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- April 15
- Alternatives
Alternatives
- By Mary Geddry
- Published 04/14/2009
- Columnists , April 15
- Unrated
Mary Geddry
View all articles by Mary GeddryProducing energy from renewable sources is clearly a growth industry judging from the number of federal agencies receiving stimulus money dedicated to renewable energy and carbon neutrality.
While rural America is not a direct recipient of most of the stimulus money, especially in Oregon where it is being divvied out to more populous areas, being able to produce energy locally opens the door for indirect investment. Developing manufacturing capability for solar and wind generators on the South Coast allows public agencies to spend their stimulus dollars here bringing in badly needed outside capital.
Still, as written here before the real opportunity in renewable energy is in the ongoing production and sale of electricity. It is this concept that motivated the development of the Western Oregon Wind Project to help earn additional revenue for local schools. Once again I want to personally thank Congressman Peter DeFazio for supporting this project and encourage everyone reading this to call or write the Congressman or stop by The Sentinel and sign a letter of support for this project.
Clean storage, the ability to capture power from clean sources for later use, is the proverbial ‘holy grail’ of the renewable energy industry. Presently, renewable energy must be used, stored in batteries or lost or fed back into the centralized grid as a credit against future use. Using a coal-powered grid for clean energy storage is counter-intuitive. For quite some time I have been working to acquire the rights to an emerging clean storage system to replace batteries and this week made significant progress in that direction. Ultra-capacitors are a clean storage source capable of millions of charge and discharge cycles, utilize organic electrolytes and dielectrics and unlike batteries need never to be replaced. A capacitor roughly the size of refrigerator could store sufficient power from clean sources to run an average home for almost a week.
The capacitor technology will not be available for a couple of years but I hope that it is encouraging to devotees of renewable energy to know great strides have been made in this area. With luck and perseverance the Southern Oregon Coast may be a leader in the implementation of this technology as well as wide scale distributed energy.