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Financial
Institutions - Program Partners
The
development of new "on-site" and "near-site" distributed power
generation technologies, such as advanced combustion turbines
and reciprocating engines, microturbines, and fuel cells,
are opening up new opportunities not only for improving power
reliability for buildings but also reducing energy costs.
Equipment for distributed generation is commercially available
from many U.S. companies, including, but not limited to, the
following:
- Combustion
(Oil and Gas) Turbines
- General
Electric
- Westinghouse
Electric
- Solar
Turbine
- Micro-
and Mini-Turbines
- Capstone
Turbines
- DTE
Energy Technologies
- Ingersoll
Rand
- Reciprocating
Engines
- Caterpillar
- Kohler
- Waukesha
Opportunities
for reducing energy costs for buildings come from integrating
buildings cooling, heating and electrical energy needs with
distributed generation. The CHP systems also improve the economics
of operating humidity management system for controlling indoor
air quality. Thermally-activated equipment (e.g. absorption
chillers and desiccant systems) for cooling, heating, and
humidity control are also commercially available from many
U.S. companies, including the following:
- Absorption
Chillers
- American
Yazaki
- Broad
USA
- Carrier
Corporation
- Dunham
Bush
- Robur
Corporation
- The
Trane Corporation
- Desiccant
Systems
- Munters
Corporation
- ATS
- Kathabar
At
present the distributed generation equipment and the thermally-activated
equipment must be customized at each building site. Work is
now in progress, by at least seven teams of US companies,
for developing 'Ready to Go" modular packaged systems to reduce
total system costs, improve overall energy efficiency, and
reduce operating and maintenance costs. Designing plug-and-play
systems for CHP systems is critical to reducing the time and
effort required to integrate system components. Universal
connection standards would greatly simplify installation and
maintenance-and encourage acceptance of the technology by
the architectural and engineering community. Simplified, pre-engineered,
skid-mounted CHP equipment would make building owners responsible
only for connecting power, piping, or ducting. Controls may
be connected to a local network, permitting onsite personnel
to operate the equipment directly from a desktop PC.
DOE
is helping manufacturers work together not only to integrate
their components into packages, but also to make the packages
more readily available in the marketplace. Over $30 million
have been allocated for the project, with industry contributing
43% of the funds. DOE's $18.5 million contribution goes to
seven industry teams for research, development, and testing
of First Generation Packaged Cooling, Heating and Power Systems
for Buildings. The 7 teams receiving the DOE awards, include
the following companies:
- Broad
USA, NY
- Burns
and McDonnell, MO
- Capstone
Turbine Corporation, CA
- Carrier
Corporation, NY
- DTE
Energy Technologies, MI
- Gas
Technology Institute, IL
- Ingersoll
Rand
- NiSource
Energy Technologies, IN
- Pratt
& Whitney
- Solar
Turbines
- The
Trane Company
- United
Technologies
- Waukesha
Engines
A
CHP Integration Test Center has been established at the University
of Maryland, College Park, MD. The objective of the center
is to create a new understanding of how to integrate CHP into
buildings. You are welcome to take
a virtual tour of the test center. Partners in this test
center include the following:
- DOE's
Office of Power Technologies
- DOE
Office of Distributed Energy Resources (DER)
- DOE
CHP Program
- University
of Maryland's Center for Environmental Energy Engineering
- Oak
Ridge National Laboratory
- Pacific
Northwest National Laboratory
- Brookhaven
National Laboratory
- National
Renewable Energy Laboratory
- Broad
USA
- Goettl
Corporation
- ATS
- Kathabar
- Several
gas utilities
The
U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) has also established the Midwest
CHP Application Center (MAC) at the University of Illinois
at Chicago (UIC) Energy Resources Center (ERC). The Center
is a partnership between UIC/ERC and the Gas Technology Institute
(GTI). Its mission is to provide application assistance, technology
information, and educational support in the eight Midwest
states of Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri,
Ohio, and Wisconsin.
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