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The first award under
the state of Ohio's $100-million, three-year fuel-cell research
and development program is expected to be made shortly. The
state has put up $839,000 toward the $1.26-million cost of
a 250-kw fuel-cell powerplant for the city of Westerville.
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GRID Ohio town's fuel cell will provide grid support.
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Columbus-based wholesale power
provider American Municipal Power-Ohio will manage the project,
which is expected to use a unit manufactured by FuelCell Energy
Inc., Danbury, Conn., and distributed by Caterpillar Inc.,
Peoria, Ill. Contract negotiations should be complete within
a few weeks, says FuelCell spokesman Bill Baker.
"This is the first utility-scale
powerplant installed at a substation to provide grid support,"
says Malcolm Jacobson, FuelCell vice president of market development.
"That's a very good application
of fuel cells," says Rusi Patel, vice president of Kema-Xenergy,
an energy-services and consulting company in Burlington, Mass.
Fuel cells electrolytically combine hydrogen with oxygen to
create electricity and heat.
President Bush's focus on the hydrogen
economy in his recent State of the Union address bodes well
for fuel-cell technology, Baker says. "Something has
got to happen now, and that is stationary fuel cells that
make their own hydrogen," he says. Unlike other fuel
cells, FCE units re-form hydrogen internally from natural
gas.
Although the Dept. of Energy has
active programs for clean-energy technologies, leadership
in clean-energy development has come from the state and local
level, according to Clean Energy Trends 2003. In the report
published last month, Clean Edge Inc., an Oakland, Calif.-based
clean-energy market-research and consulting firm, forecasts
that fuel cells for mobile, stationary and portable applications
will continue to grow aggressively from $500 million to $12.5
billion by 2012. "We believe we're going to see the largest
growth in the stationary and portable" fuel cells, says
Ron Pernick, co-founder and principal.
Michigan and California also have
programs promoting automotive fuel-cell research and development.
As if to validate Clean Edge's
point, the Connecticut Clean Energy Fund, Rocky Hill, in late
February announced that it has selected 24 of 60 proposals
it received in response to the first phase of its 2002 program
to promote the commercial viability and development of fuel-cell
power generation. Proposals under Round 2, seeking a share
of nearly $9 million of state funding, are due April 1.
Six projects selected under the
2001 program will begin operation within six months, says
Subhash Chandra, CCEF managing director and chief technology
officer. The largest will be a two-cell, 500-kw plant at a
bakery in Bloomfield.
A 50-Mw fuel-cell project selected
in the same round is still in development. The plant would
stack 25 cells of a 2-Mw FuelCell Energy model to be rolled
out this year, says Jim Murkette, CEO of Purepower LLC, Norwalk,
Conn. "We're not inventing anything new, just putting
together a vast array of simple pieces," he says. It
would be installed in transmission-constrained Fairfield County
in southwest Connecticut to power a compressor station, probably
for Iroquois Gas Transmission Co., according to CCEF. Excess
generation would be sold into the grid.
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