| Energy Policy
Act of 2005 Authorized Department of Energy Research and Development Awards
WASHINGTON - Senators Chris Dodd
(D-CT) and Joe Lieberman (D-CT) announced that the University of Connecticut’s
Global Fuel Cell Center and Connecticut-based United Technologies (UTC)
Power received today more than $10 million in research and development
grants from the U.S. Department of Energy. The Global Fuel Cell Center
received $1.9 million for research into the effects of impurities on fuel-cell
performance and durability. UTC Power received two awards, of $6.4 million
and $2 million, for the development of advanced seals and cathode catalysts
for use in fuel cells. Title VIII of the Energy Policy Act, enacted in
August 2005, authorized the Energy Department to award the grants today.
“Connecticut is a pioneer in the
advancement of fuel cell technology, which stands to be at the forefront
of a new energy policy for the 21st century,” said Dodd. “These clean and
renewable energy sources can lead to less foreign oil imports, emissions
reductions, a cleaner environment and more jobs to spur the economy.
The Administration should be doing
everything in its power to provide the federal resources necessary to continue
the significant work and research already occurring in this field. This
funding is a small step in what must be a much larger initiative to keep
Connecticut and the United States on the cutting edge of energy innovation.”
“As the hub of this country’s advanced
fuel-cell industry, Connecticut is benefiting justifiably from the federal
funding that last year’s energy bill authorized for fuel-cell development
grants and other fuel-cell incentives,” Lieberman said. “Today’s grants
represent just a small fraction of the federal support that Connecticut’s
clean-energy research centers and companies stand to receive under that
law. I will continue fighting for federal funds that protect Connecticut
jobs while helping to make the U.S. energy independent.”
Fuel cells use hydrogen and oxygen
to generate pollution-free electricity (water and heat are the only byproducts).
They can power small portable devices, buildings, and vehicles. Connecticut
is an important hub of the emerging fuel-cell industry. The state is home
to fuel-cell technology companies such as UTC Power, Fuel Cell Energy,
and Proton Energy Systems, and the University of Connecticut’s fuel-cell
research program is widely respected.

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