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DOE Pledges up to $30 Million for Plug-in Hybrids
June 12, 2008Source: Clean Edge News
U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Assistant Secretary of Energy
Efficiency and Renewable Energy Andy Karsner recently announced up
to $30 million in funding over three years for three cost-shared
Plug-in Hybrid Electric Vehicles (PHEVs) demonstration and
development projects. The selected projects will accelerate the
development of PHEVs capable of traveling up to 40 miles without
recharging, which includes most daily roundtrip commutes and
satisfies 70 percent of the average daily travel in the U. S. The
projects will also address critical barriers to achieving DOE’s goal
of making PHEVs cost-competitive by 2014 and ready for
commercialization by 2016.
“The projects announced today demonstrate a shared public-private
sector commitment to advance clean vehicle technologies and will
help reduce our dependence on foreign oil while also confronting the
serious challenge of global climate change,” DOE Assistant Secretary
Andy Karsner said. “The Department remains committed to the
research, development and deployment of cleaner, more efficient
vehicle options for consumers from laboratory to the street.”
Assistant Secretary Karsner made the announcements at the Plug-In
Electric Vehicles 2008: What Role for Washington? conference,
sponsored by the Brookings Institution and Google.org. The projects
selected will be developed between Fiscal Years 2008-11 and
demonstrated in geographically diverse regions to identify
performance, operation, and fuel economy in a real-world
environment. The goal is to develop PHEVs that can be mass
produced, compete effectively in the marketplace, and substantially
reduce petroleum consumption by offering fuel flexibility to
American consumers. DOE’s funding for these projects, which is
subject to Congressional appropriations, will be combined with an
industry cost share of 50 percent.
In addition to announced projects, DOE expanded its own fleet of
alternative fuel and advanced technology vehicles with the addition
of a Ford Escape Plug-In Hybrid Flex-Fuel Vehicle, capable of
running on E85, 85 percent ethanol, 15 percent gasoline. This
vehicle demonstrates the capacity of flexible fuel technology to
reduce petroleum use to almost zero. This Ford Escape flexible fuel
PHEV when refueling only on cellulosic E85 or electricity would
consume less than 75 gallons of gasoline per year – the equivalent
of over 150 mpg - and reduce CO2 emissions by up to 93 percent. The
Department’s new Ford Escape will be used to transport DOE employees
to official events and meetings in the Washington, D.C. area.
PHEVs are hybrid vehicles that can be driven in electric-only or
hybrid modes and recharged from a standard electric outlet. They
offer increased energy efficiency and decreased petroleum
consumption by using electricity as the primary fuel for urban
driving. This is the first round of selections under DOE’s PHEV
Technology Acceleration and Deployment Activity funding opportunity
announcement. A second round of applications is due July 18, 2008.
The following three projects were selected:
General Motors has been selected for negotiation of an award for a
project aimed at enhancement of Lithium-Ion battery packs, charging
systems, powertrain development, vehicle integration, and vehicle
validation. Following development, the PHEVs will be deployed over
a three year period into a demonstration fleet in three regions of
the U.S. Other team members include Electric Power Research
Institute (EPRI), University of Michigan Transportation Research
Institute, and the Michigan Economic Development Corporation.
Ford Motor Company has been selected for negotiation of an award for
a project to identify a pathway that accelerates commercial mass-
production of PHEVs. The project will focus on development of
battery systems and deployment of prototype PHEVs. The project will
test and demonstrate the propulsion system design, controls, and
communications necessary to develop a viable PHEV production
program. Team members include Southern California Edison, Electric
Power Research Institute, and Johnson Controls-Saft, Inc.
General Electric has been selected for negotiation of an award for a
demonstration of PHEVs that relies upon an innovative dual-battery
energy storage system capable of 40 miles accumulated electric
driving range. The project will focus on developing the dual-
battery energy storage system in parallel with vehicle integration.
GE is partnering with Chrysler for this project.