UFTO Note - Short Subjects - Oct 19, 2003
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Cleantech 706 Posts |
Subject: UFTO Note - Short Subjects
Date: Sun, 19 Oct 2003
- Cleantech Forum NY Oct 21
- EESAT SF Oct 27
- WSJ on Cold Fusion, Gasification
- Transmission Line Sag Mitigator
- Mechanical De-Icer
- UFTO comments
- Reinventing Corporate R&D
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Cleantech Venture Forum III
Next week, New York City. The Cleantech Venture Forum III starts
on Tuesday afternoon Oct 21 with some pre-conference workshops.
I'll be presenting information about Federal technology
resources. The conference gets into full swing on Wed.
The Forum program will have nearly thirty investor presentations
and refinements based on participant feedback from previous
events. The quality of presenting companies is excellent with the
21 private companies on show collectively having revenue of over
$100 million, thereby demonstrating "market traction" for
cleantech products and services, from alternative energy to water
purification.
The Forum will take place in a positive climate for cleantech
venturing. The $641 million invested in clean technology ventures
during the first two quarters of 2003 is 22% higher than the $524
million invested over the same period last year, according to the
most recent issue of the Cleantech Venture Monitor released this
week. "Cleantech" doubled its venture capital market share to 8%
during Q1-Q2 2003 from 4% in 2002. Nearly 100 cleantech companies
were funded in the first half of 2003.
An executive summary of the most recent Cleantech Venture Monitor
downloaded from
http://www.cleantechventure.com/index.cfm?pageSRC=InvestmentReports
The Cleantech III program agenda can be found at:
http://www.cleantechventure.com/index.cfm?pageSRC=Agenda
*****************
Electric Energy Storage Applications & Technology
The EESAT 2003 meeting is in San Francisco, Oct 27-29. I plan to
attend on the 28-29th. Hope to see you there. Complete
information at http://www.sandia.gov/eesat
*****************
The Wall Street Journal seems to be taking an increasing interest
in energy technology.
A. There was a good report Sept. 5 on Cold Fusion, describing a
conference the previous week with 150 scientists who continue to
make progress, despite the inability to publish, get funding, or
avoid risks to careers. The article concludes that whether or not
the science is "pathological" (as the establishment holds), the
failure to permit or provide honest scrutiny of the evidence
certainly is a worse refutation of the scientific method.
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB106270936017252700,00.html
-- Check out UFTO.COM's "recommended reading" item on Cold Fusion
http://www.ufto.com/documentspublic/uftoextras.html#"Excess%20Heat:%20Why%20Cold%20Fusion%20Research%20Prevailed"
B. Gasification, the basis of the Billion $ DOE plan for
"FutureGen", i.e. zero- emission coal power plant of the future,
and CO2 capture/sequestration, are both actually being profitably
performed at a decades-old powerplant that was nearly scrapped
long ago.
"From Obsolete to Cutting Edge" October 15. In 1988, Basin
Electric Power Cooperative took over an experimental facility
known as the Weyburn Project, begun in the 70's. They make
methane from lignite, and also sell CO2 via pipeline to oil well
operators, who inject it into wells to increase recovery, while
possibly sequestering the CO2.
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB106618439869515100,00.html
*****************
Transmission Line Sag Mitigator
Remember this? The program has made steady progress with CEC
(Calif Energy Commission) funding, and it became the subject of
an EPRI TC project, following full scale tests at PG&E in the
summer of 2002. Developers are in negotiations with
manufacturers, so they're on their way to commercialization, and
are looking for partners for business development.
Contact: Manuchehr Shir 510-594-0300 x202 m.shir@misolution.com
CEC issued a newsrelease recently:
http://www.energy.ca.gov/releases/2003_releases/2003-10-02_line_mitigator.html.
Get the full story by downloading:
http://www.misolution.com/SLiM%20Story%209-3-03.pdf
UFTO Note 29 Jun 1999 - T Line Sag Mitigator Gets Funding;
Partner Wanted
http://198.63.37.164/clients-only/uftonotes99.html
UFTO Note 01 Oct 2002 - Short Subjects (previous update)
*****************
Passive Mechanical De-Icer
MIS has come up with another innovation for transmission lines --
to mechanically prevent ice buildup on bundled conductor by
delivering lateral vibration to the line. MIS has shown the
initial feasibility of this approach by both dynamic simulations
(using finite element methods) and by small scale testing. The
central concept of this device, called the De-Icer Device (pat.
pending), is that it will prevent, as opposed to remove, ice
buildup. It is a passive mechanical device (no electronics) that
will function on de-energized lines. It is designed to be
installed between existing spacers or, in some cases, replace
spacers.
Contact: Manuchehr Shir 510-594-0300 x202 m.shir@misolution.com
or Dr. Ram Adapa, EPRI, regarding the TC 650-855-8988
radapa@epri.com
http://www.epriweb.com/public/000000000001009165.pdf
*****************
A Note to UFTO Clients:
UFTO needs feedback. Please let me know any comments or
suggestions of ways I can make UFTO more valuable to you. What
recent UFTO Notes have you found especially interesting? Also,
visit the website and tell me how it could be enhanced. (Have you
seen the new features on both the public and clients-only areas?)
Coming Soon, to an UFTO Note near you...
*** Let me know which ones you think I should do first.**
- Distributed Utility Integration Test (DUIT) Facility Opens
- Enzyme, microbial fuel cells and hydrogen
- Thermal water splitting
- More New New Solar
- Wave, tidal, ocean power
- New progress in Li polymer batteries
- Powerplant exhaust to solar biomass
- Gas-to-Liquids (GTL)..old old technology taking off
****************
Reinventing Corporate R&D
"Now even companies with big research budgets don't try to invent
everything in-house"
It was great to see this article in Business Week recently
(September 22, 2003). It says that " a new R&D model is
emerging, dubbed open innovation. Companies of all sizes are
rounding up more partners, big and small, than ever before, and
they're casting wide research nets, snapping up work at diverse
corporate, government, and academic labs." It also mentions that
"P&G has 53 "technology scouts" who search beyond company
walls for promising innovations."
So! What does that remind you of??
http://www.businessweek.com/cgi-bin/register/archive.cgi?c=&y=03&w=38&h=b3850067.htm
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