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March 8,
2004
MiBiz Network
By Rod Kackley
MUSKEGON - Phase one of the installation of
the Fuel Cell Energy Inc. fuel cell that will eventually
power the Michigan Alternative and Renewable Energy
Center (MAREC) has been completed. By the end of March,
it should begin producing energy, according to MAREC
Executive Director Dr. Imad Mahawili.
The fuel cell power plant will provide electricity
and a heat recovery system for heating and cooling
that advances energy technology applications in newly
created research space, incubator facilities, conference
center and classrooms. The project will also include
a solar/photovoltaic installation that will provide
electricity.
MAREC is believed to be the first commercial project
in the world to integrate fuel cell technology, a
heat recovery system for heating and air conditioning,
photovoltaics and a nickel metal hydride battery storage
system to store excess energy. The result will be
a building that powers itself using green sources.
Mahawili addressed a meeting of the Muskegon Area
Chamber of Commerce Energy Efficiency Committee February
19 and also told them that several companies have
expressed an interest in moving into the incubator
space offered inside MARAC.
"I am receiving some very serious interest,"
he told MiBiz. "I can’t reveal any names
or any kind of a timetable, however."
MAREC is both a business incubator and education research
center, as well as a major demonstration project of
energy technologies. The energy program will integrate
fuel cell technology, a heat recovery system for heating
and air conditioning, solar/photovoltaics, and a nickel
metal hydride battery storage system.
MAREC offers four offices to companies that want to
develop products associated with the mission of producing
new sources of energy. Mahawili said the companies
would also be able to use lab space. Four-thousand
square feet of the 26,600-square-foot MAREC building
will be devoted to incubator space once alternative
energy entrepreneurs move into the building on the
Muskegon Lake shoreline just outside of downtown Muskegon.
He also said progress is being made on the idea of
converting biomass (animal manure) to methane gas
and then converting methane gas to electricity. The
plant could be set up on a farm or at a wastewater
treatment facility in Muskegon County, he said.
"Everything is a possibility. It is too early
in the game to be more specific," said Mahawili.
He has put together a grant proposal for the $1.3
million that would be needed to set up a pilot plant
for that process.
"This is going to be an operating plant on a
site where manure can be used on a regular basis to
create methane gas," he said.
Mahawili's own work on alternative and renewable energy
began early in his career. He began his work as a
chemical engineer in 1974, developing chemical feedstock
from coal for the chemical industry as a consequence
of the 1973 energy crisis.
"I see MAREC as a timely and critical vision
for the development of economically viable technologies
for alternative and renewable energy resources for
our nation," he said.
COPYRIGHT 2004. MIBIZ NETWORK.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
This article
appeared in the March 8, 2004 issue of MiBiz, read
by upper management executives in West and Southwest
Michigan. Print subscriptions are free to qualified
individuals who do business in West and Southwest
Michigan. For further information about MiBiz Network,
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