UPDATE: US DOE Awards $151 Million In Energy Research Stimulus Grants
October 26 2009 - 4:16PM
Dow Jones News
The U.S. Energy Department on Monday announced $151 million in
grants for next-generation energy research projects that the
agency's top official said could be vital to cutting U.S.
greenhouse-gas emissions to combat climate change while also
helping the U.S. compete in global low-carbon energy markets.
"We essentially need a second industrial revolution to fulfill
our energy and envirvonment goals," said Secretary of Energy Steven
Chu, who was speaking at the headquarters of Internet search giant
Google Inc. (GOOG). "We don't have the technologies that can bring
our carbon emissions down by 80% by mid-century."
President Barack Obama has proposed new rules that would require
the U.S. to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 80% by 2020, while
proposals pending in the U.S. Congress include similar
emission-reduction goals.
Several of the 37 projects that received funding are focused on
improving technologies for generating renewable energy, storing
electricity and increasing energy efficiency.
The biggest grant - almost $9.2 million - was awarded to Foro
Energy Inc. for the development of new geothermal drilling
technology that aims to open access to geothermal power in deep,
hard basement rock. The next-biggest, at $9 million, went to DuPont
(DD) for the production of a biofuel derived from seaweed.
Chu said the U.S. needs to acclerate investment in new,
low-carbon energy technologies to cut greenhouse-gas emissions
while continuing to grow economically, and to develop a competitive
edge in world markets. It's important for the government to fund
early-stage, potentially game-changing technologies that private
industry isn't funding, to ensure the best ideas have a chance to
be developed, Chu said. He added that the U.S. should be careful
not to fall behind other countries that are boosting investment in
low-carbon energy technologies, like China, which "is now spending
over $100 billion a year on developing clean energy," Chu said.
Chu said a comprehensive energy and climate change policy, like
legislation proposed by Sens. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., and John
Kerry, D-Mass., will be essential to "set the ground rules to
propmote energy efficiency, renewable energy and stimulate the
start of the nuclear industry again," among other technologies. The
Energy Department chief plans to argue the case for climate
legislation and a cap on U.S. greenhouse-gas emissions Wednesday
before a Senate panel.
The grants announced Monday are the first awarded under a new
program called the Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy that is
modeled on the Defense Department's Advanced Research Projects
Agency.
In battery technology, the DOE awarded $6.9 million for the
development of an all-liquid battery that could enable continuous
power from renewable-energy sources, such as wind and solar power.
The technology, created by Massachusetts Institute of Technology
President Don Sadoway, is viewed by the Energy Department as
holding the potential to break through the cost barrier required
for mass adoption of large-scale battery storage in the electric
grid.
To see a list of grant recipients, click here:
http://www.energy.gov/news2009/documents2009/ARPA-E_Project_Selections.pdf
-By Cassandra Sweet and Siobhan Hughes, Dow Jones Newswires;
415-439-6468; cassandra.sweet@dowjones.com