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Energy Roundup: Chu Backs FutureGen, World's Largest Laser, and More

By Kirsten Korosec | Mar 30, 2009

FutureGen might just have a future Energy Secretary Steven Chu met with FutureGen Alliance officials today and said the project has merit, a move that suggests the troubled near-zero emission coal-fueled plant might have a new life under the Obama administration. FutureGen, a project aimed at generating electricity while permanently storing carbon dioxide deep beneath the earth, was axed by the Bush administration in January 2008. FutureGen CEO Michael Mudd said funding might be available for the $1.5 billion commercial scale plant through the stimulus package. [Source: Technology Review]

World’s most powerful laser ready for nuclear fusion experiments –U.S. engineers have finished building the world’s most powerful laser, a 12-year, $3.5 billion project designed to simulate the energy force of the sun and demonstrate the possibility of nuclear fusion. The Energy Department is expected to announce Tuesday it has certified the National Ignition Facility, a massive building equipped with 192 separate laser beams directed on a tiny pellet of hydrogen fuel. [Source: BBC]

Constellation Energy sells off commodities trading unitsConstellation Energy, which faced bankruptcy late last year, has finalized sales of most of its commodities trading operations in Houston and London. Macquarie Group of Australia has purchased Constellation’s natural gas trading unit and an affiliate of Goldman Sachs bought its coal, freight and international commodities business. [Source: Baltimore Sun]

Irish firm to invest $1 billion in wind energyMainstream Renewable Power, the Irish renewable energy firm, will invest $1 billion over the next five years to build wind farms in Chile. The project is expected to generate more than 400 megawatts of electricity and supply power to more than 300,000 homes. Mainstream is ready to develop even more wind farms, based on comments from its CEO, who said their research shows Chile has the natural resources to develop 44,000 megawatts of wind energy and 37,000 megawatts of solar energy. [Source: Cleantech Brief]

Electric car projects offer a little respite in sagging industryDetroit Electric, along with its new Malaysian partner Proton Holdings, says it will produce 270,000 electric vehicles a year by 2012. Proton, which will build the cars, is well-known among green car aficionados and is responsible for the Lotus Elise sports car. General Electric may be placing a larger stake into another electric car company - Tesla Motors. In a leaked interview with Tesla CEO and PayPal founder Elon Musk, GE was the second-largest investor in the company’s recent round of fundraising. [Source: Greentech Media, Daily Finance] UPDATE: GE pulled back its intended investment at the last minute. But don’t worry, three other venture firms stepped up and Tesla completed its $40 million fund drive. [Source: Greentech Media, Business Insider]

Noble makes second natural gas discovery in recent monthsNoble Energy made a natural gas discovery offshore Israel — its second this year — in a well drilled to a depth of 12,000 feet in undersea Levantine basin. Houston-based Noble operates Israel’s first offshore natural gas platform and is working to start production in the new region in 2012. [Source: Houston Chronicle]

Kirsten Korosec has been a print and online journalist for more than 10 years covering education, politics and business.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Coal Call: Texas and Illinois Vie to Bring FutureGen Back From the Grave

    Wall Street Journal - 339 days 11 hours 47 minutes ago

    The Journal’s Russell Gold reports: Steven Chu may not like coal, but Illinois and Texas sure do. Nearly a year after the U.S. government pulled financial support for FutureGen, a showcase for clean-coal technology, the two states that were in the running to house the facility are trying to keep the project alive. On Friday, Illinois state...

  • US coal state senators press new DOE chief to revive FutureGen

    Platts - 297 days 1 hour 39 minutes ago

    Washington (Platts)--29Jan2009 Six US senators from Midwest coal states, including Assistant Majority Leader Richard Durbin, on Thursday asked Energy Secretary Steven Chu to revive FutureGen, a $1.8-billion government-industry project designed to demonstrate the ability to capture and store CO2 emissions from a coal-fired power plant. The...

  • Congress Digs Up Dirt on Plot to Kill FutureGen Cleaner Coal Project

    Earth2tech.com - 257 days 3 hours 55 minutes ago

    What a tangled web the federal government has woven with the FutureGen project. Last week, we wrote about a new show of support from Energy Secretary Steven Chu for the scuttled public-private initiative to build a cleaner coal plant with experimental technology for capturing and storing carbon emissions. Today, we have two Congressional...

  • Fresh Legs for FutureGen Clean Coal Plant?

    Wall Street Journal - 315 days 3 hours 47 minutes ago

    Will President-elect Barack Obama?s massive stimulus package mean new life for the FutureGen clean coal plant? Illinois politicians have their fingers crossed after a meeting yesterday with incoming Energy Secretary Steven Chu. From the Chicago Tribune: Steven Chu, the Nobel Prize-winning physicist and energy secretary nominee, met with...

  • Energy Roundup: FutureGen Has a Future, Silver Springs Snags Cisco Exec, Tesla Co-Founder Sues, and More

    BNET Energy - 164 days 1 hour 44 minutes ago

    U.S. restarts FutureGen clean coal project – The Department of Energy breathed new life into FutureGen,a coal-fired plant project that aims to capture 60 percent of its carbon dioxide emissions and store them underground. The DOEwill provide $1 billion in economic stimulus funds towards the controversial project derailed by the Bush...

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