
Environmental, and 
<http://www.communityenergy.biz/cei_pr_eastern.html>CEI.

BPA Draws on Hydropower to Make Wind Energy More Attractive

The Bonneville Power Administration (BPA), which supplies power to 
utilities throughout the Northwest, has launched a new service that 
will make wind power more attractive to those utilities. Because the 
wind produces a variable supply of energy, BPA is using its 
hydropower facilities as a back-up energy source to cover the times 
when the wind turbines don't turn. BPA announced the new service last 
week in conjunction with its sale of two megawatts of wind power to 
Cowlitz County Public Utility District in Longview, Washington. The 
wind power will be generated at the Nine Canyon wind energy project 
near Kennewick, Washington, a facility operated by Energy Northwest. 
See the 
<http://www.bpa.gov/corporate/kc/home/nreleases/NewsRelease.cfm?Releas 
eNo=434>BPA press release.

The BPA service is partially based on a report by energy consultant 
Eric Hirst, who for years has been studying how best to integrate 
wind power into utility power grids. According to a report published 
by Hirst in 2001, wind advocates often claim that wind energy can be 
integrated into existing power grids at no cost, and detractors claim 
that "every unscheduled megawatt movement of a wind farm must be 
offset, megawatt for megawatt, by some other resource, generally at 
high cost." The truth, says Hirst, lies somewhere in between. Hirst 
concludes that wind facility owners can use improved wind forecasting 
techniques to schedule their wind power output in advance with 
electric system operators, thereby earning more money per 
kilowatt-hour of wind power. See Hirst's summary, with a link to his 
2001 report, on his <http://www.ehirst.com/news.html>Web site.

Wind integration into the utility grid is also an issue in New York 
State. The New York Public Service Commission (PSC) is developing a 
minimum requirement for renewable power generation in the state-also 
known as a renewable portfolio standard (RPS)-and wants to know how 
much wind power could be integrated into the power system without 
harming reliability. According to a preliminary assessment prepared 
by GE Power Systems Energy Consulting, the state should be able to 
provide 10 percent of its peak power load from wind power without any 
adverse impacts. That would be about 3,300 megawatts of wind power. 
See the report 
(<http://www.dps.state.ny.us/Phase_1_Draft_Report_1-8-04.pdf>PDF 1.75 
MB) and the <http://www.dps.state.ny.us/03e0188.htm>PSC RPS Web page. 
<http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/alternate.html>Download 
Acrobat Reader.

Altamont Wind Plants Sued for Failing to Prevent Bird Deaths

The Center for Biological Diversity (CBD), a non-profit environmental 
organization, filed a federal lawsuit on January 12th against FPL 
Group, Inc. and NEG Micon A/S, claiming that the two companies have 
violated state and federal laws by allowing birds to be killed at 
their wind power facilities in California's Altamont Pass. The two 
companies and their subsidiaries own or operate roughly half of the 
5,400 wind turbines in the Altamont Wind Energy Resource Area 
(AWERA), an area known for its high rate of bird deaths. The area is 
particularly problematic because of the large number of golden eagles 
in the area, some of which are killed each year. CBD claims the wind 
power companies at AWERA have failed to implement effective 
mitigation strategies to reduce bird kills in the area. "The issue at 
Altamont is not wind power versus birds," says CBD, "but rather 
whether the wind power industry is willing to take simple steps to 
reduce bird kills." See the 
<http://www.sw-center.org/swcbd/press/BIRDKILLS1-12-04.htm>CBD press 
release.

Wind turbines' interactions with birds have long been of concern to 
the wind power industry, in fact, the issue was one of the drivers 
for forming the National Wind Coordinating Committee (NWCC) in 1994. 
In 1999, the NWCC Wildlife Working Group produced "Studying Wind 
Energy/Bird Interactions: A Guidance Document," a comprehensive guide 
for determining or monitoring potential impacts on birds at proposed 
and existing wind energy sites. The Wildlife Working Group has also 
facilitated four National Avian-Wind Power Planning Workshops to 
define needed research and explore current issues. See the latest 
publications and activities of the Wildlife Working Group on the 
<http://www.nationalwind.org/workinggroups/wildlife/default.htm>NWCC 
Web site.

A study prepared for the NWCC in 2001, called "Avian Collisions with 
Wind Turbines," found that wind power facilities kill 10-40 thousand 
birds each year. To place that in context, the study also found that 
vehicles kill 60-80 million birds per year, and buildings and windows 
kill 98-980 million birds per year. See the study 
(<http://www.nationalwind.org/pubs/avian_collisions.pdf>PDF 2.78 MB). 
<http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/alternate.html>Download 
Acrobat Reader.

A fact sheet on bird deaths from the American Wind Energy Association 
(AWEA) notes that avian mortality is low at most wind power sites, 
but acknowledges that Altamont Pass remains a concern because of the 
deaths of golden eagles there. The fact sheet also notes that other 
energy sources also have adverse effects on birds. See the AWEA fact 
sheet (<http://www.awea.org/pubs/factsheets/WEandBirds.pdf>PDF 126 
KB).



Energy Connections

2003 and 2002 Tied as Second-Warmest Years on Record

The past two years tied as the second-warmest years on record, 
according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration 
(NOAA). Global temperatures for both years averaged 1.01 degrees 
Fahrenheit (0.56 degrees Celsius) above the long-term average. The 
warmest year on record was 1998, when average global temperatures hit 
1.5 degrees Fahrenheit (0.44 degrees Celsius) above the long-term 
average. See the 
<http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/oa/climate/research/2003/ann/global.html>ann 
ual review of global temperatures on NOAA's National Climatic Data 
Center Web site.

In a series of announcements over the past three years, President 
Bush has acknowledged the long-term challenge of global climate 
change and the need to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. In early 
2003, DOE launched Climate VISION (Voluntary Innovative Sector 
Initiatives: Opportunities Now), a Presidential public-private 
partnership to help meet the President's goal of reducing greenhouse 
gas intensity by 18 percent in 10 years. In December, DOE launched a 
new <http://www.climatevision.gov/index.html>Climate VISION Web site, 
which includes 
<http://www.climatevision.gov/statements.html>President Bush's 
statements regarding climate change.



This newsletter is funded by DOE's 
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