Archive for April, 2008
DoE Wants To Hear from You
This is time sensitive folks, if you want to participate, RSVP TODAY to go.geothermal@go.doe.gov – since time is short, comments may also be submitted via email to the same address before April 28.
The U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Geothermal Technologies Program (GTP) is seeking input from the oil/gas and geothermal community (industry, academia, etc.) to assist in the development of two Enhanced Geothermal System (EGS) Funding Opportunity Announcements (FOAs) and a Request for Information (RFI), as summarized below.
You are invited to participate in a pre-solicitation meeting scheduled for April 25th in Houston, Texas at the Houston Museum of Natural Science, lower level conference room, beginning at 9:00 AM. We will be reviewing our plans for two funding opportunities and a RFI. We value your input on the construct of a reconstituted geothermal effort focusing on Enhanced Geothermal Systems prior to final decisions made by the Department. If you are unable to participate at this event in person, you are encouraged to provide input through email, as described below.
DRAFT Funding Opportunity Announcement FY08: Enhanced Geothermal Systems Research, Development, and Reservoir Stimulation
Topic Area 1: Enhanced Geothermal Systems Technologies – This topic area seeks projects that address key aspects of engineered reservoir creation, management, and utilization, by developing tools and techniques useful to temperatures up to 300°C and depths as great as 10,000 meters. Areas of interest include: zonal isolation; down-hole pumps; fracture characterization; image fluid flow; tracers and tracer interpretation; high-temperature logging tools and sensors; and stimulation prediction models. These technology improvements are discussed in greater detail in the report, “An Evaluation of Enhanced Geothermal Systems Technology,†posted on the DOE website: https://www.eere.energy.gov/geothermal/pdfs/evaluation_egs_tech_2008.pdf.
Topic Area 2: Enhanced Geothermal Systems Reservoir Stimulation – This topic area seeks projects that demonstrate stimulation techniques that successfully establish inter-well connectivity at viable flow and heat extraction rates for commercial EGS production using techniques such as hydraulic stimulation.
Comments in response to these topic areas can be provided to the DOE Golden Field Office as an attachment to an e-mail message to go.geothermal@go.doe.gov. Please provide comments by April 28th.
DRAFT Funding Opportunity Announcement FY08: Institutional Challenges
Topic Area 1: Geothermal National Data Center – GTP is seeking to award one grant on a competitive basis to develop a data center that has reliable and accurate data on geothermal resources. The data center will support a wide range of development and utilization of geothermal resources. The Applicant will be responsible for collecting, maintaining, and disseminating information in the public domain. The Applicant will also be responsible for incorporating best practices from the information technology industry. The Applicant should also include a proposal for a classification system that will provide industry and investors a clearly defined framework to evaluate geothermal prospects and establish a common industry language for geothermal development.
Topic Area 2: Industry Communications – GTP is seeking opportunities to coordinate efforts and share information with domestic and international partners engaged in research and development of geothermal systems and related technology.
Topic Area 3: Geothermal Curriculum Development and International Student Exchange – U.S. industry needs new geothermal professionals to meet the demands of the growing geothermal development market. GTP is seeking to award grant funding, on a competitive basis, to develop geothermal educational curriculum for an institute of higher education. The institute will serve as an educational resource to students in relevant fields of study, and the data generated by the facility shall be available to students and the general public. The curriculum development would include sponsoring a student exchange with participating foreign universities. Students who utilized this curriculum would gain first hand knowledge through classroom education in the U.S. and a foreign country, field work, a National Lab or industry internship in geothermal research and development, policy, regulatory, and/or environmental issues.
Comments in response to these topic areas can be provided to the DOE Golden Field Office as an attachment to an e-mail message to go.geothermal@go.doe.gov. Please provide comments by April 28th.
Request for Information DE-PS36-08GO38003: Enhanced Geothermal Systems Technologies Validation Site(s)
The Department of Energy is seeking information from the geothermal community to assist in the development of a possible Funding Opportunity Announcement, acquisition, or other procurement option in regard to establishing Enhanced Geothermal Systems Technologies Validation Site(s). This will facilitate high risk technology development, validation, and deployment by participating organizations that would not otherwise take place at a commercial geothermal field. The information gathered from this RFI will be used by DOE for internal planning and decision making purposes, and will not be released to the general public.
The RFI will be listed at https://e-center.doe.gov/iips/faopor.nsf/Solicitation%20By%20Program%20Office?OpenView&Start=1&Count=30&Expand=3#3 for comment. Comments in response to this RFI must be provided to the DOE Golden Field Office as an attachment to an e-mail message to RFI-08GO38003@go.doe.gov. Comments must be provided no later than 8 p.m. EDT, on May 30, 2008.
The Department thanks you for your assistance and input.
Thanks to Liz Battocletti of Bob Lawrence & Associates for distributing this message.
DIY Solar Hot Water Heater
In the spirit of Earth Day, here’s a little project virtually anyone can attempt, if you’ve got any solar resource at all. Most homes spend around 30% of their energy budget heating water. Get 100 meters of black hose, a few connectors, and a place to site your heater and you’re in business with a cost effective solar hot water heater.
With the humor out of the way, here’s the rest of the story…
Hats off to Green Power Science who put these entertaining, yet cheesy, videos together.
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Earth Day Funny
Attribution: TabToons/CagleCartoons
No doubt there are serious issues to address on Earth Day. But a little humor never hurt and oh, by the way, just in case we’re worried about Earth? Don’t. This really should be “save the humans from themselves day.” Earth will be just fine long after we’re gone…
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The Baseload Crunch
Last week, Thomas Blakeslee of the Clearlight Foundation wrote a piece for Renewable Energy World on the coming baseload crunch. It’s well worth your time to read the article in its entirety.
The core thesis to the piece is that adding wind and solar are great, but they’re both intermittent power sources and there is only so much intermittent supply that should be added to the grid. We’ve heard different levels, 20% being the most commonly accepted figure.
Blakeslee gives an impassioned argument on why we should be paying much more attention to geothermal power as an energy source – something that certainly resonates with us – due to resource availability, superior capacity factor, and the advances in harvest technologies that have appeared over the last 30 years.
SunPower hits $1B
SunPower, the leading PV solar manufacturer, hit the big time with their latest financial results. Their run rate is now north of $1B (having turned in a $274M quarter) and the business model is now profitable (with earnings increasing 1,000% year over year.)
We here at MeV aren’t bullish on PV solar, yet it does have some undeniable appeal particularly as a massively distributed generation system which not only lends itself to scale, but solves problems like transmission and distribution. However, we still believe the economics don’t solve and ultimately, once the hype recedes, the PV industry will collapse unless the basic economics work.
Another intangible aspect of solar PV is momentum and this technology has it. People understand that the sun is hot and that ultimately, most energy we harvest is in some way powered by the sun (hundreds of millions of years ago for plants having transformed into hydrocarbons for instance.) In any case, congratulations SunPower, that’s a phenomenal quarter you’ve turned in and despite our outlook on PV overall, we hope you drive the economics to solve and prove our pessimistic view on PV very wrong in the end.