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UTC to power New Haven high-rise

UTC Power in South Windsor is due to deliver Friday one of its fuel cells to power the 32-story luxury high-rise going up in downtown New Haven.

The 400-kilowatt fuel cell will supply electricity for the $180 million Pitkin Plaza tower and its 504 living units and retail-office space when it opens in August, officials said.

The project will be the first of its kind in the world to run on a fuel cell of that capacity, officials said.

Becker + Becker is the architect-developer of the tower that is certified LEED Platinum.

UTC Power is a division of United Technologies Corp. in Hartford.

May 27, 2010 - 8:00 AM No Comments

UPS Systems’ Seminar Creates ‘Exciting Times’ for Fuel Cell Industry

Hungerford, Berkshire, United Kingdom– UPS Systems has announced that 67% of delegates have changed their opinion of fuel cells because of its seminar – Fuel cells…real world applications for business – and warn that there are very exciting times ahead for the UK fuel cell industry.

UPS Systems seminar was a unique event providing organisations with an insight into the commercial applications for fuel cell technology, featuring case studies to highlight the business benefits of fuel cells.

Where other fuel cell events have in the past focused on technical and academic discussions about technology, UPS Systems’ event brought together some of the industry’s leading manufacturers to discuss the practical application of the latest products. Throughout the course of the day, delegates heard presentations from UPS Systems plc, SFC, Hydrogenics, BOC, ACAL Energy and FCT Consulting.

There were also displays and demonstrations of the latest commercial fuel cell products, including the Hymera from BOC, EFOY Pro 2200 from SFC, 600W generator from IRD, HyPM from Hydrogenics and REMO from UPS Systems.

“The event was a great success with over 70 delegates attending from all around the UK,” said UPS Systems’ Marketing Manager, Roger Foggitt. “The feedback we received from the delegates was really positive – 66% rated the seminar as ‘excellent’ with the remainder rating it as ‘good’. Furthermore, 67% of delegates said the seminar had changed their opinion of fuel cells – a huge achievement and testament to the hard work from our speakers on the day.”

Bob Longman, V P Engineering at ACAL Energy, and one of the speakers at the seminar, said: “It is to UPS Systems’ credit that they are evangelising fuel cell technology on behalf of the industry in the UK. Our own technology is not ready for mass-market adoption yet but there are certainly a growing number of markets that can benefit from the products on show at the event.”

Another speaker at the seminar, Dr Jonathan Butler, Senior Market Analyst at FCT Consulting commented: “The fact that there is so much interest in the seminar is testament to the fact that there is a genuine market opportunity for fuel cell technology in the UK. And we have some genuine pockets of industrial, commercial and R&D expertise in the UK, which are characterised by some of the companies presenting at UPS Systems’ event.”

UPS Systems Managing Director, Tom Sperrey commented: “There has been a definite shift in the UK fuel cell industry. Last year we were educating the market about what fuel cells are and the benefits they have to offer organisations. This year it’s clear that people are ready to buy and actively looking for the best solution to meet their needs. Since the seminar, we have already taken new orders, and received several enquiries from companies wishing to adopt fuel cell technology. I think 2010 could turn out to be a momentous year for fuel cells with very exciting times ahead for the industry.”

UPS Systems plc (upssystems.co.uk) is the UK’s largest independent supplier of standby power solutions. Through its independent position, allied to close working relationships with the world’s leading manufacturers, the company is uniquely able to offer impartial technical advice on the widest range of standby power solutions. An authority on fuel cell technology, UPS Systems implemented the UK’s first two hydrogen fuel cells providing AC standby power, and is currently working on projects where the technology will be used for the supply of backup or prime power to utilities, telecommunications, remote telemetry, portable signage and renewable energy applications.

ACAL Energy is a developer of a new fuel cell technology that will enable low cost and highly reliable fuel cell systems for a wide variety of applications. The company was founded in August 2004 by FlowCath® inventor Dr Andrew Creeth and is headquartered in Runcorn, UK.

Fuel cells are a highly efficient and clean energy production technology capable of replacing combustion engines in applications including remote and distributed power and residential cogeneration, as well as automotive and mobile power applications. FlowCath® replaces the expensive precious metal catalyst found in conventional fuel cells with a proprietary low cost liquid catalyst. This not only reduces the cost of the fuel cell, but also provides significant durability and reliability benefits through system simplification and the elimination of the most common failure mechanisms found in standard fuel cells.

FCT Consulting is a dedicated consulting company with a unique positioning covering the global fuel cell and hydrogen industry. FCT Consulting was formed to help companies, governments, and NGOs navigate their way around or over obstacles by providing high quality, independent, and rigorous information on a variety of issues currently facing the fuel cell industry.

May 27, 2010 - 6:50 AM No Comments

K. R. Sridhar: Bloom Energy’s Fuel-Cell Guru

‘This Is Brand New’

The CEO of Bloom Energy on a new way of powering the planet.

By Fareed Zakaria | NEWSWEEK

NWK Caption: KR Sridhar, co-founder and CEO of Silicon Valley  startup Bloom Energy, holds up a stack of fuel cells at a news  conference at eBay offices in San Jose, Calif., Wednesday, Feb. 24,  2010. The company's first product is a huge box of fuel cells that it  hopes will allow homes and businesses to generate their own electricity.  (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma) -- IPTC Caption: KR Sridhar, co-founder and CEO  of Silicon Valley startup Bloom Energy, holds up a stack of fuel cells  at a news conference at eBay offices in San Jose, Calif., Wednesday,  Feb. 24, 2010. The company's first product is a huge box of fuel cells  that it hopes will allow homes and businesses to generate their own  electricity. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma)

Paul Sakuma / AP

From the magazine issue dated May 3, 2010

K. R. Sridhar spent years building technologies for NASA that could sustain life on Mars. Now, as CEO of Bloom Energy, he’s trying to perfect a device that could improve life on Earth. His company builds fuel cells—small power plants, essentially, that can power anything from a single home to a whole city. NEWSWEEK International editor Fareed Zakaria spoke with him about these “Bloom boxes,” which convert gas, biomass, and other fuels into electricity. Excerpts:

Tell me about your transition from working on the Mars mission to this.

It became obvious to me that on Mars, if you give me a few molecules of oxygen, I can create everything else human beings need: fuel, heat, electricity, plastic, food, water. So I started looking for someplace where I can make an impact in a realistic time frame, as opposed to something far in the future. It dawned on me that if we don’t solve the energy issue, we will have significant problems.

Why is Bloom so important in terms of the future of energy?

Look at what distributive computing did to computing. We wouldn’t have millions of software engineers if computing relied purely on mainframe computers hooked up to dumb terminals. Why? Too expensive. Access is limited to the privileged. Distributive power is real democracy.

So this is really a big bet on the power of decentralization?

Absolutely. If you go to Google or Microsoft or Amazon, they all have huge data centers. Inside, there are actually small servers ganged up in groups of hundreds and thousands. Our fuel cells are exactly the same thing. I can cluster our energy servers and build an energy farm. Or I can take the same technology to a little village and create a microgrid.

But you still need to get the fuel from a centralized source.

That is true today. But the same technology I am using today to turn chemical energy, like natural gas, into electrons, can be used with an intermittent source, like solar or wind.

But don’t you need to then store the energy somewhere?

Think of it as being able to spin in two directions. In one direction, I take the solar energy during the day, and I break water up into hydrogen and oxygen. The hydrogen is stored locally in very low-pressure bladders. And at night, when the sun stops shining, you take this hydrogen, run it through the fuel cells, and produce electricity.

How can you ever be more efficient than a big power plant?

The question to ask is, in a traditional power plant, is there a Moore’s law kind of learning that can happen? The answer is no. There are 100 years of history associated with that [technology]. Whereas we have shown in the last five years that, every year, we are able to improve upon the physics and the chemistry to get more value out of the same material that we put in.

And because you can distribute fuel cells everywhere, you don’t lose much due to long transmission lines?

That is absolutely true. Also, in a fuel cell you are going from chemical energy directly to electrical energy, with no in-between steps. In the other forms of electricity generation, whether it is coal or gas, you burn the fuel first. And the laws of thermodynamics say that if you convert energy from one form to another, you will have losses.

Your capital cost is high, something like $7 or $8 per watt.

Right now we are only economical with subsidies.

Why do you think this will be viable without subsidies in the future?

If I build a large automobile plant, and I have just put out the 30th car, do you expect me to be profitable? Ask anybody in manufacturing: for every doubling in volume, you will see a 10 to 15 percent reduction in cost.

How long before you scale to the point where you can have a transformative effect?

Within this decade we’ll be a significant player in this field. That’s a very short time frame, if you think about the market and how static it has been. We are not just creating a company—we are creating an ecosystem. There is no supply chain right now. This is brand new.

What do you think the world of energy will look like in 10 years?

Energy is the capacity to do work. We’ve got 2 billion starving people on this planet, and they want to climb the economic ladder. Without creating significantly more energy than we consume today, we’ll face the threat of social and political unrest. But I’m an optimist; I see this as the biggest opportunity.

Find this article at http://services.newsweek.com/id/236860

May 27, 2010 - 6:28 AM No Comments