| GRAND FORKS,
N.D.--The Energy & Environmental Research Center (EERC) at the University
of North Dakota (UND) was approved for a $2.5 million award from the North
Dakota Centers of Excellence Commission to build a new facility for the
EERC's National Center for Hydrogen Technology.
The $3 million, 15,000-square-foot
facility is dedicated to the development and commercialization of hydrogen
and fuel cell technologies and is expected to create between 50 and 100
new high-paying technical jobs and attract $50 million in research contracts
in the short term. It will be built to the west of the current EERC facilities
on the UND campus.
"This award recognizes the value
that the EERC holds in offering hundreds of quality jobs, partnerships
with industry, and opportunities to spin off high-tech businesses in our
region," said EERC Director Gerald Groenewold. "The EERC's National Center
for Hydrogen Technology represents a significant partnership between the
federal government, the state, private industry, and higher education and
provides a cornerstone to address this nation's enormous challenge of developing
new technologies which will guarantee this country's energy security for
the long term--the EERC will make North Dakota proud."
The EERC submitted a proposal to
the newly formed Centers of Excellence Commission in May 2005, the first
proposal sent to the commission. The Centers of Excellence application
required a 2-to-1 match of funds from non-state sources, but the EERC's
proposal offered a 5-to-1 match, and over the next 5 years, it is expected
to exceed a 20-to-1 match. The award will be matched with $500,000 from
the Grand Forks Growth Fund, which is managed by the Grand Forks Job Development
Authority.
"We would like to thank the city
of Grand Forks for its tremendous support and financial partnership," Groenewold
said. "This new facility will house world-class activities which will draw
global attention to Grand Forks and bring more world-class talent to our
community."
The EERC was designated the National
Center for Hydrogen Technology by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) in
November 2004 in recognition of over 50 years of hydrogen research involving
fossil fuels and renewable energy. U.S. Senator Byron Dorgan secured initial
funding through DOE, that funding has been leveraged by numerous corporate
partners, including Air Products and Chemicals, Chippewa Valley Ethanol,
Basin Electric Power Cooperative, ePower Synergies, Inc., Hydrogenics Corporation,
IdaTech, Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne, SGL Carbon, Schunk-INEX, Siemens
Energy Systems, and Xcel Energy.
The award will now go through three
more levels of approval by the State Board of Higher Education, the North
Dakota Department of Commerce Foundation, and the Legislative Budget Section
before final disbursement of funds in early December.
Groenewold says construction on the
National Center for Hydrogen Technology facility should begin in spring
2006, with anticipated completion in fall 2006.

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