DOE Selects Projects for up to $50 Million of
Federal Funding to Modernize the Nation's Electricity
Grid
Apr 22 , 2008 - Energy Department
Documents and Publications
U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Assistant
Secretary for Electricity Delivery and Energy Reliability
Kevin Kolevar today announced the Department's
plans to invest up to $50 million over five years
(Fiscal Years 2008 - 2012), subject to appropriations
from Congress, in nine demonstration projects competitively
selected to increase efficiency in the nation's
electricity grid. The Renewable and Distributed
Systems Integration (RDSI) technologies demonstrated
in these projects aim to reduce peak load electricity
demand by at least 15 percent at distribution feeders-the
power lines delivering electricity to consumers-and
are part of the Bush Administration's ongoing efforts
to enhance the efficiency and reliability of our
nation's energy infrastructure to ensure a reliable
supply of energy to all Americans.
"Cutting-edge technologies that enhance the
efficiency and dependability of the nation's electricity
grid are critical to the Bush Administration's
overarching goal of ensuring an affordable and
reliable supply of electricity to the American
people," Assistant Secretary Kolevar said. "These
proposals will help to increase reliability in
our electricity grid by defraying both the cost
and effort associated with upgrading distribution
lines or adding new generation capacity to meet
peak electrical load, furthering our ongoing efforts
to increase national economic and energy security."
The projects were selected in response to DOE's
Office of Electricity Delivery and Energy Reliability
(OE) April 2007 Funding Opportunity Announcement
seeking applications for research and development
activities to improve the security of controls
systems for energy delivery and increase the use
of distributed generation during peak load periods.
Negotiations between selected applicants and OE
will begin immediately to determine final project
plans and funding levels. Selected projects include:
Allegheny Power will develop the "West Virginia
Super Circuit" in conjunction with West Virginia
University (WVU) Research Park, WVU Advanced Power
and Electricity Research Center, North Carolina
State University, Research and Development Solutions,
Augusta Systems, Inc., and Tollgrade Communications.
They will improve distribution system performance,
reliability, and security of electric supply through
the integration of distributed resources and advanced
technologies. (Duration: 5 years; Cost: $5.4 million
federal/4 million non-federal)
ATK Launch Systems, along with partners Rocky
Mountain Power and P&E AUTOMATION, will demonstrate
load reduction through an integrated network of
diverse renewable generation technologies and intelligent
automation. The project will integrate renewable
generation and energy storage resources, including
a novel compressed-air generation technology, wind-turbines,
heat recovery systems, solar trough booster technology,
a steam turbine, and hydro-turbine resources. (Duration:
5 years; Cost: $1.6 million federal/$2 million
non-federal)
Chevron Energy Solutions will collaborate with
Alameda County, PG&E, VRB Power Systems, SatCon
Technology Corporation, the University of Wisconsin,
the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Lawrence
Berkeley National Laboratory, and Energy and Environmental
Economics to significantly reduce peak load and
measurably improve power reliability at the Santa
Rita Jail. The project will integrate solar energy,
fuel cell, energy storage and control systems.
(Duration: 3 years; Cost: $7 million federal/$7
million non-federal)
The City of Fort Collins, in cooperation with
Larimer County, Colorado State University, InteGrid
Lab, Community Foundation of Northern Colorado,
the Governor's Energy Office, Advanced Energy,
Woodward, Spirae, and Eaton, will research, develop,
and demonstrate a 3.5 megawatt coordinated and
integrated system of Mixed Distributed Resources
in Fort Collins to Achieve a 20-30 percent peak
load reduction on multiple distribution feeders.
(Duration: 3 years; Cost: $6.3 million federal/$4.9
million non-federal)
Consolidated Edison Co. of New York, Inc., along
with Verizon, Innovative Power, Infotility, and
Enernex, will develop and demonstrate methodologies
to achieve true interoperability between a delivery
company and end-use retail electric customers,
enhancing the reliability of the distribution grid
and the efficiency of its operations. (Duration:
3 years; Cost: $6.8 million federal/6.2 million
non-federal)
The Illinois Institute of Technology (IIT) will
collaborate with Exelon/ComEd, Galvin Electricity
Initiative, S&C Electric, and others to develop
and demonstrate a system that will achieve "perfect
power" at the main campus of IIT through the
implementation of distributed resources, advanced
sensing, switching, feeder reconfiguration, and
controls. This effort will be replicable at any
municipality-sized system. (Duration: 5 years;
Cost: $7 million federal/$5.2 million non-federal)
San Diego Gas and Electric will develop a dispatchable
distribution feeder for peak load reduction and
wind-farming in conjunction with: Horizon Energy
Group, Advanced Control Systems, Pacific Northwest
National Laboratory, the University of San Diego,
Motorola, and Lockheed Martin. The project aims
to prove the effectiveness of integrating multiple
distributed energy resources with advanced controls
and communication systems to improve stability
and reduce peak loads on feeders/substations. (Duration:
3 years; Cost $6.9 million federal/$4 million non-federal)
The University of Hawaii, in cooperation with
General Electric, Hawaiian Electric Company, Inc.,
Maui Electric Company, Columbus Electric Cooperative,
New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology,
Sentech, and UPC Wind, will explore the management
of distribution system resources for improved service
quality and reliability, transmission congestion
relief, and grid support functions. (Duration:
3 years; Cost: $7 million federal/$8 million non-federal)
The University of Nevada will collaborate with
homebuilder Pulte Homes, Nevada Power Company,
and GE Ecomagination to address the construction
of energy efficient homes that overcome electricity
grid integration, control, and communications issues
by building integrated photovoltaic systems, battery
energy storage, and consumer products linked to
advanced meters that enable and facilitate an efficient
response to consumer energy demands. (Duration:
5 years: Cost: $6.9 million federal/$13.9 million
non-federal)
RDSI focuses on integrating renewable energy,
distributed generation, energy storage, thermally
activated technologies, and demand response into
the electric distribution and transmission system.
This integration is aimed toward managing peak
loads, offering new value-added services such as
differentiated power quality to meet individual
user needs, and enhancing asset use.
For more information on the Bush Administration's
ongoing efforts to modernize the electric grid;
enhance security and reliability of the energy
infrastructure; and facilitate recovery from disruptions
to energy supply, visit: www.oe.energy.gov.
-DOE-