| EAST AMWELL,
N.J. - Some thought he was crazy and would blow himself up in failure.
But Michael Stritzki was determined to someday operate his home in rural
Hunterdon County on hydrogen created by the sun.
Yesterday, in a rain-soaked moment
of triumph with nearly 100 supporters on his multi-acre property, Stritzki
made history when his two-story home became the first in the nation to
be powered solely by solar and hydrogen energy.
The intricate, $500,000 Hopewell
Project - Stritzki's home - was almost five years in the making. Stritzki
cultivated private and corporate support and cajoled state utilities officials
into embracing the idea that renewable energy must be the way of the future,
to cut down on pollution.
Still, Stritzki encountered critics
who thought his idea of using solar electricity to extract hydrogen from
water was dangerous. Building code officials, he added, weren't prepared
for the technology he championed.
"Things that people don't understand,
they're afraid of," Stritzki said. "Hydrogen is just another gas, and it's
safer than all the fossil fuels we currently know."
Now it's Stritzki, a married father
of three, who is doing the lecturing. He was to appear last night on ABC
World News Tonight to talk about his home and has admirers across the country.
"I said, 'I'm not waiting anymore.
We're going to work through the existing code, and I'm going to drag them
kicking and screaming, but we're going to do it.' And we did," he said.
"I convinced enough people to be believers, and the ones I couldn't convince,
other people helped me move them aside."
Stritzki and many others now believe
that hydrogen, a colorless, odorless gas used by NASA for space shuttle
fuel, will become more accepted as a home energy source. Researchers also
are studying hydrogen as a pollution-free automotive fuel.
Stritzki's home has solar panels
lining the garage roof. During the summer, those panels generate excess
electricity, which is harnessed to extract hydrogen from water. That hydrogen
is pumped into 10 tanks on his property and is used to power a fuel cell,
which generates electricity to supplement the solar panels in the cooler
months.
Now he enjoys his big-screen television,
his swimming pool, his hot tub, and the other comforts of his home - all
powered by hydrogen and the sun.
Stritzki was a state Department of
Transportation engineer when he became interested in hydrogen technology.
He has built cars, a golf cart, a boat, and an airplane that use hydrogen.
"New Jersey has shown the will, the
leadership to the rest of the country, and it's up to them to catch up
because we're in the vanguard," said Lyle K. Rawlings, president of Advanced
Solar Products and a design engineer for Stritzki's home. "This is a vision
shared by many of us."
Connie O. Hughes, a commissioner
on the state Board of Public Utilities, praised Stritzki as a "modern-day
pioneer."
"We're not anticipating this exact
project to be duplicated everywhere," Hughes said. "But we do see this
as one of the ways to address New Jersey's goals of having 20 percent of
our energy coming from renewables by the year 2020."
Hughes said the state utilities board
provided $250,000 for the project as part of its Clean Energy Program that
encourages renewable energy sources to fuel homes and businesses.
Stritzki put $100,000 of his own
money into the project. Other funding came from loans and private and corporate
sponsors.

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