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April
23, 2004
The Muskegon Chronicle
By Dave Alexander
The new Michigan Alternative and Renewable
Energy Center lies less than a mile down the Muskegon
Lake shoreline from Consumers Energy's coal-burning
B.C. Cobb plant.
One looks to the future; the other is rooted in the
past.
But according to those gathered to dedicate the high-tech
research facility Thursday, new energy sources are
likely just to supplement, not replace, the old ones
-- at least for now.
"Renewable sources of power are not going to
usurp coal power plants," said Gary Nowakowski,
a renewable energy team leader for the U.S. Department
of Energy's Chicago office, who attended Thursday's
event. "But they will complement the power grid,
giving us a more reliable and energy-efficient system."
Grand Valley State University dedicated its second
research facility on Muskegon Lake Thursday afternoon
-- Earth Day -- with more than 150 business, government
and educational leaders present. GVSU also has the
Lake Michigan Center, a Muskegon research facility
dedicated to the region's water resources.
University President Mark Murray promised the energy
center would serve students and faculty, create jobs,
work on problems such as farm waste and demonstrate
a clean, self-efficient energy system.
"This center is going to bring people from around
the nation and around the world to Muskegon,"
Murray said. "This is a center that will attract
national attention."
At its heart, the energy center demonstrates "distributive
power." The 25,000-square-foot "office building
of the future" -- designed and constructed by
Workstage, a division of Steelcase Inc. of Grand Rapids
-- has a self-contained power plant that can operate
independent of the electrical grid or generate surplus
"green power" to be exported to the grid
system.
Distributive power is made in small quantities where
it is needed, in contrast to huge power plants now
in operation. GVSU's energy center in the Edison Landing
business park relies on a fuel cell, solar panel roof
and high-tech storage batteries.
"This facility is working while we sit here,"
said the center's executive director, Imad Mahawili.
"GVSU has dared to create the mental image of
a 21st Century energy future. We can export or import
energy, as we need today.
"This is the dawning of energy distribution."
The federal government provided a $125,000 grant to
the $7 million energy center. Key was a $3 million
technology grant from the Michigan Public Service
Commission, the state's utility regulators, for the
fuel cell, solar panels and battery system.
"GVSU has provided us a front-row view of the
energy revolution that is playing itself out,"
Public Service Commissioner Bob Nelson said. "This
facility plays such a key role in the long-term economic
health of this state and nation."
Not only was Thursday's VIP dedication ceremony a
time for GVSU to show off its latest research institution,
but also a time for Muskegon officials to bask in
the glow of GVSU's accomplishment. Instrumental in
making the GVSU energy center possible was a state-sponsored
high-tech SmartZone won by the city of Muskegon and
Muskegon Area First, a local economic development
agency.
The Community Foundation for Muskegon County and the
Muskegon Area Chamber of Commerce played supporting
roles in creating the SmartZone and developing the
energy center.
"Our community is proud to be home to two GVSU
research centers," Muskegon Mayor Steve Warmington
said. "We look forward to positive results coming
from this center."
Mahawili and his staff now have the three energy devices
working and will begin to write the software programs
to integrate them for their most efficient use. The
center also will begin a program on alternative energy
technology with Muskegon Community College to train
students on the operation and maintenance of alternative
energy devices.
The energy center has space in which startup energy
and technology firms can work with GVSU staff and
students to build new companies. The first tenant
of the center is Freedom Power, a company that integrates
wind, solar, and fuel cells with advanced technologies.
The center also is beginning to work on a few specific
research and development projects. Foremost is a "bio-mass"
project in which farm waste will be used to produce
methane to power either a microturbine or a fuel cell.
The first such plant is being targeted for the Muskegon
County Wastewater Management System.
© 2004
Muskegon Chronicle. Used with permission
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