================================================= EREN NETWORK NEWS -- March 6, 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 Nevada Power to Buy Wind Power from DOE's Nevada Test Site Wave Energy Demonstrations Planned for North America New Commercial Building Energy Codes Take Effect in Seattle DOE and States Team Up on Clean Energy Research Report Finds Efficiency, Clean Power Potential in U.S. South California Electricity Report Confirms Energy Savings *Energy Facts and Tips Have Scientists Found A New Version of "Cold Fusion"? *About this Newsletter ---------------------------------------------------------------------- NEWS AND EVENTS ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Nevada Power to Buy Wind Power from DOE's Nevada Test Site Nevada Power Company announced last week that it will buy the power from a new 85-megawatt wind power plant at DOE's Nevada Test Site (NTS). MNS Wind Company LLC, a joint venture of Global Renewable Energy Partners and Siemens Energy and Automation, will build the 60-turbine wind plant. Construction is expected to begin as soon as this summer, and the plant should begin operating in 2003. The wind power agreement will help Nevada Power meet the goals of the state's Renewable Energy Portfolio Standard, which calls for using renewable energy sources for five percent of the company's energy sales in 2003. See the Nevada Power press release at: <http://www.nevadapower.com/news/releases/1014969600.html>. The NTS, located 65 miles northwest of Las Vegas, was used for testing nuclear weapons until 1992. Last year, plans were announced to build a 260-megawatt wind facility on the site, but that facility has yet to materialize. See the January 24, 2001, edition of EREN Network News at: <http://www.eren.doe.gov/newsletter/archives/2001/jan24_01.html>. U.S. wind power facilities may someday be dwarfed by an installation on the coast of our northern neighbor: a 700-megawatt offshore wind plant in the Canadian province of British Columbia. Uniterre Resources Ltd. signed an agreement last month with ABB New Ventures GmbH to conduct a feasibility study for such a wind facility. The study will examine building the plant in two phases in Hecate Strait, at the extreme northeast tip of Haida Gwaii in the Queen Charlotte Islands. The agreement was one of 29 business deals signed between Canada and Germany in Berlin. See the February 19th press release by selecting "News Releases" on Prime Minister Jean Chretien's Web site at: <http://pm.gc.ca/default.asp?Language=E&Page=newsroom>. Wave Energy Demonstrations Planned for North America British Columbia may also be the site of the first wave power facility in North America. BC Hydro, the province's electric utility, announced last week that it will help develop a 3 to 4 megawatt ocean wave energy demonstration project on Vancouver Island. BC Hydro signed a memorandum of understanding with Energetech Australia Pty Ltd. for the project. The Energetech system uses an oscillating water column (OWC) system to produce electricity. OWC systems consist of a large fixed tube that is open to the ocean at the bottom and projects above the ocean surface. Waves cause the water level in the tube, or column, to move up and down. These oscillations push air in and out of the top of the column, past an air-driven turbine that generates electricity. BC Hydro is currently verifying the wave energy resource at a site near Amphitrite Point off Ucluelet. The project is part of a 20-megawatt Vancouver Island Green Energy Demonstration project, which will include 10 megawatts of wind power and 6 to 8 megawatts of micro-hydroelectric power by 2004. See the BC Hydro press release at: <http://eww.bchydro.bc.ca/news/2002/feb/feb02-26a.html>. To help develop such projects in North and South America, Energetech has established a U.S. subsidiary, Energetech America, which it says will be based in Connecticut. See the Energetech Web site (particularly the "What's New" section) at: <http://www.energetech.com.au/index.html>. BC Hydro may have some competition from down south: a wave energy project is also being planned for the northwest coast of Washington State. AquaEnergy Group Ltd. is proposing to build a $2.5 million demonstration plant off Wa'atch Point in Neah Bay. The local utility, Public Utility District (PUD) No. 1 of Clallam County, has agreed to buy 1 megawatt of power from the project. Although the published information on the project is limited, it was discussed in the January 28th meeting of the PUD's Board of Commissioners. See: <http://www.clallampud.net/staff-minutes.htm>. AquaEnergy's system uses a moored buoy that captures the kinetic energy of the waves. See the AquaEnergy Web site at: <http://www.aquaenergygroup.com/>. California is also getting into the act: Scientists at San Diego State University are planning to determine just how much electricity could be produced along the state's 1,100-mile coastline, the likely costs of generating electricity from waves, and environmental issues that may be tied to developing ocean wave energy systems. Their goal is to determine the best places to deploy ocean wave energy systems off the California coast. The California Energy Commission (CEC) recently awarded $120,000 to the university for these studies. See the February 28th press release on the CEC Web site at: <http://www.energy.ca.gov/releases/>. To learn more about ocean wave energy, see the Wave Energy page on EREN at: <http://www.eren.doe.gov/RE/ocean_wave.html>. New Commercial Building Energy Codes Take Effect in Seattle New building energy codes for commercial buildings went into effect in Seattle, Washington, last week. The new codes exceed national energy efficiency standards by nearly 20 percent. Although revisions were only made to the equipment requirements for commercial buildings (for instance, the heating and ventilating systems), a much broader revision of the energy codes for residential buildings will go into effect in July. That revision -- the most significant since 1991 -- mandates high-efficiency windows as well as insulation R-values ranging from 21 in the walls to 38 in the ceilings. See the City of Seattle Web site at: <http://www.cityofseattle.net/dclu/news/20020228a.asp>. How do builders achieve such efficiency standards affordably? This question will be tackled at the 2002 Affordable Comfort Conference, an annual conference to advance building performance. DOE is part sponsor of this year's event, which takes place in Cincinnati, Ohio. See the Affordable Comfort Web site at: <http://www.affordablecomfort.org/home1.html>. DOE and States Team Up on Clean Energy Research DOE awarded nearly $10.5 million for 14 cooperative agreements with states last week. The agreements with state energy offices, energy associations and universities will help to advance research in energy efficient technologies. Four of the agreements focus on distributed generation technologies, such as fuel cells; another four relate to building technologies; three involve transportation technologies; two will help industrial energy efficiency; and one will develop fuels from waste products. For example, one of the cooperative agreements will design and build an advanced "brake-by-wire" system that will replace hydraulic braking systems in advanced high-efficiency vehicles. See the DOE press release at: <http://www.energy.gov/HQPress/releases02/febpr/pr02031.htm>. Report Finds Efficiency, Clean Power Potential in U.S. South The southeastern United States can reduce its production of carbon dioxide while cutting nitrogen oxide and sulfur dioxide emissions through energy efficiency, renewable energy, and other clean energy sources, according to a new report from the Renewable Energy Policy Project. The report finds that biomass, wind power, natural gas, and distributed generation sources, combined with energy efficiency, can allow the region to reduce its air emissions from power generation without increasing the cost of electricity. See the REPP report on the Powering the South Web site at: <http://www.poweringthesouth.org/report/>. The Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA), which serves Tennessee and parts of surrounding states, is in a key position to influence power development in the South. TVA's Green Power Switch program just signed on seven new East Tennessee distributors of green power, and is working on plans to add 20 megawatts of wind power by 2003. TVA recently received 20 proposals for wind facilities ranging from 20 to 60 megawatts in capacity. See the TVA Green Power Switch News at: <http://www.tva.gov/greenpowerswitch/newsletter/vol2_1/index.htm>. To further advance green power in the South, the 2002 Southeast Green Power Summit will be held in Raleigh, North Carolina, in early May. See the Southeast Green Power Network Web site at: <http://www.southeastgreenpower.net/>. California Electricity Report Confirms Energy Savings The California Energy Commission (CEC) released last week its formal report on the state's actions during last summer's electricity crisis. The report confirms that conservation efforts helped cut overall electricity use by 6.7 percent throughout the state, while the summer peak electricity demand was cut by 10 percent. The report says that energy conservation programs, and not weather or economic factors, were responsible for the drop in electricity use. See the CEC Web site, which includes links to the full report and the accompanying press release from Governor Gray Davis, at: <http://www.energy.ca.gov/>. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ENERGY FACTS AND TIPS ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Have Scientists Found A New Version of "Cold Fusion"? As renewable energy and energy efficiency continues to advance in strides, a new energy competitor may be on the horizon: a low-temperature means of achieving nuclear fusion. Research to be published in Friday's edition of the journal Science suggests that the explosive collapse of bubbles in a liquid may be able to trigger nuclear fusion reactions. Nuclear fusion, the source of energy for the sun, generally requires extremely high temperatures and pressures to occur. The new research was driven by the phenomenon of "sonoluminescence" -- the emission of light from the collapse of bubbles in a liquid. First observed randomly during studies of pumps, the phenomenon was reproduced in the early 1990s by passing sound through a liquid (a mixture of water and glycerin was found to work well). The results are intriguing to physicists, since a sound wave with a low energy density can create bubbles that emitted energetic light, suggesting that the bubbles were reaching temperatures of more than 10,000 degrees Celsius, and possibly more than 1 million degrees Celsius. This suggested that these small bubbles might get hot enough to achieve nuclear fusion. See "Sonoluminescence: an Introduction" on the Web site of DOE's Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory at: <http://www-phys.llnl.gov/N_Div/sonolum/>. The new research -- performed by scientists at DOE's Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, and the Russian Academy of Sciences -- used acetone as the liquid, and replaced the hydrogen atoms in the acetone with deuterium, a heavy isotope of hydrogen that fuses more easily with itself to make helium. And although the experiment occurred at low temperatures, it was hardly a low energy process: the researchers bombarded the acetone with neutrons at energies of 14 million electron volts to help generate bubbles in the liquid. According to the researchers, small but statistically significant amounts of tritium were detected, suggesting that nuclear fusion might have taken place. However, the researchers have had mixed results when attempting to detect the neutrons that would be emitted by a fusion reaction. The deputy director of ORNL suggests "a cautionary view" toward the experiments until further experiments can confirm the results -- an understandable view, considering the controversy created by the announced discovery of "cold fusion" in 1989. If the research holds up, however, it will provide a new technique for creating nuclear fusion, a process that holds vast potential for energy production. See the ORNL press release at: <http://www.ornl.gov/Press_Releases/current/mr20020305-00.html>. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- 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. The Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Network (EREN) home page is located at <http://www.eren.doe.gov/>. 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