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).

March 17, 2004

<#news>News and Events

<#6719>DOE Launches "Energy Hog" Energy Efficiency Campaign
<#6732>DOE Offers $6 Million to Advance Solid-State Lighting
<#6731>DOE Releases Long-Term Hydrogen Research Plan
<#6733>Ford to Employ Toyota's Hybrid Electric Control Technology
<#6734>General Electric Wins Approval to Buy AstroPower Assets
<#6735>U.S. Firms to Test Ocean Wave, Current, and Thermal Technologies

<#site>Site News

New FEMP Web Site Reflects the Program's Energy Expertise

<#energy>Energy Connections

Latest U.S. Census Shows More Workers Driving Alone to Work



News and Events

DOE Launches "Energy Hog" Energy Efficiency Campaign

 
The Energy Hog is energy efficiency's new arch-villain.
Credit: Tracy Locke

DOE has launched a national public service advertising campaign 
designed to make children and their parents aware of energy efficient 
behavior. The Energy Efficiency Campaign, launched last week, 
features a reprehensible new villain-the energy-wasting Energy 
Hog-and includes public service announcements on television, radio, 
and the Internet. The Energy Efficiency Campaign currently targets 
children between the ages of eight and 13, but in future phases it 
will also target parents and teachers. The Advertising Council and 
Energy Outreach Colorado developed the Energy Hog and the campaign, 
and sponsors include DOE, The Home Depot, the North American 
Insulation Manufacturers Association, the National Fuel Funds 
Network, and 20 state energy offices. See the 
<http://www.energy.gov/engine/content.do?PUBLIC_ID=15213&BT_CODE=PR_PR 
ESSRELEASES&TT_CODE=PRESSRELEASE>DOE press release.

The centerpiece of the campaign is the new Energy Hog Web site, which 
is aimed at children, but also includes resources for parents and 
teachers, as well as Internet versions of the Energy Hog ads. The Web 
site's main attractions are the Energy Hog Training Camp and its five 
training games, where children can train to become Energy Hog Busters 
and learn fun and simple ways to use energy more efficiently. But 
we'll warn you right now: those Energy Hog Buster training games 
aren't easy! To become an Energy Hog Buster yourself, visit the 
<http://www.energyhog.org/>Energy Hog Web site.

DOE Offers $6 Million to Advance Solid-State Lighting

DOE's National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL) issued a 
solicitation in late February for research projects relating to light 
emitting diodes (LEDs) and organic LEDs (OLEDs). These so-called 
solid-state lighting sources could revolutionize the lighting 
industry by yielding long-lasting, efficient lights with features 
that today's light bulbs could never achieve. DOE plans to spread $6 
million among three projects that will be carried out over one to 
three years. Applications are due on April 15th. See the 
<https://e-center.doe.gov/iips/faopor.nsf/1be0f2271893ba198525644b006b 
c0be/4f7967171740b7c885256e46004fce4a?OpenDocument>solicitation on 
the DOE "e-Center" Web site.

DOE's Solid State Lighting program has already chalked up one 
success: GE Global Research announced in early March that it has 
broken two world records with a demonstration OLED device. OLEDs are 
thin sheets of plastic-like material that emit light when a voltage 
is applied to them, and GE has managed to build a 
two-foot-by-two-foot panel that emits 1,200 lumens of light with an 
efficiency of 15 lumens per watt, on par with an incandescent bulb. 
That makes it the biggest and most efficient OLED device yet. Under a 
three-year project funded by DOE and NETL, GE has increased the light 
output of its OLED by a factor of 600 while boosting efficiency by a 
factor of four. See the 
<"http://www.ge.com/cgi-bin/cnn-storydisplay_nu.cgi?story=/www/bw/webb 
ox/bw.030404/240644365.htm&strip=1&notimestamp=1&noeditor=1&nohrule=1& 
header=%2Fwww%2Fbw%2Fge%2Ftest-top.htm&footer=%2Fwww%2Fbw%2Fge%2Ftest- 
bot.htm&textcolor=%23000000&bgcolor=%23FFFFFF&>GE press release.

LEDs continued to find new applications in recent months, appearing 
in the taillights of several new automobiles, such as the Lexus LS 
430. The white-light LEDs from Lumileds Lighting are being used as 
daytime running lights on the Audi A8 6.0, and the BMW 5 Series is 
using LEDs from Osram Opto Semiconductors for a heads-up instrument 
display. The 2005 Ford Mustang will even use an LED system from 
Delphi Technology to allow driver-selected custom color backlighting 
on its instrument panel. Meanwhile, Carmanah Technologies, Inc. has 
been using its solar-powered LED lights to light up everything from 
the taxiways at the Truckee Tahoe Airport in California, to Coast 
Guard aid-to-navigation lights, to pedestrian crossings. See the 
press releases from 
<http://www.lexus.com/about/press_releases/popups/2003/pr_09_24_a.html 
 >Lexus, <http://www.lumileds.com/newsandevents/press.htm>Lumileds, 
<http://www.osram-os.com/news/index.html>Osram, 
<http://www.delphi.com/media/news/pressReleases/pr25992-12112003>Delph 
i, and <http://www.carmanah.com/index.asp?a=iv&m=news>Carmanah.

DOE Releases Long-Term Hydrogen Research Plan

DOE released a research plan on March 10th that outlines the agency's 
planned activities, milestones, and deliverables needed to support 
the shift to a hydrogen-based transportation energy system. The 
"Hydrogen Posture Plan" identifies milestones for technology 
development over the next decade, leading up to a commercialization 
decision by industry in 2015. The plan integrates the research, 
development, and demonstration activities of four DOE offices: Energy 
Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE); Fossil Energy; Nuclear 
Energy, Science, and Technology; and Science.

An integrated hydrogen program will improve the effectiveness and 
accountability of DOE's research activities and increase the 
probability of success in achieving technical milestones on the road 
to a hydrogen economy. DOE has also coordinated its work on codes and 
standards with the U.S. Department of Transportation and other 
agencies. The plan also points out that the use of hydrogen as an 
energy carrier can enhance energy security while reducing air 
pollution and greenhouse gas emissions. See the 
<http://www.energy.gov/engine/content.do?PUBLIC_ID=15220&BT_CODE=P
R_PRESSRELEASES&TT_CODE=PRESSRELEASE>DOE press release, or go 
directly to the Hydrogen Posture Plan 
(<http://www.eere.energy.gov/hydrogenandfuelcells/pdfs/hydrogen_postur 
e_plan.pdf>PDF 2.1 MB). 
<http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/alternate.html>Download 
Acrobat Reader.

Ford to Employ Toyota's Hybrid Electric Control Technology

Toyota Motor Corporation announced last week that it has licensed its 
hybrid control technology to Ford Motor Company for use with Ford's 
hybrid electric system. While Ford's hybrid electric system will be 
used on the Escape Hybrid, the Toyota technology will provide the 
electronic controls for the system. Ford is also licensing Toyota's 
emission control technology for lean-burning engines. While 
lean-burning engines are more fuel-efficient, controlling air 
emissions from the engines is more difficult than in standard 
engines. Ford currently plans to begin selling the Escape Hybrid in 
late summer. See the 
<http://www.toyota.co.jp/en/news/04/0309.html>Toyota press release.

According to a report released by ABI Research on Monday, hybrids 
could make up 10 percent of U.S. midsize passenger vehicle sales by 
2006. See the 
<http://www.abiresearch.com/abiprdisplay2.jsp?pressid=245>ABI 
Research press release.

 
The Army's SmarTruck III features hydraulic hybrid technology.
Credit: U.S. Army

Meanwhile, both the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and 
the U.S. Army unveiled prototype vehicles last week that use a 
hydraulic energy-storage system rather than an electric system. The 
hydraulic systems provide a "launch assist" for heavy vehicles as 
they accelerate. The EPA unveiled a hybrid hydraulic sport utility 
vehicle (SUV) that it claims can achieve a 55 percent improvement in 
fuel economy over other SUVs, and the U.S. Army's National Automotive 
Center introduced a hybrid hydraulic military truck, called the 
SmarTruck III. Both vehicles were on display at the Society of 
Automotive Engineers' 2004 World Congress. See the 
<http://www.epa.gov/otaq/technology/inthenews.htm>EPA and 
<http://www.liemac.com/smartruckIII/PressKit/Default.aspx>U.S. Army 
announcements.

General Electric Wins Approval to Buy AstroPower Assets

AstroPower, Inc. announced last week that the U.S. Bankruptcy Court 
presiding over the company's Chapter 11 proceedings has approved the 
sale of most of AstroPower's assets to Heritage Power LLC, which is 
representing the General Electric Company (GE). The sale price was 
$15 million cash, and AstroPower expects the sale to close by the end 
of this month. Although GE has yet to comment on the sale, the 
company has a good track record of reviving renewable energy 
businesses, having bought the Enron Wind Corporation in May 2002 and 
developed it into a thriving business offering new multi-megawatt 
wind turbines. If the AstroPower purchase goes through, GE will be a 
U.S. leader in both wind and solar energy technologies. AstroPower 
filed for bankruptcy in February after months of financial 
difficulties. See the 
<http://www.astropower.com/press_releases.htm>AstroPower press 
release and the 
<http://www.gepower.com/businesses/ge_wind_energy/en/index.htm>GE 
Wind Energy Web site.

While AstroPower is changing hands, another U.S. solar power company 
is preparing to expand. Ohio's First Solar Corporation expects to 
produce 6 megawatts of solar cells this year and is currently 
expanding its production four-fold, allowing the company to produce 
25 megawatts of solar cells in 2005. The State of Ohio is providing a 
$5-million low-interest loan to aid in the expansion. See the First 
Solar press release 
(<http://www.firstsolar.com/pdf/030904%20First%20Solar%20Ohio%20Loan%2 
0FINAL.pdf>PDF 102 KB). 
<http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/alternate.html>Download 
Acrobat Reader.

U.S. Firms to Test Ocean Wave, Current, and Thermal Technologies

In recent years, several European companies have led the way in 
developing new ocean energy technologies, but that may be changing: 
U.S. firms are heading up three new ocean energy projects. The 
project developers claim that all three of the projects will provide 
power to electrical grids.

New Jersey's Ocean Power Technologies, Inc. (OPT) has signed an 
agreement with Spanish utility Iberdola S.A. to build a 1.25-megawatt 
wave energy plant that will provide power to the Spanish power grid. 
OPT's device uses a buoy to capture wave energy and convert it into 
electricity in an ocean-floor-mounted generator. See the 
<http://www.londonstockexchange.com/rns/announcement.asp?AnnID=752184> 
OPT announcement and 
<http://www.oceanpowertechnologies.com/technology/>Web site.

Closer to home, the U.S. Navy is working with Florida Hydro Power and 
Light (FHPL) to test an innovative turbine that captures the energy 
of ocean currents. The open-centered turbine will be deployed in the 
Gulf Stream, and the Navy intends to connect it to the Florida power 
grid. See the 
<http://www.dt.navy.mil/pressreleases/archives/000042.html>announcemen 
t from the Naval Surface Division's Carderock Division and visit the 
<http://www.floridahydro.com/Technology.htm>FHPL Web site.

But perhaps the biggest surprise comes from U.S. engineering company 
R.W. Beck, which intends to work with Baltimore's Solar Sea Power 
International (SSP) to build a 10-megawatt ocean thermal energy 
conversion (OTEC) plant on a Caribbean island by 2007. OTEC plants 
use the temperature difference between the sun-warmed surface of the 
ocean and the cold ocean depths to produce power, and can also 
produce desalinated water as a byproduct. DOE research in OTEC 
technology culminated in a 50-kilowatt OTEC plant in Hawaii in the 
early 1990s. R.W. Beck and SSP will detail their plans at the ASME 
(American Society of Mechanical Engineers) Power conference in 
Baltimore in late March. See the 
<http://www.rwbeck.com/press/2004/03_09B_04.asp>R.W. Beck 
announcement, the <http://www.seasolarpower.com/index.html>SSP Web 
site, and the <http://www.asmeconferences.org/Power04/index.cfm>ASME 
Power Web site.

Archived information about <http://www.nrel.gov/otec/>DOE's OTEC 
research program is available on the Web site of DOE's National 
Renewable Energy Laboratory.



Site News

<http://www.eere.energy.gov/femp/>New FEMP Web Site Reflects the 
Program's Energy Expertise

The Federal Energy Management Program (FEMP), one of 11 energy 
programs in the DOE Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy 
(EERE), has captured its energy expertise in a newly revised Web site 
that provides simple, intuitive access to information about the 
program. FEMP helps the nation's largest energy consumer-the federal 
government-save energy, conserve water, and use more renewable and 
distributed energy. Reflecting that role, the FEMP Web site is packed 
full of energy-efficiency recommendations, energy cost calculators, 
information about a wide variety of energy technologies, and 
financing information. The program's new Web site has an updated look 
and feel to reflect the look of the EERE Web site, and provides the 
latest news from the program. See the new 
<http://www.eere.energy.gov/femp/>FEMP Web site.



Energy Connections

Latest U.S. Census Shows More Workers Driving Alone to Work

More than three-quarters of U.S. workers drove to work alone in 2000, 
according to a newly released brief from the U.S. Census Bureau. Of 
the remaining workers, 12 percent carpooled, 4.7 percent used public 
transportation, 3.3 percent worked at home, 2.9 percent walked to 
work, and 1.2 percent used other means, such as a motorcycle or 
bicycle. Of all modes of travel to work, driving by car increased the 
most between the 1990 and 2000 U.S. censuses, and the number of 
people walking and taking public transportation to work actually 
dropped. Over the same time period, the average travel time to work 
increased by 3.1 minutes to 25.5 minutes, a 14 percent increase. See 
the Census 2000 Brief, "Journey to Work: 2000" 
(<http://www.census.gov/prod/2004pubs/c2kbr-33.pdf>PDF 503 KB). 
<http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/alternate.html>Download 
Acrobat Reader.

What makes regional transportation systems successful? According to a 
new report from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), 
metropolitan areas with "smart growth" transportation systems-those 
that feature extensive transit services, shorter block sizes, and a 
relatively dense and well-connected network of streets-experience 
more efficient vehicle travel and modest improvements in traffic 
congestion. In contrast, the study found that lane additions and 
decreased population densities (two common characteristics of urban 
sprawl) do not prevent worsening congestion. For example, congestion 
delays in Detroit, Michigan, nearly quadrupled between 1982 and 2000, 
although the number of miles of road available, counting all the 
lanes, increased 13 percent and the population increased only 5.5 
percent. But that population has spread out over a larger area, as 
Detroit's urbanized land area expanded by 21 percent. See the EPA 
report, 
"<http://www.epa.gov/smartgrowth/CharPerm_RTS.htm>Characteristics and 
Performance of Regional Transportation Systems."



This newsletter is funded by DOE's 
<http://www.eere.energy.gov/>Office of Energy Efficiency and 
Renewable Energy (EERE) and is also available on the 
<http://www.eere.energy.gov/news/>EERE news page. You can 
<http://www.eere.energy.gov/news/about.cfm>subscribe to the EERE 
Network News using our simple online form, and you can also 
<http://www.eere.energy.gov/news/changes.cfm>update your email 
address or 
<http://www.eere.energy.gov/news/unsubscribe.cfm>unsubscribe online.

If you have questions or comments about this newsletter, please 
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>contact the editor, Kevin Eber, at 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


You are currently subscribed as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]


------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor ---------------------~-->
Buy Ink Cartridges or Refill Kits for your HP, Epson, Canon or Lexmark
Printer at MyInks.com. Free s/h on orders $50 or more to the US & Canada.
http://www.c1tracking.com/l.asp?cid=5511
http://us.click.yahoo.com/mOAaAA/3exGAA/qnsNAA/FGYolB/TM
---------------------------------------------------------------------~->

Biofuel at Journey to Forever:
http://journeytoforever.org/biofuel.html

Biofuels list archives:
http://infoarchive.net/sgroup/biofuel/

Please do NOT send Unsubscribe messages to the list address.
To unsubscribe, send an email to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
     http://groups.yahoo.com/group/biofuel/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
     [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
     http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 


Reply via email to