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Palo Alto program teaches C&I customers value of facility maintenance

Hog farm, utilities, state team up to explore porker power

Lenox wind turbine generates power, interest in renewable energy

Successful incentive program keeps Union County, S.D., in hot water

Industry pioneer urges local development of Nebraska wind farms

Kansas writes its own rules for interconnecting renewable projects

New California building standards raise bar for efficiency measures

Researchers, companies aim for efficient ultra-thin PV cells

Western recognizes University of North Dakota's energy-savings program
Energy Services: An energy-saving tool for all seasons

Topics from the Power Line
Accurate readings needed to assess power factor

Energy Shorts
Calendar of events



New Web site simplifies applying for federal grants
A new Web site unveiled December 9th by Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy G. Thompson, will make it easier for organizations to learn about and apply for Federal grants.

The site, Grants.gov, provides information in a standardized format across agencies and includes a "Find Grant Opportunities" database that allows applicants to search current funding opportunities. The "Apply for Grants" feature greatly simplifies the application process by allowing applicants to download, complete and submit applications for specific grant opportunities from any Federal grant-making agency.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services led the development of the cross-agency Web site that has information about more than 800 available grant programs involving all 26 Federal grant-making agencies. These agencies together award more than $360 billion in grant funds each year.

To date, five agencies—the U.S. Departments of Commerce, Education, Energy, Justice and HHS—have posted application packages to the Grants.gov Web site. This section will expand in coming months as Federal agencies continue to post application information about additional grant opportunities.


Secretary Abraham pledges to speed review of energy-saving standards

At a recent meeting with energy efficiency, environmental and consumer groups and major utility companies, U.S. Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham promised to "cut through the red tape" that has delayed the long-awaited reviews of energy efficiency standards on residential furnaces and other equipment.


"We applaud Secretary Abraham's leadership on energy efficiency standards," said Mark Hopkins, acting co-president of the Alliance to Save Energy, "The secretary's leadership will make all the difference in getting these standards done."

DOE staff used the meeting to review the steps involved in considering a new standard and discussed ways to smooth the process. The standards under review cover residential furnaces and boilers, commercial air conditioners and electric distribution transformers.

The American Council for an Energy Efficient Economy estimated that strengthening the residential furnace standard would save typical households in cold-weather states like Michigan about $120 per winter. Nationally, upgrades to the three standards could save consumers and businesses about $22 billion over the next 20 years, cutting the growth in peak electrical demand by an amount equal to the output of 80 new powerplants. ACEEE projects that the new standards will also save nearly 400 billion cubic feet of natural gas per year, helping to ease the rise of natural gas prices.

Minnesota wind incentive capacity full

Minnesota's production incentive for small, utility scale projects of 2 MW or less completely reached its capacity on Nov. 7, at 9:20 A.M., according to the American Wind Energy Association.

On that date, the Minnesota Energy Office accepted the final project to be eligible for the state payment of 1.5 cent per kWh. The exact time was important, since multiple projects were scrambling to secure power purchases to meet the deadline for the incentive. Developers submitting their applications later in the day missed the opportunity.

Not only is the 200-MW total capacity fully subscribed, but the energy office's waiting list has 23 MW of additional projects in the wings. If an approved project fails to begin generating electricity within 18 months of its approval, that capacity will be re-allocated to wait-listed projects. Renewable energy advocates are concerned that unless the state earmarks more funds for wind generation, attrition will be the only avenue to the incentive for additional projects.

Master's degree offered in alternative fuels

Michigan's Wayne State University has become the first in the nation to offer a master's degree program specifically in alternative fuel technology.

The College of Engineering opened the graduate level course, "Fundamentals of Alternative Energy I" to students with a bachelor's degree in engineering during the winter semester. The study will focus on many aspects including fuel cell catalysts, thermal management, control systems, smart sensors, process safety, vehicle design, traffic simulation, infrastructure management and engineering management.

"Fundamentals of Alternative Energy I" is the first piece of a new engineering master's degree program in a curriculum planned to be fully in place by fall 2005. The college is also planning an AET graduate certificate program and an undergraduate concentration program.

A $300,000 grant from NextEnergy is funding the new program. NextEnergy, a nonprofit corporation the state of Michigan created last year, is providing the spark and support to galvanize an alternative fuel technology economy in the state. Lansing Community College, Lawrence Technological University and Kettering University also received NextEnergy AET curriculum grants that involve associate degree and certificate programs.

California's self-generation rebate program extended

California's outgoing Governor Gray Davis signed legislation on Oct. 12, to extend the state's Self-Generation Incentive Program through the end of 2007. The program that has done so much to stimulate the growth of solar power in California was set to expire at the end of 2004.

The new legislation, Assembly Bill 1685, also set emissions standards and required a minimum conversion efficiency of 60 percent for any fossil-fueled distributed generation that seeks to qualify for the incentive payment. Combined heat and power projects can earn credits against the emission standards based on how much heat they recover.

The California Public Utilities Commission initiated the program in 2001 to offer incentives to customers of Pacific Gas & Electric Company, San Diego Gas & Electric Company, Southern California Edison and Southern California Gas Company to install "self-generation" units to lessen the electricity load on the power grid.