September 21, 2024
Federal Briefs
Lake Erie Wind Project Loses DOE Grant
News briefs on the federal agencies that impact those doing business in PJM's footprint. This week, we highlight the Department of Energy and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

Despite losing out on a $487 million, four-year Department of Energy grant, the developers of a proposed Lake Erie wind farm say they will proceed with the project. The Lake Erie Energy Development Corp. (LEEDCo) will still get a $3 million federal grant for engineering and other studies, in addition to the $4 million it received in 2012. The planned Icebreaker project is to be built near Cleveland, seven miles off shore. LEEDCo President Lorry Wagner said that “the fundamentals of the project are as strong, if not stronger” than ever. “People want locally grown green energy.”

More: Midwest Energy News

NRC’s Apostolakis to Retire at End of Term

apostolakissourceMIT
George Apostolakis

Nuclear Regulatory Commissioner George Apostolakis announced last week that he would retire at the end of his term on June 30. He became the second NRC commissioner to announce his departure in a month. William Magwood announced two weeks ago that he was leaving in September. If neither is replaced immediately, three of the commission’s five seats will be vacant. Apostolakis became a member of the NRC in April 2010. Before that, he was a professor of nuclear science and engineering and a professor of engineering systems at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

More: Nuclear Engineering International

NRC: Entergy Plant Still has ‘Chilled Work Environment’

PalisadesSourceNRCThe Palisades Nuclear Power Plant in Michigan still presents a “chilled work environment” for its security workers despite Entergy Corp.’s commitment to improve, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission said in a letter sent to plant management on June 20. Entergy’s efforts “did not demonstrate a strong commitment to effectively improve” the culture at the plant, the NRC said.

“We concluded that the quality of the actions implemented have been insufficient to assess and understand the cause of the chilled work environment within the Security Department,” according to the letter. Security employees at the plant continue to be afraid to point out problems, the commission said.

But it did note that Entergy continues to work to improve the situation. “Because the first step in any 12-step recovery program involves identifying and admitting the problem, Palisades has clearly passed this step,” the NRC said.

More: MichiganLive

UD Gets $12 Million from DOE

UofDSourceUofDThe University of Delaware received a $12 million grant from the Department of Energy to help conduct energy research. Dionisios Vlachos, director of the university’s Catalysis Center for Energy Innovation, said the money will let researchers continue work researching widely abundant plant biomass to be used for renewable chemicals and fuels. The university was one of 32 “Energy Frontier Research Centers” across the country to share $100 million in research grants.

Other winners included the Carnegie Institution of Washington (accelerating the discovery and synthesis of kinetically stabilized energy-relevant materials using extreme pressures), the University of Maryland at College Park (nanostructures for electrical energy storage) and Pennsylvania State University (developing a detailed nano- to meso-scale understanding of plant cell wall structure and its mechanism of assembly to provide a basis for improved methods of converting biomass into fuels).

More: The News JournalDepartment of Energy

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