Global Cooling

 Posted by Allan on October 31st, 2008

The Economist magazine has named California Energy Commissioner Art Rosenfeld recipient of one of this year’s Innovation Awards. The weekly British magazine awards Innovation awards in several areas; Rosenfeld won the award in the “Energy and the Environment” sector. A former Berkeley Lab scientist, Rosenfeld was director of the Center for Building Science (Environmental Energy Technologies Division), and he is a Professor Emeritus in the Physics Department at UC Berkeley.

Rosenfeld is working with EETD’s Hashem Akbari on reducing the effects of global warming through the application of white and cool-colored roofs. In a paper to be published by the journal Climatic Change, Rosenfeld, Akbari, and EETD’s Surabi Menon point out that a vigorous white and cool roof program can significantly cool the world by directly offsetting the heating effect of carbon dioxide. They estimate that every 1,000 square feet of white roof offsets 10 tons of CO2 emissions.

Download the paper here:
http://www.energy.ca.gov/2008publications/CEC-999-2008-020/CEC-999-2008-020.PDF

Read the California Energy Commission press release:
http://www.energy.ca.gov/releases/2008_releases/2008-10-30_rosenfeld_award.html

Energy-Efficient Data Center Research Summarized

 Posted by Allan on October 21st, 2008

The September-October 2008 issue of the online publication Conservation Update, published on the web by the U.S. Department of Energy’s State Energy Program, has an article written by me (Allan Chen) summarizing research by Berkeley Lab’s Environmental Energy Technologies Division (EETD) and its many partners to improve the energy efficiency of data centers.

http://apps1.eere.energy.gov/state_energy_program/update/

Philips Corp. and Berkeley Lab EETD announce a cooperative R&D effort

 Posted by Allan on October 10th, 2008

Royal Philips Electronics and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) announced that they have signed an agreement to jointly research new energy-efficiency solutions for buildings. Philips and Berkeley Lab will work together to develop new technologies for the control of multiple building sub-systems such as lighting and temperature controls, and new building simulation tools for developing and evaluating effective energy control strategies.

Initial research will focus on optimizing the energy efficiency of indoor lighting through advanced integrated wireless lighting control systems that are responsive to people, events and external daylight levels.

For more information, see the rest of this press release at:
http://www.research.philips.com/newscenter/index.html

BIJLEE: A new R&D effort in partnership with India

 Posted by Allan on October 10th, 2008

Berkeley Lab’s Environmental Energy Technologies Division and the University of California, Berkeley, have announced a new R&D program to conduct energy and environment R&D with government and private sector partners in India. See the press release for more information:

http://newscenter.lbl.gov/press-releases/2008/10/03/berkeley-lab-and-university-of-california-berkeley-announce-india-energy-rd-program/

Climate Change, the United States and China: A Symposium

 Posted by Allan on August 13th, 2008

For those who are local in the San Francisco Bay area:

How Can China and the U.S. Work Together to Address Climate Change?

Thursday, September 25
10:00 a.m.- 12:30 p.m.
Sibley Auditorium, Bechtel Engineering Building, UC Berkeley
http://www.citris-uc.org/FAS

The Federation of American Scientists (FAS) will hold a symposium on the relationship between US and China, focused on regulating global emissions, and present the FAS Public Service Award to Mark Levine, leader of the China Group at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, for his extraordinary contributions to energy efficiency research and his work helping China build a strong energy program.

Please visit the new EETD video page

 Posted by Allan on July 30th, 2008

The new Environmental Energy Technologies Division video page brings together videos of EETD scientists’ lectures posted on YouTube and news stories on such subjects as modeling climate change, making buildings more energy efficient, and developing a fuel-efficient stove for Darfur refugees.

http://eetd.lbl.gov/eetd-news-videos.html

An R&D 100 award for Nanostructured Polymer Electrolyte

 Posted by Allan on July 30th, 2008

One of R&D Magazine’s prestigious R&D 100 Awards for 2008, which recognize the 100 most significant proven technological advances of the year,has been awarded to “Nanostructured Polymer Electrolyte for Rechargeable Lithium Batteries”— a polymer electrolyte that enables the development of rechargeable lithium metal batteries with energy density that is at least a factor of two larger than that of existing technology. This technology was invented by Nitash Balsara of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory’s Materials Sciences Division, and Environmental Energy Technologies Division.

http://www.lbl.gov/publicinfo/newscenter/pr/2008/TT-RD100.html

EETD Researchers Assist CDC Trailer Emissions Study

 Posted by Allan on July 10th, 2008

In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, the Federal Emergency Management Agency supplied trailers for temporary housing for approximately 100,000 families. When a pattern of respiratory symptoms and other health effects became evident in children living in the trailers, FEMA asked the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention of the Department of Health and Human Services to study the problem. CDC brought in Michael Apte of Berkeley Lab’s Environmental Energy Technologies Division, to assist in one of its studies—measurements of the emissions of volatile organic compounds in several unoccupied trailers. Other EETD staff who participated were Randy Maddalena, Marion Russell, and Doug Sullivan.

The results of this study have been posted at the CDC’s website.
http://www.cdc.gov/nceh/ehhe/trailerstudy/residents.htm#final

Summertime Atmospheric Greenhouse Gas Sampling Over California

 Posted by Allan on June 25th, 2008

Scientists from the U.S. Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab), the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the University of California, the California Air Resources Board, and NASA will use aircraft outfitted with atmospheric sampling devices in mid-June to measure greenhouse gases over California, in an effort to better understand the relative contribution of the state’s GHG emissions to the global total.

Read the rest of this story here:
http://www.lbl.gov/publicinfo/newscenter/pr/2008/EETD-emissions.html

EETD Scientist Alan Meier Helps Juneau Save Energy

 Posted by Allan on June 19th, 2008

When an avalanche damaged a major electrical power line near Juneau, Alaska, on April 16, life abruptly changed for the town’s 30,000 inhabitants. The line had carried inexpensive hydroelectric power that supplied 85 percent of the Alaskan state capital’s electricity needs.

The line runs along the foot of a mountain that is often covered in snow in the winter and the local power utility, the Alaska Electric Light and Power company, had long been aware of its vulnerability. A bank of diesel-powered generators was waiting to step in during the emergency.

However, a big problem still remained for the town’s inhabitants: with the price of diesel fuel at historic highs, everyone was going to see their monthly electricity bill jump by as much as five times.

How do you save electricity in a hurry? One way to do it is to call in Berkeley Lab scientist Alan Meier, who wrote the book Saving Electricity in a Hurry while on leave to the International Energy Agency.

Read the rest of this story here:

http://www.lbl.gov/publicinfo/newscenter/features/2008/EETD-alaska.html

A Buildy for DRRC

 Posted by Allan on June 5th, 2008

A multi-institutional research program managed by Berkeley Lab received recognition May 22 at Connectivity Week in Santa Clara, CA. The Connectivity Week meeting is a gathering of researchers and manufacturers of technology for intelligent buildings, green buildings, HVAC, lighting, IT, and the power grid. Connectivity Week’s Buildy awards recognize the application of automated control technology.

The demand response automation server, a technology developed for the Automated Demand Response research effort managed by Berkeley Lab’s Demand Response Research Center, received a Buildy Implementation Award. The AutoDR program is a collaboration of Berkeley Lab’s Environmental Energy Technologies Division, Akuacom, Global Energy Partners, and California’s investor-owned utilities. Berkeley Lab manages the DRRC, funded by the California Energy Commission’s Public Interest Energy Research Program.

About automated demand response research:
http://www.lbl.gov/Science-Articles/Archive/sabl/2008/Feb/ADR.html

About the Buildys:
http://www.builconn.com/2008/na/news.asp?qsitem=2008-0530.htm

New Study Sheds Light on the Growing U.S. Wind Power Market

 Posted by Allan on May 29th, 2008

For the third consecutive year, the U.S. was home to the fastest-growing wind power market in the world in 2007, according to a report released today by the U.S. Department of Energy and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Specifically, U.S. wind power capacity increased by 46 percent in 2007, representing a $9 billion investment in new wind projects. At this pace, wind is on a path to becoming a significant contributor to the U.S. power mix: wind projects accounted for 35% of all new electric generating capacity added in the U.S. in 2007, and more than 200 GW of wind are in various stages of development throughout the country.

The 2007 edition of the Annual Report on U.S. Wind Power Installation, Cost, and Performance Trends provides a comprehensive overview of developments in the rapidly evolving U.S. wind power market. The need for such a report has become apparent in the past few years, as the wind power industry has entered an era of unprecedented growth, both globally and in the United States. “With the market evolving at such a rapid pace, keeping up with trends in the marketplace has become increasingly difficult,” notes report author Ryan Wiser, of Berkeley Lab. “Yet, the need for timely, objective information on the industry and its progress has never been greater…this report seeks to fill this need.”

Drawing from a variety of sources, this report – the second in an ongoing annual series – analyzes trends in wind power capacity growth, turbine size, turbine prices, installed project costs, project performance, wind power prices, and how wind prices compare to the price of conventional generation. It also describes developer consolidation trends, current ownership and financing structures, and trends among major wind power purchasers. Finally, the report examines other factors impacting the domestic wind power market, including grid integration costs, transmission issues, and policy drivers.

“By consolidating this information into a single, publicly available document, the DOE and Berkeley Lab hope to provide a valuable resource to industry participants, energy regulators, and state and local policymakers,” notes Berkeley Lab co-author Mark Bolinger. Indeed, the inaugural 2006 edition released last year has quickly become a key benchmark by which the wind industry judges its progress, and by which regulators and policymakers evaluate the merits of wind power.

Some of the key findings from the just-released 2007 edition include:

• The U.S. is the fastest-growing wind market worldwide. The U.S. has led the world in new wind capacity for three straight years, and 1.2% of the nation’s electricity supply could be met with the wind capacity on line at the end of 2007.
• Growth is distributed across much of the U.S. States as diverse as Texas, Colorado, Illinois, and Oregon led the U.S. in annual wind capacity growth in 2007. Sixteen states had more than 100 MW of wind capacity installed by the end of 2007, with six topping 1,000 MW.
• Market growth is spurring manufacturing investments in the U.S. Several major foreign wind turbine manufacturers either opened or announced new U.S. wind turbine manufacturing plants in 2007. Likewise, new and existing U.S.-based manufacturers either initiated or scaled-up production. All told, the new turbine and component manufacturing facilities opened or announced in 2007 alone could create more than 4,700 new jobs in the U.S.
• Wind turbine prices and installed project costs have risen since 2002. Turbine price increases have been driven by weakness in the dollar, higher prices for materials and energy inputs, and shortages in certain turbine components – all factors that are impacting many different types of generating technologies.
• Wind project performance has improved in recent years. This improvement in project performance has been driven in part by taller towers and larger rotors, enhanced project siting, and technological advancements.
• Wind power is competitive and has provided good value in wholesale power markets. Despite rising project costs, in recent years, wind power has consistently been priced at or below the average price of conventional electricity, as reflected in wholesale power prices.

Berkeley Lab’s contributions to this report were funded by the Wind & Hydropower Technologies Program, Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy of the U.S. Department of Energy.

Berkeley Lab is a U.S. Department of Energy national laboratory located in Berkeley, California. It conducts unclassified scientific research and is managed by the University of California. Visit our website at http://www.lbl.gov.

Additional Information:
• The report – Annual Report on U.S. Wind Power Installation, Cost, and Performance Trends: 2007 – can be downloaded from http://eetd.lbl.gov/ea/ems/re-pubs.html
• A PowerPoint presentation summarizing key findings from the report can be found at: http://eetd.lbl.gov/ea/ems/emp-ppt.html

• The Department of Energy’s press release is available at: http://energy.gov/news/6286.htm

Open Automated Demand Response Communication Standards for California

 Posted by Allan on May 20th, 2008

The following information comes from the Research Director of the Demand Response Research Center, Mary Ann Piette,

“The Website for the Draft “Open Automated Demand Response Communication Standards” (Open Auto-DR or OpenADR) is now live for its first public review and comment process — http://drrc.lbl.gov/openadr/

“This document is a draft of the Open Automated Demand Response Communication Standards. The research that led to this standard was funded by the California Energy Commission’s (CEC) Public Interest Energy Research Program (PIER). The work has been carried out by the Demand Response Research Center (DRRC) which is managed by Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. The initial goal of the research was to explore the feasibility of developing a low cost communications infrastructure to improve the reliability, repeatability, robustness, and cost-effectiveness of demand response (DR) in commercial buildings. One key research question was: Could today’s technology be used to automate the response of commercial buildings to standardized electricity price signals? Over six years of research, development, and demonstration have led to this standard. The standard outlines communications standards using Web Services to send DR signals to end-use customer systems.

“This technology has been in use for several years and the purpose of this formal standard is to reduce cost, promote interoperability among DR technologies, and allow wide spread price or emergency response in commercial and industrial facilities.

“The OpenADR draft is being officially released in conjunction with Connectivity Week on Monday, May 19 in Santa Clara, CA. The OpenADR Communication Standards and supporting documents along with the review process are posted on the above Website. Please encourage all the stakeholders to visit and send comments.

“Thank you,
Mary Ann Piette
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory”

Turning Number Into Knowledge, by Jon Koomey

 Posted by Allan on April 25th, 2008

The revised and updated 2d edition of Jon Koomey’s book Turning Numbers into Knowledge: Mastering the Art of Problem Solving will be released on 28 April 2008 by Analytics Press http://www.analyticspress.com/. It’s now in both paperback and hard cover.

The 2d edition includes a new chapter on data sharing web sites, an epilogue summarizing Dr. Koomey’s experience debunking an urban legend, an expanded further reading section, numerous updates and improvements throughout, and a new foreword from John P. Holdren, Past President of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, who writes: ““There is nothing else like this book out there. Nobody who deals with problems where numbers matter — and everybody in today’s world really needs to — should be without it.”

Scientific team leaders and managers can just hand the book to their new recruits and say “This book describes my expectations for the quality, rigor, and transparency of your analytical work,” saving them hours of explanations and avoiding the time wasted by bad graphs, poorly documented tables, and sloppy data analysis.

Students can use the book to build and hone their analytical skills–their future bosses, customers, and readers will thank them for it. Journalists can use the book to understand the scientific process and how it interacts (for better and for worse) with the mainstream media.

And professors and supervisors can use the book (as colleagues at UC Berkeley, Stanford, Georgetown, Rochester Institute of Technology, Global Business Network, Dupont, Detroit Edison, and other institutions have done) as a training manual to teach the tricks of the trade that aren’t often covered in typical undergraduate and graduate classes.

Some of the book’s chapters can be downloaded in PDF format, as described below. Feel free to distribute these URLs to others as you see fit (the files are protected under a Creative Commons license that allows copying but not modification or commercial use).

The front matter includes the table of contents, the foreword, and the preface (which contains an annotated chapter list):
http://www.analyticspress.com/keydata/FrontmatterTNIK2ded.pdf

Chapter 4 describes the importance of peer review to the scientific process:
http://www.analyticspress.com/keydata/ch4TNIK2ded.pdf

Chapter 11 defines “critical thinking” and describes how that process can improve your analytical work:
http://www.analyticspress.com/keydata/ch11TNIK2ded.pdf

Chapter 28 describes the uses and limitations of models, both simple and complex:
http://www.analyticspress.com/keydata/ch28TNIK2ded.pdf

You can send comments or questions to Dr. Koomey at jgkoomey@stanford.edu or http://www.koomey.com. If you have suggestions for people or institutions who should hear about the book, please let him know.

EETD Examines State-level Renewables Portfolio Standards Policies

 Posted by Allan on April 15th, 2008

Renewable electricity is being supported by a growing number of states through the creation of renewables portfolio standards (RPS). A report released by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) provides a comprehensive overview of the early experiences with these state-level RPS policies.

Read the rest of this article here:
http://www.lbl.gov/Science-Articles/Archive/EETD-RPS.html

Download the EETD report here:
http://eetd.lbl.gov/ea/ems/re-pubs.html

EETD Participates in Purdue’s Vulcan Project - Carbon Dioxide Emissions Mapping

 Posted by Allan on April 15th, 2008

Marc Fischer, a scientist at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in Berkeley, California, is a participant in the Vulcan Project, which is working to quantify North American fossil fuel carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions at a much finer scale than anything that has been done so far. The maps and system, called Vulcan, show CO2 emissions at more than 100 times more detail than previously available.

Project scientists have produced a video simulation of North American fossil fuel carbon dioxide emissions, which you can view on YouTube:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eJpj8UUMTaI

Th Vulcan project is on the web here:
http://www.purdue.edu/eas/carbon/vulcan/index.php

Saving energy in Ethernet devices

 Posted by Allan on April 15th, 2008

Bruce Nordman, a researcher in EETD’s energy-efficient digital networks project, and research collaborator Ken Christenson of the University of South Florida have a column in the March issue of Communications News Magazine about saving energy in Ethernet devices.

http://www.comnews.com/features/2008_march/0308_up_to_speed.aspx

Industrial Energy Efficiency and GHG Reduction

 Posted by Allan on April 15th, 2008

Report available:

International Experience with Key Program Elements of Industrial Energy Efficiency or Greenhouse Gas Emissions Reduction
Target-Setting Programs
Author: Price, Lynn; Galitsky, Christina; Kramer, Klaas Jan
Report Date: 02/02/2008
Report Number: LBNL-63807

http://www-library.lbl.gov/docs/LBNL/638/07/PDF/LBNL-63807.pdf

Saving Power at Peak Hours talk at Berkeley Repertory Theater March 10

 Posted by Allan on February 27th, 2008

Berkeley Lab’s Science at the Theatre Lecture Series

Mary Ann Piette
Research Director, Demand Response Research Center
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Berkeley, California

will speak at Berkeley Repertory Theater’s Roda Theater on

“Saving Power at Peak Hours”

Monday March 10, 5:30 pm
Berkeley Repertory Theater
2015 Addison St., Berkeley, California

California needs new, responsive demand-side energy technologies, to ensure that periods of tight electricity supply on the grid don’t turn into power outages. Led by Berkeley Lab’s Mary Ann Piette, the California Energy Commission (through its Public Interest Energy Research Program) has established a Demand Response Research Center that addresses two motivations for adopting demand responsiveness: reducing average electricity prices, and preventing future electricity crises.

The research seeks to understand factors that influence “what works” in Demand Response. Piette’s team is investigating the two types of demand response – load response and price response – that may influence and reduce the use of peak electric power through automated controls, peak pricing, advanced communications, and other strategies. Would you be willing to consider one or some of these? Please join us to learn more about these developments. No reservations or tickets are required.

Demand Response Research Center:
http://drrc.lbl.gov

Robert Sawyer elected to National Academy of Engineering

 Posted by Allan on February 15th, 2008

Robert Sawyer, Class of 1935 Professor of Energy Emeritus of Cal’s Department of Mechanical Engineering and scientist in the Environmental Energy Technologies Division, has been elected to the National Academy of Engineering. He was cited “for pioneering work in reducing energy consumption and improving the environment, and for contributions to our understanding of air pollution.”

Sawyer’s current research interests include: air pollutant formation and control, motor vehicle emissions, energy and environment, regulatory policy. In 2006-2007, he served as Chair of the California Air Resources Board, overseeing California’s air quality and global warming programs.

For more information about his work, go here:
http://www.me.berkeley.edu/faculty/sawyer/index.html