HomeMy WebLinkAboutNews Release - Mail Packet - 12/12/2017 - Coloradoan Article Published November 24, 2017 From Darin Atteberry Titled Opinion: Fort Collins Risk Became A Powerhouse In Energy ScienceOpinion: Fort Collins'
risk became a
Powerhouse in energy
science
Bryan Willson
Published 4:00 p.m. MT Nov. 24, 2017
(Photo: John Eisele/CSU Photography, John Eisele/CSU Photography)
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Twenty-five-years ago, the city of Fort Collins took a chance on energy innovation, and
on me. I was an assistant professor in mechanical engineering at Colorado State
University, and I was looking for a space to start CSU’s Engines and Energy Conversions
Lab (EECL). I wanted to find a place where my students, colleagues, and I could build
and test clean energy solutions at large scale.
I found that in an unlikely space — the decommissioned coal-fired municipal power plant
on the north edge of downtown Fort Collins. This 35,000-square-foot facility had the
Dec. 7, 2017
TO: Mayor & City Council
FROM: Darin Atteberry
FYI /sek
heavy structure and space we needed. Fort Collins even then in 1992 was willing to
imagine the space as something more than the abandoned and deteriorating building it
was at the time, and take a risk alongside us as we worked to build what is now the
Powerhouse Energy Campus. Our continuing partnership with the city of Fort Collins is
truly unique in town/gown relationships across the U.S.
Our earliest work focused on reducing emissions from the massive engines used to
power our natural gas pipeline system. Now, almost every engine on the pipeline uses
some technology we helped to create, and every year this reduces pollution (NOx
emissions) in the U.S. by the same amount as removing 150 million automobiles from the
highway. Later, we became interested in the future of the electric grid, and once again
the city of Fort Collins stepped up. Leaders allowed us to connect our experimental grid
laboratory to the city’s grid, which incurred some reliability risk but ultimately helped to
grow local companies like Spirae and allowed the development of new electric grid
solutions being implemented in the U.S., on the national grid in Denmark, and now in
sub-Saharan Africa.
We have also sought to improve access to energy among the world’s poorest
populations. Envirofit International, a company we launched from the lab in 2003, is now
the largest manufacturer of clean cookstoves for the developing world. Factor(e)
Ventures, a company we launched in 2013, has helped to launch 15 companies that use
technology to improve the human condition in the developing world.
In 2014, we completed a 65,000 square-foot addition to the building; now our 100,000-
square foot facility is one of the largest free-standing energy research facilities at any
university. The new space allowed us to expand from just developing to technology to
addressing the entire energy spectrum; technology, energy policy, human behavior,
health, entrepreneurship and access to energy in the developing world. With this
expanded focus we changed our name to the Powerhouse Energy Campus to reflect the
broad interdisciplinary and collaborative nature of the energy work being done.
Powerhouse now houses more than 30 faculty and research scientists, 15 energy
companies, and more than 150 graduate and undergraduate students. On most days,
there are more than 250 people working in the building to: 1) do great energy science, 2)
turn that science into real-world solutions, and 3) figure out how to get those solutions
implemented at large scale. That’s cool.
This interdisciplinary nature of the Powerhouse is not an afterthought, it is by design. The
collaborative ecosystem of researchers, professors, engineers, writers, students,
established companies and start-up companies extends to the greater Fort Collins
community; this unique partnership on clean energy led to the inclusion of Fort Collins in
the Smithsonian Institution’s “Places of Invention” exhibit in Washington D.C.
As we celebrate our 25th anniversary, I want to use this moment to thank the Fort Collins
community for taking a risk all those years ago. This is as much a celebration of our
achievements as the Powerhouse Energy Campus as it is a celebration of the unique
commitment and support the Fort Collins community has shown for energy innovation.
Bryan Willson is a professor of mechanical engineering at Colorado State University and
executive director of the CSU Energy Institute.
http://www.coloradoan.com/story/opinion/2017/11/24/opinion-fort-collins-risk-became-
powerhouse-energy-science/886733001/