美国能源部门投资6000万美元要创新发展集中太阳能技术
(2011-11-03 13:47:21)
标签:
太阳能新能源政策杂谈 |
分类: 市场观察 |
Department of Energy to Invest $60 Million to Develop Innovative Concentrating Solar Power Technologies
Washington, D.C. - As part of the U.S. Department of Energy’s
SunShot Initiative, Energy Secretary Steven Chu today announced a
$60 million investment over 3 years for applied scientific research
to advance cutting-edge Concentrating Solar Power (CSP)
technologies. CSP technologies use mirrors to reflect and
concentrate sunlight to produce heat, which can then be used to
produce electricity. Funded through DOE’s Office of Energy
Efficiency and Renewable Energy, this research supports DOE’s
SunShot Initiative, a collaborative national effort to reduce the
cost of solar energy 75 percent to make it cost competitive with
other forms of energy by the end of the decade.
“Our nation is in a global race to produce cost-competitive renewable energy that can create manufacturing jobs, cut our reliance on fossil fuels, and reduce carbon emissions,” said Secretary Chu. “The funding announced today through the SunShot Initiative will help unleash the vast potential of solar energy to diversify our energy portfolio, create clean energy jobs, and re-establish U.S. global leadership in this fast growing industry.”
Through this solicitation, the Department seeks to support
research into technologies that have the potential to dramatically
increase efficiency, lower costs, and deliver more reliable
performance than existing commercial and near-commercial CSP
systems. DOE expects to fund between approximately 20 and 22
projects, and encourages industry, universities, and National
Laboratories to apply.
This SunShot CSP opportunity seeks to develop innovative concepts that could lead to performance breakthroughs like improving efficiency and temperature ranges, and demonstrate new approaches in the design of collectors, receivers, and power cycle equipment used in CSP systems. Each of these subsystems is critical to CSP operation: the collectors collect and concentrate the Sun’s energy onto the receiver; the receiver accepts and transfers the heat energy to the power cycle; and the power cycle converts the heat energy into electricity. Developing low-cost collectors, high-temperature receivers, and high-efficiency power cycles should lead to subsequent system integration, engineering scale-up, and eventual commercial production for clean electricity generation applications.