The U.S. Department of Energy today announced its annual competition
for students and professors from minority institutions to compete for
research dollars that will continue to support the nation's clean air
goals and help bolster declining domestic oil supplies.
Historically Black Colleges and Universities and Other Minority Institutions
will compete for $900,000 from the Department of Energy to conduct innovative
research and development that converts and uses coal, natural gas and
oil. Proposals are due February 18, 2000. The department expects to announce
awards in May. DOE anticipates announcing four to six awards from the
first six topics (maximum amount $200,000) and four to eight awards in
the Faculty/Student Exploratory Research Training grants (maximum award
$20,000).
A solicitation, Support of Advanced Fossil Resource Utilization Research
by Historically Black Colleges and Universities and Other Minority Institutions,
is currently available on the Internet at NETL's
Electronic Business Center under Solicitations. Projects will be selected
and managed by the Office of Fossil Energy's National Energy Technology
Laboratory (NETL)
The solicitation addresses seven technical topics:
-
Advanced Environmental Control Technologies for Coal
-- This area focuses on technologies that will mitigate
the environmental disadvantages of coal use by improving various aspects
of the fuel cycle, from coal extraction and preparation to combustion-related
waste utilization or disposal.
-
Advanced Coal Utilization -- This area
explores advanced combustion techniques, as well as other systems
and materials, that allow coal to be used more efficiently and more
cleanly than in currently deployed conventional systems.
-
Clean Fuels Technology -- In this area,
researchers examine production of premium fuels and products from
coal. Novel concepts furthering this and/or other approaches that
develop premium fuels and products are sought.
-
Heavy Oil Upgrading and Processing -- This
topic focuses on processing or understanding the upgrading of heavy
oils to quality transportation fuels in a cost-effective manner. This
work will apply to other heavy resources such as shale oil, coal liquids,
and tar sands oil at a later time.
-
Advanced Recovery, Completion/Stimulation, and Geoscience
Technologies for Oil -- Characterization is the most
important means of understanding an oil reservoir. Its two main facets
- defining the anatomy of the reservoir and determining how that anatomy
governs fluid movement - develop methods and strategies that improve
oil recovery. Innovative applications are sought to improve the recovery
of oil.
-
Natural Gas Supply Storage and Processing
-- DOE seeks innovative methods and concepts that allow more efficient,
economical, and environmentally acceptable recovery of natural gas.
Novel improvements in recovery techniques could lead to lower production
costs and/or greater recovery efficiencies.
-
Faculty/Student Exploratory Research Training
-- These grants provide an opportunity to maximize the participation
of students and faculty by addressing a variety of topics. Work can
take the form of a novel idea or concept to be tested at a preliminary
stage, or it can address a small, novel aspect of a larger problem.
Research can continue or expand on previous work (e.g. sorbent formulations,
catalyst conditions, etc.), or some other concept, but the topic must
fall within fossil energy research needs.
Because the program is designed to stimulate cooperation between industry
and academia, collaboration with private industry is encouraged for the
first six topics. In fact, collaboration that promotes a cooperative or
interactive effort between the minority institution and a private partner
is preferred.
Applicants without Internet capability can receive a 3.5" double-sided,
high-density computer disk by mail by contacting Debra Duncan, Contract
Specialist, U.S. Department of Energy, National Energy Technology Laboratory,
626 Cochrans Mill Road, P.O. Box 10940, MS 921-143, Pittsburgh, PA, 15236-0940,
or by faxing a request to 412-386-6216. Telephone requests will not be
accepted.
NETL manages and implements a broad spectrum of energy and environmental
programs. NETL employs approximately 1,100 federal and support-service
contractor employees, and is the largest fossil-energy research organization
in the United States.
For more information, contact:
Hattie Wolfe, DOE Office of Fossil Energy, 202/586-6503, e-mail: hattie.wolfe@hq.doe.gov.
Otis Mills, Jr., National Energy Technology Laboratory, 412/386-5890,
e-mail: mills@netl.doe.gov.
Program Contact:
Donald Krastman, National Energy Technology Laboratory, 412/386-4720,
e-mail: krastman@netl.doe.gov. |