A key part of Energy Secretary Steven Chu’s plan to revamp the U.S. Department of Energy and push forward new clean energy technologies is the “Energy Innovation Hub,” a research center modeled on the legendary Bell Labs, which generated many key advances for computers and the Internet. But his plans ran into trouble earlier this year, as Congress proved reluctant to fund the eight hubs he had in mind. At one point it looked as if none would be funded, but in the end, three were, at $22 million each. On Tuesday the DOE announced details about the three hubs.
The first three hubs will focus on these problems: making fuels from sunlight, designing energy efficient buildings, and using computer modeling and simulation to develop better materials for nuclear reactors. More details are available for the sunlight to fuels program than the others–the department has issued a formal funding opportunity announcement to get proposals. The nuclear hub seems to be the next in line–DOE already had a workshop on the subject in early December. Details about all three can be found here.
In their announcement this week, the department put the hubs in context. One of the main congressional objections was that the hubs seemed to duplicate other new programs at DOE. A new set of Energy Frontier Research Centers and a new agency called the Advanced Research Projects Agency -Energy (ARPA-E) both fund research that could transform energy technologies. The frontier research centers are meant to tackle specific, basic science questions–the kind of basic research that most economists say the government should be funding, because industry won’t. ARPA-E is also for funding risky research, but the focus here isn’t on basic science. Rather it’s on research that could lead to very big changes in energy, but that involves technology so different from existing technology that industry isn’t likely to fund it, even if it doesn’t require fundamental science breakthroughs. Early projects being funded here include a liquid battery that’s quite different from today’s batteries, which use either solid electrodes or electrolytes.
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