The document discusses the FY 2017 budget request for the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE). It outlines major national energy goals and EERE's strategic planning drivers. The budget summary table shows requested funding increases for solar energy, wind energy, and water power technologies. Specific initiatives highlighted include offshore wind demonstration projects, technologies to enable larger wind turbines, and the HydroNEXT program to lower costs of new hydropower facilities.
Solar Energy Installation Outlook US | Power Sector | Aranca Articles and Pub...Aranca
The total power generation capacity installations every year in the US has expanded significantly, led majorly by solar energy sources. PV installation capacity is expected to expand at a four-year CAGR of around 48% over 2013-16.
English language version of the presentation given by Jonathan Jutsen, Chairman of the Australian Alliance for Energy Productivity in San Luis Argentina in December 2016
Solar Energy Installation Outlook US | Power Sector | Aranca Articles and Pub...Aranca
The total power generation capacity installations every year in the US has expanded significantly, led majorly by solar energy sources. PV installation capacity is expected to expand at a four-year CAGR of around 48% over 2013-16.
English language version of the presentation given by Jonathan Jutsen, Chairman of the Australian Alliance for Energy Productivity in San Luis Argentina in December 2016
Solar News from around the world for week 2 of June 2021Rohit Arora
Weekly Solar News updates from around the world.
with world's biggest solar expo event in Shanghai this week,
we have a lot happening in the solar industry.
80+ Solar News from India, China, Australia, USA, Europe, Africa, and much more.
The presentation focuses on the investment opportunities in commercial and industrial rooftop building in India. Sensitivity analysis has been carried out for 11 states to understand the impact on project economics in terms of PIRR, EIRR, and payback periods.
Overview of solar power generation in indiaBinit Das
-Overall Indian solar capacity addition target vs. current progress
-Current competitive landscape in solar power generation in India
-Typical timeline / milestones for ground-mounted solar project implementation (incl. activity-wise phasing)
-Usual EPC supply chain for ground-mounted solar project
-Key EPC / implementation risks and other key challenges faced by solar developers in India
-Typical risk mitigation measures and key success factors
Reducing energy intensity of the Indian economy, Saurabh Diddi, Bureau of Ene...ESD UNU-IAS
This lecture is part of the 2016 ProSPER.Net Young Researchers’ School on sustainable energy for transforming lives: availability, accessibility, affordability
Many large-scale energy customers, from local governments to corporations, have set ambitious clean energy goals. Utility investments in renewables in the overall generation mix are important to achieving them. But there can be a number of barriers to the inclusion of solar and other renewables in utility long-term planning, including cost and technology assumptions, modeling approaches and scenario development. Large-scale energy customers and utilities have an opportunity and are increasingly taking action to update practices and address these barriers.
This presentation highlights ways that solar energy is currently considered and can be improved in utility long-term planning, and how customers are engaging in these plans to advance their clean energy goals.
Industrial Solar Rooftop System Installation Powerpoint Presentation SlidesSlideTeam
Introducing Industrial Solar Rooftop System Installation PowerPoint Presentation Slides. The purpose of this presentation is to reduce annual electricity bill costs by shifting to solar energy. By using this solar power plant PPT visuals, you can showcase the energy consumption analysis of the manufacturing plant. Present issues and challenges related to the solar system with the help of a ready-to-use PPT complete deck. After that, depict the solutions to counter energy issues using a content-ready solar system for industry PowerPoint layouts. Highlight the renewable technologies that the industry can adopt and cost overview of different technologies. You can also depict the application of the solar system and illustrate various solar PV integration model workflow. The slides also explain permissions and regulatory key considerations required before project implementation. Power plant details, along with project description and specifications, are also included in our PPT slideshow. Showcase decision-making checklist for the solar project by using the installation of renewable energy PPT infographics. Depict estimated cost for the solar project, implementation schedule, PV operational and maintenance plan, etc., by incorporating professionally designed solar rooftop system PPT slide deck. https://bit.ly/2SSa2bt
Energy efficiency implementation program for state level in MalaysiaZAINI ABDUL WAHAB
Proposed program by MAESCO at a state level in Malaysia for faster results to reduce energy costs through strategic partnership between government and private sectors and facilities owners and ESCOs.
Practical approach with the state government with some interventions and supports from agencies from the federal government.
Solar News from around the world for week 2 of June 2021Rohit Arora
Weekly Solar News updates from around the world.
with world's biggest solar expo event in Shanghai this week,
we have a lot happening in the solar industry.
80+ Solar News from India, China, Australia, USA, Europe, Africa, and much more.
The presentation focuses on the investment opportunities in commercial and industrial rooftop building in India. Sensitivity analysis has been carried out for 11 states to understand the impact on project economics in terms of PIRR, EIRR, and payback periods.
Overview of solar power generation in indiaBinit Das
-Overall Indian solar capacity addition target vs. current progress
-Current competitive landscape in solar power generation in India
-Typical timeline / milestones for ground-mounted solar project implementation (incl. activity-wise phasing)
-Usual EPC supply chain for ground-mounted solar project
-Key EPC / implementation risks and other key challenges faced by solar developers in India
-Typical risk mitigation measures and key success factors
Reducing energy intensity of the Indian economy, Saurabh Diddi, Bureau of Ene...ESD UNU-IAS
This lecture is part of the 2016 ProSPER.Net Young Researchers’ School on sustainable energy for transforming lives: availability, accessibility, affordability
Many large-scale energy customers, from local governments to corporations, have set ambitious clean energy goals. Utility investments in renewables in the overall generation mix are important to achieving them. But there can be a number of barriers to the inclusion of solar and other renewables in utility long-term planning, including cost and technology assumptions, modeling approaches and scenario development. Large-scale energy customers and utilities have an opportunity and are increasingly taking action to update practices and address these barriers.
This presentation highlights ways that solar energy is currently considered and can be improved in utility long-term planning, and how customers are engaging in these plans to advance their clean energy goals.
Industrial Solar Rooftop System Installation Powerpoint Presentation SlidesSlideTeam
Introducing Industrial Solar Rooftop System Installation PowerPoint Presentation Slides. The purpose of this presentation is to reduce annual electricity bill costs by shifting to solar energy. By using this solar power plant PPT visuals, you can showcase the energy consumption analysis of the manufacturing plant. Present issues and challenges related to the solar system with the help of a ready-to-use PPT complete deck. After that, depict the solutions to counter energy issues using a content-ready solar system for industry PowerPoint layouts. Highlight the renewable technologies that the industry can adopt and cost overview of different technologies. You can also depict the application of the solar system and illustrate various solar PV integration model workflow. The slides also explain permissions and regulatory key considerations required before project implementation. Power plant details, along with project description and specifications, are also included in our PPT slideshow. Showcase decision-making checklist for the solar project by using the installation of renewable energy PPT infographics. Depict estimated cost for the solar project, implementation schedule, PV operational and maintenance plan, etc., by incorporating professionally designed solar rooftop system PPT slide deck. https://bit.ly/2SSa2bt
Energy efficiency implementation program for state level in MalaysiaZAINI ABDUL WAHAB
Proposed program by MAESCO at a state level in Malaysia for faster results to reduce energy costs through strategic partnership between government and private sectors and facilities owners and ESCOs.
Practical approach with the state government with some interventions and supports from agencies from the federal government.
Presentation by Diana Pangestu of Solar1.org regarding government sponsored sustainability incentives. Given at GreenPearl.com's Building Owners Cash Flow seminar on May 13, 2009
Renewable Energy Policy Mechanisms and Investment Opportunities - Mylene Capo...OECD Environment
1st Clean Energy Finance and Investment Consultation Workshop: “Unlocking finance and investment for clean energy in the Philippines” 31 May – 1 June 2022, Makati Diamond Residences, Legazpi Village, Makati City
Energy Efficiency: A Sign of Personal Virtue or an Untapped Business Opportun...Sasin SEC
by Peter du Pont, Vice-President, Government & Clean Energy Consulting, Nexant Inc.
According to the Asian Development Bank, a total of $944 billion of investment will be needed in energy savings opportunities by 2020 in order for China, India, and Southeast Asian countries to meet their national targets for EE and greenhouse gas emission reductions. Yet only a fraction of this investment is currently being planned. This talk will address the proverbial $20 bill lying on the ground and describe why there are so few takers, and what is needed to “sex” up energy efficiency so that it becomes a more broadly bankable business opportunity. It will describe different business and regulatory models for stimulating investments in energy efficiency in buildings, factories, and the transport sector.
Dr. Peter du Pont leads the clean energy initiatives at Nexant Asia and has more than 25 years of experience developing sustainable energy and efficiency programs in the U.S. and Asia.
On February 2, 2015, Secretary of Energy Ernest Moniz gave a presentation at Department of Energy headquarters about the agency's fiscal year 2016 budget request. View the slides above to see highlights from year's budget.
Forward-looking cities, companies and institutions have begun to embrace 24/7 carbon-free energy procurement—tracking their energy load temporally, shifting their demand, and purchasing carbon-free energy on an hourly basis to match their usage.
This slide deck provides an introduction to the idea of hourly matching and 24/7 carbon-free energy procurement. It addresses questions such as: What is 24/7 carbon-free energy? Why should a city, company, or other institution pursue it? And how can your jurisdiction begin to explore it?
Fact sheet on the cem's appliance efficiency initiative (sead)Christina Parmionova
The agenda was developed by Sustainable Energy for All's High-Level Group, which includes distinguished leaders from government, the private sector and civil society, as well as three CEM ministers including: Steven Chu, U.S. Secretary of Energy; Edison Lobão, Brazilian Minister of Mines and Energy; and Farooq Abdullah, Minister of New and Renewable Energy of India.
This is normally my story line whenever I was asked/requested/invited to share with audience on the way forward for energy efficiency industry in Malaysia when I was I the government trying to push for EE agenda..and my opinions and thoughts are still the same until today and look like for longer time
Today (May 7, 2019) we break down the Illinois Solar Market with Brian Haug, Director of Energy Solutions at Continental Electrical, and Lesley McCain of ISEA (Illinois Solar Energy Association). Haug is the ISEA Board President and has overseen the installation of 75 solar projects totaling 25 MW including the two largest rooftop arrays in the Midwest. The Illinois solar market is now experiencing rapid growth with 666 MW of DG RECs and a total of 2800 MW of solar being installed in the next five years. This is helping Illinois achieve it’s RPS of 25% clean power by 2025.
ENERGY IN BUILDINGs 50 BEST PRACTICE INITIATIVESJosh Develop
Technology, economics and policy are rapidly transforming energy markets
and the broader economy. Global efforts to reduce emissions of greenhouse
gases are leading to increased focus on policies that can reduce energy use
or promote low emissions generation.
Australia’s economy-wide target under the United Nations Framework
Convention on Climate Change is to reduce emissions by 26-28 per cent
on 2005 levels by 2030. By the second half of the century, achieving net zero
emissions is likely to be necessary to meet international climate commitments.
The cost of producing electricity from renewable resources has declined
significantly over recent years and remains on a rapid downward trajectory.
Similar to EERE’s FY2017 Renewable Power Budget Webinar (20)
GraphRAG is All You need? LLM & Knowledge GraphGuy Korland
Guy Korland, CEO and Co-founder of FalkorDB, will review two articles on the integration of language models with knowledge graphs.
1. Unifying Large Language Models and Knowledge Graphs: A Roadmap.
https://arxiv.org/abs/2306.08302
2. Microsoft Research's GraphRAG paper and a review paper on various uses of knowledge graphs:
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/blog/graphrag-unlocking-llm-discovery-on-narrative-private-data/
"Impact of front-end architecture on development cost", Viktor TurskyiFwdays
I have heard many times that architecture is not important for the front-end. Also, many times I have seen how developers implement features on the front-end just following the standard rules for a framework and think that this is enough to successfully launch the project, and then the project fails. How to prevent this and what approach to choose? I have launched dozens of complex projects and during the talk we will analyze which approaches have worked for me and which have not.
Epistemic Interaction - tuning interfaces to provide information for AI supportAlan Dix
Paper presented at SYNERGY workshop at AVI 2024, Genoa, Italy. 3rd June 2024
https://alandix.com/academic/papers/synergy2024-epistemic/
As machine learning integrates deeper into human-computer interactions, the concept of epistemic interaction emerges, aiming to refine these interactions to enhance system adaptability. This approach encourages minor, intentional adjustments in user behaviour to enrich the data available for system learning. This paper introduces epistemic interaction within the context of human-system communication, illustrating how deliberate interaction design can improve system understanding and adaptation. Through concrete examples, we demonstrate the potential of epistemic interaction to significantly advance human-computer interaction by leveraging intuitive human communication strategies to inform system design and functionality, offering a novel pathway for enriching user-system engagements.
UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series, part 3DianaGray10
Welcome to UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series part 3. In this session, we will cover desktop automation along with UI automation.
Topics covered:
UI automation Introduction,
UI automation Sample
Desktop automation flow
Pradeep Chinnala, Senior Consultant Automation Developer @WonderBotz and UiPath MVP
Deepak Rai, Automation Practice Lead, Boundaryless Group and UiPath MVP
Software Delivery At the Speed of AI: Inflectra Invests In AI-Powered QualityInflectra
In this insightful webinar, Inflectra explores how artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming software development and testing. Discover how AI-powered tools are revolutionizing every stage of the software development lifecycle (SDLC), from design and prototyping to testing, deployment, and monitoring.
Learn about:
• The Future of Testing: How AI is shifting testing towards verification, analysis, and higher-level skills, while reducing repetitive tasks.
• Test Automation: How AI-powered test case generation, optimization, and self-healing tests are making testing more efficient and effective.
• Visual Testing: Explore the emerging capabilities of AI in visual testing and how it's set to revolutionize UI verification.
• Inflectra's AI Solutions: See demonstrations of Inflectra's cutting-edge AI tools like the ChatGPT plugin and Azure Open AI platform, designed to streamline your testing process.
Whether you're a developer, tester, or QA professional, this webinar will give you valuable insights into how AI is shaping the future of software delivery.
Key Trends Shaping the Future of Infrastructure.pdfCheryl Hung
Keynote at DIGIT West Expo, Glasgow on 29 May 2024.
Cheryl Hung, ochery.com
Sr Director, Infrastructure Ecosystem, Arm.
The key trends across hardware, cloud and open-source; exploring how these areas are likely to mature and develop over the short and long-term, and then considering how organisations can position themselves to adapt and thrive.
Search and Society: Reimagining Information Access for Radical FuturesBhaskar Mitra
The field of Information retrieval (IR) is currently undergoing a transformative shift, at least partly due to the emerging applications of generative AI to information access. In this talk, we will deliberate on the sociotechnical implications of generative AI for information access. We will argue that there is both a critical necessity and an exciting opportunity for the IR community to re-center our research agendas on societal needs while dismantling the artificial separation between the work on fairness, accountability, transparency, and ethics in IR and the rest of IR research. Instead of adopting a reactionary strategy of trying to mitigate potential social harms from emerging technologies, the community should aim to proactively set the research agenda for the kinds of systems we should build inspired by diverse explicitly stated sociotechnical imaginaries. The sociotechnical imaginaries that underpin the design and development of information access technologies needs to be explicitly articulated, and we need to develop theories of change in context of these diverse perspectives. Our guiding future imaginaries must be informed by other academic fields, such as democratic theory and critical theory, and should be co-developed with social science scholars, legal scholars, civil rights and social justice activists, and artists, among others.
Neuro-symbolic is not enough, we need neuro-*semantic*Frank van Harmelen
Neuro-symbolic (NeSy) AI is on the rise. However, simply machine learning on just any symbolic structure is not sufficient to really harvest the gains of NeSy. These will only be gained when the symbolic structures have an actual semantics. I give an operational definition of semantics as “predictable inference”.
All of this illustrated with link prediction over knowledge graphs, but the argument is general.
From Siloed Products to Connected Ecosystem: Building a Sustainable and Scala...
EERE’s FY2017 Renewable Power Budget Webinar
1. Doug Hollett
Deputy Assistant Secretary for
Renewable Power
Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy
FY 2017 Budget Overview | February 29, 2016
3. 3
Major National Energy Goals
• Reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions 26-28% by 2025 from
2005 baseline.
• By 2035, generate 80% of electricity from a diverse set of clean
energy resources.
• Double energy productivity by 2030.
• Reduce net oil imports by half by 2020 from a 2008 baseline.
• Reduce CO2 emissions by 3 billion metric tons cumulatively by
2030 through efficiency standards set between 2009 and 2016.
4. 4
EERE’s Guiding Principles
1. HIGH IMPACT: Is this a high impact problem?
2. ADDITIONALITY: Will the EERE funding make a large difference
relative to what the private sector (or other funding entities) is
already doing?
3. OPENNESS: Have we made sure to focus on the broad problem we
are trying to solve and be open to new ideas, new approaches, and
new performers?
4. ENDURING U.S. ECONOMIC BENEFIT: How will this EERE funding
result in enduring economic benefit to the United States?
5. PROPER ROLE OF GOVERNMENT: Why is what we are doing a proper
high impact role of government versus something best left to the
private sector to address on its own?
The 5 EERE Core Questions
5. 5
• President’s Climate Action Plan (CAP)
• DOE Strategic Plan (2014-2018)
• Quadrennial Energy Review (QER)
• Quadrennial Technology Review (QTR)
• EERE Strategic Plan (2016-2020)
EERE Strategic Planning Drivers
EERE Strategic Plan: http://energy.gov/eere/downloads/eere-strategic-plan
6. 6
EERE’s Strategic Plan Framework
Strategic Plan FrameworkEERE Vision
EERE Mission
A strong and prosperous America powered by clean, affordable
and secure energy
To create and sustain American leadership in the transition to a
global clean energy economy
Strategies Success
Indicators
• e.g., Reducing Cost, Risk,
Market Barriers, and
Improves Technical
Performance
e.g., By 2017, demonstrate a
50% improvement in long-
haul truck freight efficiency
http://energy.gov/eere/downloads/eere-strategic-plan
7. 7
FY 2017 Budget Summary Table
Dollars in Thousands
FY 2015
Enacted
FY 2016
Enacted
FY 2017
Request
FY 2017 vs
FY 2016
Renewable Energy 456,000 478,050 620,600 142,550 30%
- Solar Energy 233,000 241,600 285,100 43,500 18%
- Wind Energy 107,000 95,450 156,000 60,550 63%
- Water Power 61,000 70,000 80,000 10,000 14%
- Geothermal Technologies 55,000 71,000 99,500 28,500 40%
Total, Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy 1,914,195 2,069,194 2,898,400 829,206 40%
9. 9
Solar Energy Technologies - Overview
Motivation/Focus
The SunShot Initiative’s goal is to drive technology innovation to make solar energy cost‐competitive without incentives with
traditional energy sources by 2020, and to enable rapid, large‐scale adoption of solar electricity beyond 2020. We aim to
re‐establish American technological and market leadership in solar energy, improve the nation's energy security, reduce
environmental impacts of electricity generation, and strengthen U.S. economic competitiveness.
Achievements
• Leading in PV R&D: Over the past 35 years, DOE R&D funding at our nation’s laboratories has resulted in over 50% of solar cell
efficiency world records. These records continue annually.
• Reviving U.S. Manufacturing: Announced US-based expansion will ultimately amount to over 2GW of production, reversing a
decade-long trend in U.S. PV manufacturing decline.
• SunShot Incubator: Since 2007, SunShot’s Incubator program has provided early-stage assistance to small businesses to rapidly
bring new products and services to the marketplace. Approximately $138M invested has resulted in over $3B in follow on
private capital financing.
• Marrying Portfolio Achievements for Greater Outcomes: Recent SunShot Incubator awardees are enabling individual utilities to
streamline interconnection time to two-days (from the national average of 3-6 months), via the SunShot Prize collaboration.
• Enabling Greater Renewables Integration: NREL’s ESIF platform used to help resolve an interconnection backlog in Hawaii for
thousands of customers.
• Cutting Red Tape: SunShot works with state & local government, businesses to make the process of going solar faster, easier,
and more affordable. The Rooftop Solar Challenge round 1 cut permitting time by 40%, reduced fees by 12%, made it possible
for >47 million Americans to install solar (1 week saved across 40,000 systems -- 600MW of residential/commercial solar
installed in first year).
• Building an Expanded, Skilled Solar Workforce: DOE’s Solar Instructor Training Network (SITN) of over 400 community colleges
in 49 states helps meet the growing demand for solar workers, with a focus on recruiting returning veterans, through the Solar
Ready Vets. Overall SITN has trained over 30,000 workers to enter the solar field on the way to 50,000 by 2020.
10. 10
Solar Energy Technologies – FY 2017 Budget Request
(Dollars in Thousands)
FY 2015
Enacted
FY 2016
Enacted
FY 2017
Request
FY 2017 vs.
FY 2016
Concentrating Solar Power 46,400 48,400 43,000 -5,400
Photovoltaic R&D 35,300 53,152 64,000 +10,848
System Integration 43,700 52,447 83,000 +30,553
Balance of Systems Soft Cost Reduction 40,700 34,913 23,100 -11,813
Innovations in Manufacturing Competitiveness 57,800 43,488 62,000 +18,512
Next Generation Renewable Fuels and Chemicals R&D 0 0 10,000 +10,000
NREL Site-Wide Facility Support 9,100 9,200 0 -9,200
Total, Solar Energy Technologies Office 233,000 241,600 285,100 +43,500
Goals/Metrics
By 2020, achieve cost competitiveness without subsidies.
• For PV systems, this goal translates to approximately:
- Utility‐scale installed system price: $1.00/Wdc from a 2010 baseline of $3.80/Wdc.
- Commercial‐scale installed system price: $1.25/Wdc from a 2010 baseline of $5.00/Wdc.
- Residential‐scale installed system price: $1.50/Wdc from a 2010 baseline of $6.80/Wdc.
• For CSP, the goal of $0.06/kWh translates to about $3.50/W including 16 hours of thermal storage.
By the end of 2015, progress 70% of the way to the 2020 objectives has been achieved.
11. 11
Solar Energy Technologies – FY 2017 Budget Highlights
• Advanced Power Electronics Solutions for Distributed PV ($20M): Supports
development of cutting-edge approaches to reduce the cost and improve the
reliability and functionality of power electronics associated with solar energy systems.
• Next Generation PV Modules ($18M): R&D focused on non-cell module components
and design, which comprise 40% of typical module cost and have the potential to
significantly impact PV performance as well as installation cost.
• Bridging Research Interactions Cooperative Grants (BRIDGE) ($15M): Partnerships
with basic science researchers to understand degradation modes that limit PV
reliability and to develop new PV characterization techniques.
• Concentrating Solar Power Desalination ($15M): R&D to explore using thermal energy
systems for cost-effective water purification and desalination strategies, in support of
the DOE Energy-Water Nexus Crosscut.
• Next Generation Renewable Fuels and Chemicals ($10M): New subprogram to
support the transition to a clean energy economy through innovative approaches of
converting and storing solar power into usable fuels.
12. 12
Wind Power Technologies – Overview
Motivation/Focus
EERE’s Wind Energy Program seeks to establish a competitive U.S. wind industry through cost reduction activities
focused on technology RD&D, offshore demonstrations, efforts to eliminate and reduce market barriers, and efforts to
enable the seamless and cost effective integration of growing amounts of wind power into the electric grid.
Achievements
• The unsubsidized cost of U.S. wind energy has decreased by more than 90%—from $0.585 /kilowatt hour (kWh,
$2015) in 1980 to $0.044 /kWh ($2015) in 2014 in good to excellent wind resource sites (without subsidies)—and has
decreased by more than 40% over just the last 5 years.
• Wind deployment has grown substantially, with total cumulative U.S. wind installed capacity at 2015 year-end of
approximately 74.5 GW (~5% of total U.S. consumption), representing greater than a fourfold increase in installed
capacity from 17 GW at 2007 year-end.
• The “Atmosphere to Electrons” (A2e) wind plant optimization R&D consortium continues cutting edge research to
optimize the cost and performance of fully integrated wind plants. A2e completed its experimental planetary
boundary layer instrumentation assessment (XPIA) and conducted its second annual merit review, including review of
the draft A2e Strategic Plan.
• Released stakeholder supported (Industry, Academia, Researchers and NGO’s) Wind Vision report, outlining a credible
robust wind energy future by 2020, 2030 and 2050, inclusive of multi-stakeholder actions (Roadmap)
13. 13
Wind Power Technologies – FY 2017 Budget Request
(Dollars in Thousands)
FY 2015
Enacted
FY 2016
Enacted
FY 2017
Request
FY 2017 vs.
FY 2016
Technology RD&T and Resource Characterization 34,658 24,789 87,500 +62,711
Technology Validation and Market Transformation 46,250 47,650 30,200 -17,450
Mitigate Market Barriers 11,207 12,395 34,000 +21,605
Modeling and Analysis 10,185 8,166 4,300 -3,866
NREL Site-Wide Facility Support 4,700 2,450 0 -2,450
Total, Wind Power Technologies 107,000 95,450 156,000 +60,550
Goals/Metrics
• Achieve the office’s wind power LCOE goals to support deployment of wind at high penetration levels, sufficient to
meet up to 20% of projected U.S. electricity demand in 2030.
• Reduce the unsubsidized market LCOE for utility-scale land wind energy systems to $0.057/kWh by 2020 and
$0.042/kWh by 2030 (from a reference wind cost of $0.069/kWh in 2014).
• Reduce the unsubsidized market LCOE for offshore fixed-bottom wind energy systems to $0.17/kWh by 2020 and
$0.14/kWh by 2030 (from a reference of $0.20/kWh in 2014).
14. 14
Wind Power Technologies – FY 2017 Budget Highlights
• Offshore Wind R&D Consortium Competitive Solicitation ($25M): Accelerate fundamental R&D
targeted at U.S.-specific challenges. The four-year, joint industry, academia and National laboratories
consortia will address unique resource and operating conditions, innovative platforms designs for
deeper water, installation, operations and maintenance, and fundamental research needs to enable a
domestic offshore industry.
• Offshore Wind Demonstration Projects ($30M): Year six of seven of the Offshore Wind Advanced
Technology Demonstration program to support the establishment of a competitive U.S. offshore wind
industry through offshore system development and demonstration.
• “Tall Wind” Competitive Solicitation ($22.5M): Enable domestic manufacturing of larger wind turbine
components enabling cost-effective access to resources throughout all 50 states (~140 meters).
• Atmosphere to Electrons Initiative (A2e) ($22.4M): Conduct comprehensive field experiments to
develop and validate high-fidelity wind inflow and wake models, and to develop and demonstrate
innovative wind-plant flow control strategies for land and offshore wind applications. It will also
leverage DOE high-performance computing (HPC) assets at the National Laboratories, and simulation
toolsets to develop wind application-focused, high-fidelity, and computational simulations capable of
modeling the relevant physical processes critical to predicting wind plant performance as well as turbine
loads.
• Advanced Grid Integration ($12.7M): Supports DOE’s Grid Modernization Initiative efforts to create
tools and technologies that measure, analyze, predict, and control the grid of the future; focus on key
policy questions related to regulatory practices, market designs, and business models; and collaborate
with stakeholders to test and demonstrate combinations of promising new technologies.
15. 15
Water Power Technologies – Overview
Motivation/Focus
The mission of EERE’s Water Power Technologies Office is to research, develop, test, and demonstrate innovative
technologies capable of generating renewable, environmentally responsible, and cost-effective electricity from U.S.
water resources at an accelerated pace.
– Marine and Hydrokinetic (MHK): MHK technologies generate energy from highly forecastable waves and currents
(tidal, ocean, river). With more than 50% of the American population living within 50 miles of the U.S. coastline, a
cost-effective MHK industry could provide a substantial amount of clean, domestic electricity for the nation.
– Hydropower is a proven renewable resource that provides the largest share of U.S. renewable generation.
Significant opportunities remain to expand hydropower generation in the United States. Hydropower also provides
strategically valuable ancillary benefits uniquely suited to support further integration of variable renewable energy
technologies.
Achievements
• Northwest Energy Innovations: With support from DOE and the U.S. Navy, a prototype wave energy device advanced
successfully from initial concept to grid-connected, open-sea pilot testing in June 2015 (20kW). The device, called
Azura, was launched and installed in a 30-meter test berth at the Navy’s WETS in Kaneohe Bay, on Oahu, Hawaii.
• Of the 92 teams that registered to compete in the Wave Energy Prize--a two-year design-build-test prize competition
to double the state-of-the-art performance of wave energy converters (WECs)--20 were selected as Qualified Teams.
Seventeen Qualified Teams successfully completed testing of 1/50th scale models of their game-changing WECs, and
up to ten stand to be selected as Finalists.
• In April, 2015, DOE released the first-ever Hydropower Market Report to quantify the current size, scope, and
variability of our nation’s hydropower supplies to provide industry and policy makers with a quantitative baseline on
the distribution, capabilities, and status of hydropower in the United States.
• The Department of Energy, the Department of the Interior, and the Department of the Army through the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers renewed their original 2010 Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) for Hydropower for another
five years on March 24, 2015.
• Completed the first FOA under the HydroNEXT initiative. This FOA focused on technology solutions to lower
construction costs and minimize the environmental footprint of new-stream reach development projects. In total,
seven awards were made ($6M)
16. 16
Water Power Technologies – FY 2017 Budget Request
(Dollars in Thousands)
FY 2015
Enacted
FY 2016
Enacted
FY 2017
Request
FY 2017 vs.
FY 2016
Marine and Hydrokinetic Technologies 41,100 44,250 55,000 +10,750
Hydropower Technologies 19,200 24,750 25,000 +250
NREL Site-Wide Facility Support 700 1,000 0 -1,000
Total, Water Power Technologies 61,000 70,000 80,000 +10,000
Goals/Metrics
• MHK: A new cost of energy FY 2017 target of 66 cents/kWh has been estimated based on information on 2015
baseline data with a 2030 goal of achieving cost competitiveness with local hurdle rates by 2030.
• Hydropower: A new metric has been developed for cost of energy from small, low-head non-powered dams from 9.7
cents/kWh today to 7.5 cents/kWh by 2030.
• Hydropower: A new metric for New Stream Developments (NSD) for cost of energy from small, low-head new stream
developments from 11.5 cents/kWh today to 8.9 cents/kWh by 2030.
17. 17
Water Power Technologies – FY 2017 Budget Highlights
• HydroNEXT - New Stream Reach Development ($7.8M): Issue a competitive solicitation for new stream
reach development (NSD) to develop new strategies including more innovative water diversion
techniques (no-dam hydropower) and advanced tunneling methods that would allow development of
areas where hydropower projects cannot be built using traditional construction methods.
• Energy-Water Nexus – Water Utility Waste Energy Recapture ($6M): Support the DOE Energy-Water
Nexus Crosscut by funding demonstrations and performance/reliability testing, in partnership with water
utilities, of different small, modular hydropower systems to recover excess energy at municipal water
supply and treatment systems and continue the second year of a 4-year effort to improve accurate
representation of hydropower systems in integrated energy assessment models to help identify any
significant future water and energy systems-level risks.
• Revolutionary Wave Energy Conversion (WEC) System Performance Demonstration ($10.3M):
Competitive solicitation to fund sub-scale Wave Energy Converter (WEC) system design, prototype
development, deployment, and operation to achieve system performance at a relevant scale. Builds on
the FY 2015 Wave Energy Prize and FY 2014 WEC demonstrations at the Navy’s Wave Energy Test Site.
• Open Water Wave Test Facility ($20M): Commence procurement for and construction of the critical
infrastructure needed for an open water, fully energetic, grid-connected wave energy test facility.
Commissioning of this multiple-berth wave energy test facility will provide affordable access to world-
class test facilities for emerging MHK components and systems to accelerate development and
deployment of U.S.-developed technologies through reductions in technical and financial risk, testing
cost, and time-to-market.
18. 18
Geothermal Technologies – Overview
Motivation/Focus
The Geothermal Technologies Program accelerates the deployment of domestic energy generation from geothermal
resources by investing in transformative research, development, analysis and demonstration-scale projects that will
catalyze commercial adoption. Successful efforts will promote a stronger, more productive economy; provide valuable,
stable, and secure renewable energy to power the U.S.; and support a cleaner environment.
Achievements
• Launched Phase I of FORGE. Five Phase 1 teams were selected to perform analysis on the suitability of their
proposed sites and to develop operational plans in preparation for Phase 2.
• Sandia National Laboratories, in partnership with Ormat Nevada Inc., improved drilling operations by monitoring
the Mechanical Specific Energy (MSE), which is the ratio of input energy to drilling rate-of penetration (ROP).
Ormat was able to show an increase in ROP of about 85% in the well sections where MSE monitoring was
implemented.
• The AltaRock Newberry EGS demonstration project was completed, the first multi-zone EGS stimulation Included
the creation of a new EGS reservoir in the low permeability rock surrounding the injection well; a first-of-its-kind
pumping system using custom-made Baker Hughes pumps to allow a wide range of injection rates and pressures
during stimulation; and the most sensitive telemetered seismic array of any project in the program’s portfolio.
• A first-in-the-world hybrid geothermal-solar facility in Fallon, Nevada successfully combined 33 MW geothermal
and 26 MW photovoltaic with an additional 2 MW Concentrated Solar Power at the Stillwater Hybrid
Geothermal-Solar site.
• The Energy Department’s Geothermal Data Repository (DOE-GDR) received its 500th submission since its launch
in March 2012. The DOE-GDR represents a vital component of the National Geothermal Data System (NGDS).
• Initiated the GeoVision Study to develop a clear strategy for geothermal growth between now and 2050 to be
used by stakeholders to advance geothermal.
19. 19
Geothermal Technologies – FY 2017 Budget Request
(Dollars in Thousands)
FY 2015
Enacted
FY 2016
Enacted
FY 2017
Request
FY 2017 vs.
FY 2016
Enhanced Geothermal Systems 32,100 45,000 45,000 0
Hydrothermal 12,500 13,800 40,500 +26,700
Low Temperature and Coproduced Resources 6,000 8,000 10,000 +2,000
Systems Analysis 3,900 3,700 4,000 +300
NREL Site-Wide Facility Support 500 500 0 -500
Total, Geothermal Technologies 55,000 71,000 99,500 +28,500
Goals/Metrics
• Demonstrate the capability to create and sustain a greenfield 5 MW Enhanced Geothermal Systems reservoir by 2020.
• Reduce the modeled cost of geothermal power from currently undiscovered hydrothermal resources to $0.10/kWh by
2020.
• Lower the levelized cost of electricity from newly developed geothermal systems to $0.06/kWh by 2030.
20. 20
Geothermal Technologies – FY 2017 Budget Highlights
• Frontier Observatory for Research in Geothermal Energy (FORGE) ($35M): Continue full
implementation of FORGE field operations. Activities include commencement of drilling, continuation
of site characterization, and advancement of a competitive solicitation for R&D projects focusing on
reservoir creation technologies.
• Subsurface Technology and Engineering R&D (Subsurface Crosscut) ($33M): Innovative research and
development in key areas — wellbore integrity, subsurface stress and induced seismicity, permeability
manipulation and new subsurface signals, and advanced imaging of geophysical and geochemical
signals in the subsurface — to reduce the cost and risk of geothermal exploration and development.
• Play Fairway Analysis ($5M): Conduct temperature gradient well drilling at targeted areas of
hydrothermal potential, culminating in a comprehensive economic and uncertainty analysis of each play
fairway to spur future exploration activities and potential development by the geothermal industry.
• Deep Direct Use ($4M): Conduct feasibility studies of low-temperature deep-well geothermal systems
coupled with advanced direct use applications and cascaded surface technologies, whose applications
extend the reach of geothermal beyond the western U.S. These efforts will support identification of
potential sites and assess new geothermal resource opportunities.
22. 22
Grid Modernization Initiative (EERE $190M; DOE $379M)
• Develops devices and integrated systems, coordinates integration
standards and test procedures, and evaluates the grid
characteristics of both individual devices and integrated systems to
provide grid-friendly energy services
Devices and Integrated
System Testing ($74.6M)
• Focuses on tools and strategies to determine the type, number, and
placement of sensors to improve system visibility
Sensing and Measurement
($34.3M)
• Focuses on new control technologies to support new generation,
load, and storage technologies
System Operations, Power
Flow, and Control ($23.1M)
• Develops the next generation of modeling and simulation tools
needed for power system planning
Design and Planning Tools
($17.7M)
• Addresses physical and cybersecurity challenges and assesses ways
to minimize risk and provide situational awareness during energy-
related emergencies
Security and Resilience
($11.5M)
• Provides technical assistance to key decision-makers so they can
address the high priority grid modernization challenges and needs
identified by electric power industry stakeholders
Institutional Support
($28.5M)
Changing Electricity
Supply Mix
Threats to Resilience and
Reliability
New Market
Opportunities for
Consumers
Information and Control
Technologies
Aging Infrastructure
EERE Strategic Goal: Enable the integration of clean electricity into a reliable, resilient, and efficient electricity grid
Clean
Distribution
Feeder
Low Reserve
Margin
Demo
Grid
Analytics
Platform
Regional
DemonstrationsGrid Modernization Multi-Year Program Plan
23. 23
Wellbore Integrity
$8M
Subsurface Stress &
Induced Seismicity
$9M
Permeability
Manipulation
$4M
New Subsurface Signals
$12M
Energy Field Observatories
Materials: adaptive cements,
muds, casing
Real time, in-situ data
acquisition and transmission
system
Diagnostics tools, remediation
tools and techniques
Quantification of material/seal
fatigue and failure
Advanced drilling and
completion tools (e.g.,
anticipative drilling &
centralizers)
Well abandonment analysis/
R&D
Stress state beyond the
borehole
Signal acquisition and
processing and inversion
Localized manipulation of
subsurface stress
Physicochemical rock physics,
including fluid-rock
interactions
New approaches to remotely
characterize in-situ fractures
and to monitor fracture
initiation/branching and fluid
flow
Manipulating (enhancing,
reducing and eliminating) flow
paths
Novel stimulation methods
Diagnostic signatures of system
behavior and critical thresholds
Autonomous acquisition,
processing and assimilation
approaches
Integration of different
measurements collected over
different scales to quantify
critical parameters and
improve spatial and temporal
resolutions
Adaptive Control of Subsurface Fractures and Fluid Flow
Risk Assessment Tools and Methodologies
Ongoing Subsurface Related R&D $47.6M
Subsurface Crosscut (EERE $81M; DOE $258M)
Advanced Imaging of
Geophysical &Geochemical
Signals in the Subsurface
24. 24
Energy-Water Nexus
Energy-Water Nexus
EERE: $52M
DOE: $96M
Collaboration Across DOE EERE RD&D Focus
Leverage integrated analysis, innovation
and outreach to accelerate Nation’s
transition to more resilient coupled
energy-water systems
• AMO ($25.0M): Low-Energy, Low-Carbon, Low- Cost
Desalination Hub
• BETO ($4.0M): Conversion technologies
• GTO ($2.0M): Desalination from geothermal
brines
• SETO ($15.0M): Concentrating Solar Power
desalination
• Water ($6.0M): Water supply system energy recovery and
integrated energy assessment modeling