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Energy Research Sputters

Experts say too much funding is going into hydrogen at the expense of near-term technologies.

By Kevin Bullis

Tuesday, January 31, 2006

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High oil prices and the dangers of global warming have some experts hoping that President Bush's State of the Union address tonight will redirect energy research priorities. The president, they say, needs to start funding a wider range of promising technologies, including ones that could have a near-term impact on both fuel costs and emissions.

"There clearly are serious issues about the balance of the [research] portfolio," says Ernest Moniz, former undersecretary at the Department of Energy and now professor of physics at MIT, where he co-chairs the Energy Research Council, set up to spearhead energy research.

Moniz says there "is a huge amount" of money going into research on new technologies, especially for transportation, that use hydrogen for fuel. Yet such hydrogen technology "is a very long way into the future, if ever, whereas lots of other kinds of work that could have very profound impacts in the shorter term are not being funded." In his 2003 State of the Union address, President Bush proposed $1.2 billion for hydrogen research.

According to Moniz, shorter-term technologies that deserve more funding include advanced internal combustion engines and new techniques for burning fossil fuels more cleanly in power plants. Advanced engines could improve fuel efficiency by 15-20%, he says, significantly easing the demand for oil, while simultaneously decreasing emissions.

One promising candidate is homogeneous charge compression ignition, known as HCCI, a technology that uses sophisticated controls to combine the best elements of diesel and gasoline engines. Since the advanced controls make the engines tunable for running on different fuels, they could further decrease dependence on oil by burning ethanol, biodiesel, or even hydrogen.

Further research for HCCI is needed to refine controls, increase power output, and identify the optimal fuels. But "a problem in this area for everybody has been reliability of funding," says William Green, a chemical engineering professor at MIT. The lack of a commitment "has slowed down the whole country's research on this. People have been reluctant to hire postdocs and expand their graduate programs because they weren't sure how many years of support they'd have," he says.

In spite of much rhetoric about the need for new energy solutions, overall energy-related research at the Department of Energy is actually less, in constant dollars, than it was in the late 1980s and early-to-mid-1990s, according to an analysis of this year's budget by the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Overall funding is more or less flat from 2005 to 2006, with 5.9 percent increase in fossil fuel research, but a 10.5 percent decrease in solar and renewables research. Also, conservation research was cut by 16.7 percent, according to the report.

Green traces the funding woes back to the late 1990s, when oil prices were very low. "Almost all energy research got killed, because nothing you could do research on could possibly beat oil at $20 a barrel. The whole infrastructure of energy research was really cut dramatically."

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Now oil prices have more than tripled of course. And yet this hasn't translated into more actual dollars for energy research. "I've seen more interest," says Green, "but I haven't seen that big of change in what's actually getting funded."

Comments

  • Energy research
    What about the Rocky Mountain Research Center and the remarkable work being done by the Lovins. I don't think anyone will ever call it to the president's attention because he is interested only in the traditional oil and gas production that has enmeshed us in this mess but I hope MIT will discuss the Lovins' work ceaselessly as to me it seems the inevitable progression and the hope for the planet. Thanks;  Eleanor Culberson
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (Eleanor Culberson)
    01/31/2006
    Posts:1
    • Energy Research
      Amory Lovins will be the featured speaker at the Energy Colloquium co-sponsored by the MIT Energy Research Council and the LFEE on February 27, 2006 at 4:00 PM in Wong Auditorium, Tang Center, E51.  The lecture is free and open to the public.
      Rate this comment: 12345
      Guest (Marie Tangney)
      02/22/2006
      Posts:1
      • I hate MIT
        Why do all the really interesting speakers go to cool colleges like MIT.  BooHoo
        Rate this comment: 12345
        Guest (karl )
        03/15/2006
        Posts:1
  • Research Funding
      I want to register my own objection to taxpayer funding of for-profit industry.  It seems to me that taxpayers should not be required, and let's face it that's what so-called 'federal funding' is, to pay for research into products eventually to be sold to profit to, guess who, taxpayers.
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (Hunter)
    01/31/2006
    Posts:1
  • Upper Atmospheric Wind Turbines
    Sky WindPower's "windmill kite" is a a promising energy technology in need of funding. By flying tethered rotorcraft in the much denser wind energy field aloft, electricity could be had at less cost than from most other sources. We need to move some of the funding from hydrogen technologies that may help us 40 years out to technologies that could help us 5 years out.

    Jonathan Freidin
    jonathan@skywindpower.com
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (Jonathan Freidin)
    01/31/2006
    Posts:1
    • Political obstruction of energy solutions
      The Bush administration cancelled the PNGV in 2001 (we sure could use its 80-MPG cars today!) and substituted a hydrogen program which will not yield fruit for another 10 years, if ever.  It took extreme action from outsiders in Congress to get a trivial amount of money for plug-in hybrids for last year's energy bill.

      The reason is now obvious:  high demand for oil combined with lack of alternatives means record profits for the Bush cronies.  This administration does NOT want solutions, because it benefits from the problems!
      Rate this comment: 12345
      Guest (Engineer-Poet)
      01/31/2006
      Posts:1
      • Technology breakthrough at any price
        15-20% improvement in fuel efficiency by advanced engines is not a solution. This will quickly be balanced by 15-20% more cars on the street, with no overall emission decrease or oil demand ease. What is needed is indeed new technology not based on burning oil or any kind of fossil.
        Rate this comment: 12345
        Guest (Eugene Masala)
        02/02/2006
        Posts:1
  • MIT anti Hydrogen
    I remember an MIT study that said computers were not helping the economy
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (R Carley)
    01/31/2006
    Posts:1
  • Energy Research
    A 22% increase in spending is great and welcomed news. However there apears to be a disconnect between "research" and "product delivery" if I heard the Prez correctly. Why not pull some of the $2 Billion we spend on subsidizing the gas pump and get these test tube ideas into high gear and into real production facilities. If Moores Law is applicable to other "Silicon" technologies, then we should see huge leaps in Solar Energy capabiities. And since our Rust Belt Industries are getting outsourced overseas to China and other locations, we should have enough idle factory production capacity to execute large buildouts of Wind Generators (of an type - teathered, vertical axis etc). Basically - keep our production here in the States and keep our citizens working too.

    Also - does anyone know what the 22% increase actually amounts to in US dollars? Over what period?


    my 2 cents
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (Mike)
    02/03/2006
    Posts:1
  • energy harvesting
    there is a method to extract a few pi electrons during the photosynthesis
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (sunil Kunjachan)
    05/14/2006
    Posts:1

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