Page added on September 17, 2013
The US Navy has just pumped $30 million into the Energy Excelerator, a funding agency for renewable energy start-ups in Hawaii. That triples the agency’s operating funding over the past three years, and it gives the ol’ Bronx cheer to certain legislators in Congress who have tried to cut funding for the Navy’s ambitious alternative fuel initiatives. Even at the relatively modest initial funding level, the program has already raised follow-on investments from the private sector totaling more than $38 million.
The Energy Excelerator, which also receives funding from the Department of Energy and other partners, has 17 success stories under its belt, and with this new round of funding the ripple effect could be huge. In addition to potential application elsewhere in the US, companies that get under way with help from the Energy Excelerator have the whole Asia Pacific island nation market at their feet.
Hawaii has a twofold, urgent motive for weaning itself from fossil fuel dependency: extremely high prices (quadruple the national average) and long supply lines. Both are intertwined with the state’s importance to the US Navy, most famously in the form of Pearl Harbor, which also explains why the Department of Defense has been adopting renewable energy and energy efficiency projects in Hawaii hand over fist.
USS Carl Vinson (cropped) courtesy of US Navy.
Aside from major solar installations, which have become ubiquitous at DoD facilities throughout the US, the DoD’s energy and conservation projects in Hawaii include a first-of-its-kind military collaboration between the Army and GM on a fuel cell vehicle fleet (which is part of a larger fuel cell infrastructure project), a full scale rainwater harvesting system at an Army barracks, an experimental renewable energy microgrid system, and a grid-connected wave power system that also serves as a shared test bed for private sector wave power development.
At just a fraction of its new funding level, the Excelerator has already established a solid track record. The 17 companies in its portfolio have garnered $18 million in revenue over the past three years.
The projects represent a wide range of renewable energy, alternative transportation and energy efficiency systems.
Some of the standouts include Conscious Commuter Corporation’s e-bike sharing system and Sopogy Inc.’s micro-concentrating solar collectors, a renewable natural gas project from Hawaii Gas, desalination systems powered by renewable energy from a company aptly named Renewable Water Technologies, and Hnu Energy’s “smart” storage solutions for smoothing out spikes in solar availability.
Of particular note is at least one algae biofuel project by the company Kuehnle Agrosystems, which interestingly enough doubles as a water and air pollution remediation system for a local Chevron refinery.
The company was recently recognized by the US EPA for its innovative algae biofuel and industrial carbon capture system, but we’re more interested in the idea that the Kuehnle investment represents yet another end-run by the Navy around partisan opposition to its biofuel initiatives, particularly algae biofuel.
Though key federal legislators including Senator John McCain (R-AZ) and Rep. Randy Forbes (R-VA) have repeatedly attempted to torpedo the Navy’s biofuel initiatives, so far the Obama Administration has managed to deploy its executive authority to keep the programs humming along.
That includes biofuel research partnerships between the Navy, Agriculture and Energy as well as ample funding for private sector biofuel projects.
7 Comments on "US Navy Triples Funding For Clean Energy In Hawaii"
peakyeast on Tue, 17th Sep 2013 11:20 am
Is 30$ million enough to even pay for the administration and CEO for one year these days?
BillT on Tue, 17th Sep 2013 2:44 pm
Gonna run the navy on moonshine? “McHales Navy” was doing that in 1962! Watch those old TV shows if you can find them. And, yes, I remember when they were on.
GregT on Tue, 17th Sep 2013 7:19 pm
Looking at the photo of the USS Carl Vinson, I can’t help but wonder, what the heck are they going to use that huge deck for, anyways? Army basic training? Tennis courts? Hmmm.
DC on Tue, 17th Sep 2013 8:21 pm
CT, cheerleader for dodgy tech-NO-fixes, now pimping for the killers of the USN.
All the USN cares about is dropping bombs from great heights at people that cant fight back. Not ‘renewable anything’. More than likely that 30 mil is cover for yet DOE black weapons program.
CT might think the people of the world will be thrilled if the find out they are being bombed and cruise-missled by the ECO-friendly USN, but in reality, the other 96% of humanity would prefer to see those ships at the bottom of the ocean, and the planes rusting away in a field somewhere in Kansas or wherever.
BillT on Wed, 18th Sep 2013 3:19 am
The Navy, whatever survives the coming war, will be mothballed or perhaps just allowed to rust. There can be no big navy after oil. Nuclear will not do it. It may power a ship, but it will not build and maintain one. Sailing ships also need timbers, which are also in short supply. Canoes maybe?
GregT on Wed, 18th Sep 2013 4:53 am
Yes BillT,
Perhaps the US could transport all of those ‘weapons of mass destruction’ jet aircraft by massive human propelled canoes, and when they get close to their intended targets to massively destroy, they could use catapults to deliver their massive ‘payloads’, all the while avoiding the collateral damage of all those pesky other human beings that unfortunately just happen to be in the way.
I wonder how long the Strategic Oil Reserves will last, when the rest of the world finally says, enough.
PrestonSturges on Wed, 18th Sep 2013 5:16 am
I think Hawaii generates its electricity using diesel fuel which is obscene considering it has high peaks which catch the trade winds for wind power, plentiful sunshine for photovoltaics, and lots of geothermal (maybe a little too active).