| Boom seen
in Freedom Field, just not real soon
ROCKFORD — Job creation and economic
development were among the benefits promised by Freedom Field supporters
when they announced the project to the public in late April.
The alternative-energy technologies
research-and-development center proposed for the Chicago/Rockford International
Airport is initially expected to cost up to $5 million to become operational.
These officials said they hope it will eventually wean itself from tax
dollars and become self-sustaining.
But for now, their plan calls for
early funding to come from three government sources: the airport, Winnebago
County and the federal government.
These hopes could certainly be realized.
But any jobs or economic boost for the Rock River Valley stemming directly
from Freedom Field, and its becoming a tax-dollar-free operation, probably
would take years to come about. Why? Because of the cutting-edge technologies
involved in the plan, according to industry and government officials.
"The way to look at it would be long
term,"said Hans Detweiler, deputy director for energy and recycling for
the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity.
Alternative energy center
Freedom Field, proposed by a coalition
of area governments and businesses, is slated to open in summer 2008 on
a 10-acre site on the airport's southwest side. Plans include a 40,000-square-foot
research and demonstration center, solar and wind energy equipment, and
a hydrogen fueling station.
The solar and wind equipment would
generate electricity, which would be used to produce hydrogen to fuel vehicles.
The electricity also would power the complex and possibly the lights at
recreation fields proposed near the center.
The research center also is expected
to have other renewable fuels available for vehicles, such as methane piped
in from the nearby Winnebago Landfill and ethanol made from locally grown
corn.
For Winnebago County officials, the
multimillion-dollar project represents a way for the region to position
itself in the growing industry of green-fuels development as the nation
struggles to shake its dependence on petroleum products and foreign oil.
County Board Chairman Scott Christiansen
said the center would fuel not only vehicles, but economic development.
The center could provide to businesses
a cheap energy source that would drive down their costs, a fact that would
attract companies to the 6,600-acre Rockford Global Trade Park that surrounds
the airport, he said.
Freedom Field is ?another tool? that
would help give the region an edge with companies looking to expand or
relocate, Christiansen said. The center "shows we are progressive in our
thinking, we are cutting-edge."
Bob Lindstrom, regional energy program
director for Rock Valley College and a key player in Freedom Field, expects
interest in the project to help boost related opportunities at nearby higher
education institutes.
He notes that Rock Valley College
is offering an introduction-to-renewable-energy course in the fall semester.
He said this will help train technicians and engineers.
In addition, Lindstrom believes that
the nation is about to begin ?a third industrial revolution? focused on
products related to alternative energy. He said Freedom Field will help
position the region as a center of manufacturing for wind and solar equipment.
Taxpayer-dependent
No hard numbers detailing potential
jobs or economic development are available. The coalition has just hired
Hamilton Sundstrand to conduct a $150,000 feasibility study of the project.
The study and planning phase could take up to four months and is expected
to answer those lingering questions.
Some of those answers might be found
by studying NextEnergy, a Detroit-based nonprofit created in 2002 to position
Michigan as one of the leading states for research, development and manufacturing
of alternative-energy technologies.
Funded by $30 million in state tax
dollars through the Michigan Economic Development Corp., NextEnergy opened
a $12 million, 45,000-square-foot center and a pavilion in September that
allow companies to test various power sources on their products.
Similar to Rockford?s EIGERlab, which
is a center for research and entrepreneurs seeking to develop manufacturing
technologies, NextEnergy?s complex is home to at least seven businesses
and organizations that are developing alternative-energy technologies.
NextEnergy has caused at least two
other companies to open a lab or office nearby to conduct research. The
businesses have generated 80 to 100 jobs tied to the research undertaken
at the center, said Jim Saber, NextEnergy director of business development.
Saber, though, says NextEnergy?s
economic effect goes beyond the companies housed in its center. He said
the center provides networking and other business services to alternative-energy
companies across Michigan that will help keep "energy dollars" in
the state. And he said the center has been able to create partnerships
with Michigan?s dominant automobile industry related to practical research
into alternative fuels for vehicles.
"We have an opportunity in Michigan
to help diversify our economy," he said.
Saber said the organization has a
plan to become self-sufficient within two years that relies on funding
from the private sector, foundations, federal research programs, fees for
such services as testing products, and specific NextEnergy projects.
But after four years of operating, NextEnergy is still funded almost
entirely by state tax money.
Lindstrom expects Freedom Field to
initially be funded by federal and state tax money but to eventually become
funded through private investment. ?I have learned that grant money is
there to start projects, not maintain them,? he said. ?My motto is to plan
for the day that the grant goes away.?
Obstacles to success
The Freedom Field project could face
challenges beyond funding because of its intense focus on hydrogen fuel.
Several economic hurdles, such as
the high cost of hydrogen-fueled vehicles and technological obstacles like
storage capacity of hydrogen on vehicles have limited the use of hydrogen
as a fuel for automobiles, said Guenter Conzelmann, director of the center
for energy, environmental and economic systems analysis at Argonne National
Laboratory in the southwest Chicago suburbs near Darien.
He said part of the problem is a
?chicken and egg? situation in which energy companies do not want to invest
large amounts of money into building fueling stations because of the lack
of hydrogen-fueled vehicles. On the other hand, automakers don?t want to
produce more hydrogen-fueled vehicles because of the lack of fueling stations,
which means consumers would shy away from purchasing the vehicles.
As a result, he said, only a couple
of hundred hydrogen demonstration vehicles exist in the U.S. and far fewer
in northern Illinois.
Conzelmann said federal energy officials
do not expect large-scale use of hydrogen-fueled vehicles until 2018 because
of these challenges.
"It's way too early for installations
like (Freedom Field) to think about economics,"he said. "in all reality,
that refueling station will not have regular customers."
Staff writer Heath Hixson may be
reached at 815-987-1343 or hhixson@rrstar.com.
How Freedom Field might be able to
make money for the region
Provide cheap energy to companies looking
to locate near Chicago/Rockford International Airport.
Sell excess electricity generated at
the field to Exelon.
Become major fueling station for hydrogen,
ethanol and other renewable fuels for the Rock River Valley.
Provide business services for alternative-energy
companies.
Become major research center for large
corporations seeking a facility to test products.
Source: Register Star research
Michigan's NextEnergy project
Description: NextEnergy is a nonprofit
based in Detroit that is focused on helping businesses research and develop
alternative energy, and growing that industry in the state.
Founded: The NextEnergy project was
started in 2002 with $30 million in state grant money through the Michigan
Economic Development Corp.
Assets: NextEnergy opened a $12 million,
45,000-square-foot center in September that includes an 18,400-square-foot
incubator laboratory that is home to several companies researching and
developing alternative energies. NextEnergy?s complex includes the Microgrid
Power Pavilion, which has on-site electricity generation and allows companies
to test their various products on various fuel sources, including hydrogen,
natural gas and biofuels.

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