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January 26, 2004
Grand Rapids Business Journal
By Scott Payne
MUSKEGON — When the blackout of 2003 began last August,
more than 50 million Americans and Canadians experienced the limits
of the U.S. power grid firsthand.
And while that blackout didn't directly affect most West Michigan
residents, they certainly have had their own problems with the
grid during the past five years.
Violent straight-wind storms from Lake Michigan have given thousands
of shoreline and Grand Rapids area businesses and residents lengthy
power outages in both winter and summer.
Starting this year, however, the Michigan Alternative and Renewable
Energy Center (MAREC) in Muskegon hopes to begin establishing
a new direction that would avoid such widespread outages.
The center is a business incubator and research and development
center for alternative and renewable energy technologies operated
by Grand Valley State University.
And according to its executive director, Imad Mahawili, Ph.D.,
the center also is to be a major demonstration project of new
power-generation technologies.
Mahawili said the key to avoiding future blackouts is distributed
generation rather than a distribution grid.
Under the current system, he explained, people receive power from
a few mammoth power plants that transmit energy to communities
through long, vulnerable power lines. In a distributed generation
system, he said, the power could be generated by a widespread
network of modest-sized power-generating fuel cells and other
technologies.
Mahawili said the current electrical grid presents several problems.
He said not only is it vulnerable to weather and terrorist attack,
but the plants supplying it use antiquated and inefficient technologies
that rely on dwindling resources.
Mahawili speaks not merely as an academic, but also as an inventor
and businessman.
According to GVSU, he holds 16 patents and has another five pending.
He also is the founder and former owner of several technology
firms, most recently Micro C Technologies Inc. and IsoComforter
Co.
His own interest in alternative and renewable energy began with
his work as a chemical engineer in the wake of the 1973 oil embargo
and energy price crisis.
At the time, he was developing feedstock from coal for the chemical
industry as a consequence of the crisis.
He said the center in Muskegon will demonstrate a distributed
power generation system using fuel cells and renewable energy
sources.
The problem with fuel cells is that like any other power generator,
they first require power to operate — either fossil fuel
or electricity from the power grid generated either by fossil
fuel or nuclear energy.
The cell at the center — a product of FuelCell Energy Inc.,
of Danbury, Conn. — uses natural gas to generate electricity.
Mahawili hopes that eventually, instead of using natural gas,
the center will be able to use biomass fuel converted from farm
waste into methane to power the fuel cell. (It so happens that
during the 1973 energy crisis when Mahawili was developing feedstock
from coal, just such a notion tentatively was proposed as one
of the synergies for Muskegon County's massive and innovative
wastewater treatment system.)
The center was designed and is being built by Workstage LLC, a
real estate development and design build firm that is part of
the GVSU team trying to make buildings run on eco-friendly power.
Workstage, founded by Steelcase Inc. and The Gale Co., and backed
by Morgan Stanley Real Estate Funds, also offers design development,
construction and project management, general contracting, procurement
and financing.
Workstage designed the structure with the notion of making it
self-sufficient in terms of power. It has photovoltaic cells to
capture solar energy, and a nickel metal hydride battery to store
excess energy from peak times for use later.
According to GVSU, the center is thought to be the first building
of its kind to use all of those technologies to be independent
of the power grid.
The hope for the facility, which opened in autumn, is that it
will attract new energy technology businesses to the region and
provide incubator space and support to start-up companies.
GVSU advises that the center also will offer energy technology
and economics seminars and training to area businesses.
"I see the MAREC as a timely and critical vision for the
development of economically viable technologies for alternative
and renewable energy resources for our nation," Mahawili
said.
The center is part of one of 11 SmartZones created by the Michigan
Economic Development Corp. in 2001 to promote and attract high
technology business development to Michigan. GVSU was the only
university in the state to be granted two SmartZones — one
in Grand Rapids and one in Muskegon.
Tim Schad, vice president for finance and administration at GVSU,
said he is pleased with the many partners working together in
this project.
"Michigan is poised," Schad said, "to be a leader
in the application of fuel cell technologies in both stationary
and mobile applications.
"The Muskegon SmartZone is a joint venture between MEDC,
the city of Muskegon and Grand Valley State University for the
purpose of research and business incubation in alternative energy."
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