• DOE & NREL Showcase Hydrogen Powered Bus at A Taste of Colorado September 2, 2010
    To help spread the word about advanced technology vehicles, the U.S. Department of Energy’s Fuel Cell Technologies Program is showcasing alternative fuel vehicles at this year’s A Taste of Colorado. […]
  • Scientist Named an American Chemical Society Fellow September 1, 2010
    Dr. Helena Chum, research fellow at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), was recently named a 2010 Fellow by the American Chemical Society (ACS). […]
  • NREL Seeks Design Tools for Better Car Batteries August 23, 2010
    The U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) is seeking proposals to create computer models to help build and improve electric drive vehicle (EDV) batteries. […]
  • Media Invited to Geothermal Energy Symposium August 12, 2010
    The U.S. Department of Energy’s Rocky Mountain Oilfield Testing Center (RMOTC) in partnership with the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) and the Southern Methodist University (SMU) Geothermal Laboratory, invite members of the media to attend the two-day “Geothermal in the Oil Field” symposium in Casper, Wyo., Aug. 18-19, […]
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  • Mariner may be facing BP-style crisis September 2, 2010
    Mariner Energy, Inc. shares dropped more than 4 percent Thursday following news that one of its production platforms exploded in the Gulf of Mexico. […]
  • BP's life on 'frontiers' of energy industry at risk August 29, 2010
    At a celebration of BP's centennial last October, CEO Tony Hayward boasted to guests that the oil company "lives on the frontiers of the energy industry." […]
  • Gas prices continue unusual pre-Labor Day fall August 23, 2010
    Gasoline pump prices continued to fall on Monday, offering a bright spot for drivers watching their wallets in the uncertain economy. […]
  • Blackstone taking Dynegy private for $542.7M August 13, 2010
    Asset manager Blackstone Group said Friday it is paying $542.7 million to take Dynegy Inc. private in a three-way deal that will see Dynegy also sell four power plants to NRG Energy Inc. […]
  • Gulf spill investigators eye undersea evidence August 6, 2010
    Now that BP appears to have vanquished its ruptured well, authorities are turning their attention to gathering evidence from what could amount to a crime scene at the bottom of the sea. […]

Congress to pass energy bill this year: White House

Coal mining is destroying our ecosystems and communities. Here, the practice of mountain top removal coal mining has leveled this Appalachian mountain.

Coal mining is destroying our ecosystems and communities. Here, the practice of mountain top removal coal mining has leveled this Appalachian mountain.

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. lawmakers will pass major energy legislation, possibly including measures to address climate change, by the end of this year, a top White House official said on Sunday.

“I do know this, at the end of this first year of Congress there will be an energy bill on the president’s desk,” White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel told ABC’s “This Week with George Stephanopoulos.”

When asked whether the bill would include a controversial cap-and-trade system aimed at curbing emissions of carbon dioxide, Emanuel said “our goal is to get that done. We will see.”

Democrats in the House Energy and Commerce Committee will begin hearings this week on proposed legislation that would limit greenhouse gas emissions and require companies to acquire permits to release carbon into the atmosphere.

Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Henry Waxman has said he wants the bill, which includes measures to boost energy efficiency and develop clean energy technology, to pass the committee in late May and the House of Representatives later in 2009.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, also a Democrat, said he hoped the Senate by the middle of 2009 would pass cap-and-trade legislation, which allows firms emitting more carbon dioxide than the limit to buy credits from those that emit less.

No major bill addressing the issue has been introduced in the chamber.

Democrats control Congress.

But the attempt to enact new climate change laws at a time when the U.S. economy is in a deep recession has raised concerns among Republicans and some Democrats, who worry that doing so would raise costs for consumers and industry.

Emanuel said it was understandable that there would be some objections to a program of this magnitude, but he disagreed with the criticism that the cap-and-trade system was a broad base tax increase.

“No, what I believe is we’re going to alter how we deal with our energy policy,” Emanuel said.

Congress faces pressure to act on climate change following the Environmental Protection Agency’s finding last week that carbon dioxide posed a danger to human health, possibly paving the way for federal regulation of greenhouse gas emissions.

Emanuel reiterated that the White House supported a legislative solution for reducing climate warming emissions.

Source:Reuters(Reporting by Ayesha Rascoe; Editing by Paul Simao)

Credit:REVERSEENERGY.COM

Retrofit of Empire State Building to Slash Energy Use by 38%

A unique team of private companies and non-profit organizations has devised an energy retrofit for the Empire State Building that will reduce its energy use by 38%, including a 33% reduction in cooling load and a 3.5-megawatt reduction in peak electrical demand. The retrofit project, a small part of a $500 million upgrade for the New York City landmark, will reduce energy loads by upgrading windows and lighting and by adding radiative barriers behind the radiators. To deliver the remaining energy more efficiently, the retrofit will upgrade some of the chillers for the building while removing others, and it will install new variable-speed air handling units. And to better control that energy delivery, the retrofit will add demand-control ventilation and tenant energy management systems, while also upgrading energy controls and meters for the building as a whole. Efforts to be completed by the end of 2010 will yield half the energy savings, while the remainder will be achieved by 2013.

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