COVID-19 has slowed green energy industry, but experts say it should bounce back
“We’re all doing the best we can in the new normal here,” said Kevin Gombotz, vice president of Envinity, a green design and construction company.
5 years ago
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This article originally appeared on StateImpact Pennsylvania.
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The U.S. Department of Energy is giving $2.2 million in 11 grants to small businesses in Pennsylvania to support research into areas including turbines, thermal energy storage and nuclear energy.
The money is going to companies in York, Lancaster, Allentown, Reading, Pittsburgh, Landisville, Pipersville and State College, with an aim of promoting innovative approaches in energy production and storage.
For State College-based Lupine Materials and Technology, that means about $200,000 for work related to high-temperature superconductors.
U.S. Secretary of Energy Dan Brouillette said the goal is to move beyond current technologies, and in Pennsylvania, nuclear energy is key.
“The technologies that they are developing are going to help us understand fusion energy much better,” Brouillette said.
Advanced Cooling Technologies in Lancaster is getting three grants totaling about $650,000. Assistant secretary for fossil energy Steve Winberg said one part of that is focused on turning waste into an asset.
“What we’re trying to do is improve the efficiency of power plants by utilizing waste streams, in this case flue gas, to produce commodities and materials such as ammonia,” Winberg said.
The projects are part of $53 million in grants the DOE is awarding nationally.
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