IEP, a Colorado-based company, owns the exclusive rights to a patented Geothermic Fuel Cell technology (GFC), that can dramatically lower the cost of oil and natural gas recovery from unconventional hydrocarbon resources. A primary application of the GFC is for on-site coal gasification for the production of syn-gas and/or for coal-to-liquids. In addition to creating over a hundred new industrial jobs in Ohio, over the next five years this application will facilitate the creation of additional new jobs around a new industry: in-ground coal gasification.
While a number of geothermic technologies have been used to produce oil from unconventional resources, many of them successful in confirming the scientific basis of geothermics, the economics have not supported a viable, long-term business model. The greatest barrier to commercial success facing these proven geothermic techniques is the cost of energy required to heat the ground. The GFC technology changes those economics.
Utilizing the research and testing capabilities of the School of Engineering and the Wright Fuel Cell Group at Case Western Reserve University, the design, engineering, and fabricating expertise in exotic alloys of ThermaFab Alloy, Inc. in Cleveland, and solid oxide fuel cells manufactured by NexTech Materials in Ohio, the collaboration will demonstrate that GFCs can be used as the heat source for an extraction method that will economically produce oil, natural gas, and green electricity from unconventional hydrocarbon resources.
This is the first phase of a project that will use solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) technology to create a single, working GFC unit that will be tested under laboratory conditions in preparation for a second phase field demonstration project.
GFC units work by heating the ground, releasing gases, and hydrocarbon liquids that flow into neighboring collection wells. A portion of the gases are processed and returned to the fuel cell stack to fuel the reaction, with the remainder available for sale. Following an initial start-up phase of operation, the GFC process becomes a self-fueling system - producing oil, electricity, and surplus natural gases.
WIRE-Net's 2006-2008 strategic plan stressed building collaborations around new technologies that could help create new market opportunities for NE Ohio manufacturing companies. Ty Haines, WIRE-Net's Vice President of Manufacturing Services is serving as the Project Manager for this Third Frontier Grant.
This technology can position Ohio as a leader in advanced energy. The Ohio Department of Natural Resources cites that Ohio has approximately 11.5 billion tons of bituminous coal. Successful application of GFC units can improve the economics of coal extraction by generating saleable gas, hydrocarbon liquids, and electricity without the environmental impact of mining, and without the sulfur and other green house gas emissions from coal burning. Moreover, Ohio can create a whole new industry around GFC manufacturing, coal gasification plant design, building, processing, and global export.
WIRE-Net EXECUTIVE RECEIVES NATIONAL FELLOWSHIP
WIRE-Net's Rebecca Kusner, Vice President of Workforce Development, has been selected to join the 2006 class of Marano Fellows at the Sector Skills Academy. This group of Fellows is comprised of twenty-four leaders in the workforce development field who represent educational, community, and faith-based organizations, workforce investment boards, and economic development organizations located throughout the country, and in diverse industry sectors such as healthcare, hospitality, biotechnology, automotive, manufacturing, transportation, construction, and information technology.
The Sector Skills Academy was founded in 2005 as joint project of the Aspen Institutes Workforce Strategies Initiative, Public/Private Ventures, and the National Network of Sector Partners (NNSP), to provide emerging leaders with a unique opportunity for peer learning, skills development, and professional growth. Marano Fellows are named in honor of Cindy Marano, a leader in the field of sectoral workforce development and head of NNSP until her death in April 2005.
In addition to skills development, during a 12-month period Academy Fellows participate in a series of three 3-day workshops designed to promote peer-to-peer learning and establish new relationships with prominent Sector Skills Academy faculty and mentors who are recognized leaders in the field of sectoral employment development. Participants are expected to apply the lessons of the Academy in order to substantially enhance their work in their chosen sector.
A proponent of sector-based strategies, Ms. Kusner joined WIRE-Net in 2005 to lead the organization's new workforce development initiative. WIRE-Net Works includes School-to-Career, WorkSource, and Employment Plus -- programs and services that offer manufacturing company employers performance-based solutions that will meet current and future workforce needs.
WIRE-Net's 2006-2008 Strategic Plan outlines stresses out need to create relationships with key public sector workforce development leaders. Since 1989, WIRE-Net has been a recognized leader in developing effective workforce strategies for manufacturing. During that time over 350 NE Ohio companies have relied on WIRE-Net for programs and services that address their human resource needs. Our success has been due to our designing programs that adjust to current trends while not lowering standards to be competitive. WIRE-Net has begun to implement a sector-based workforce strategy in the new WIRE-Net Works initiative. We're pleased that Rebecca can bring her learning to this new program.
Major support for WIRE-Nets workforce programs is provided by The Abington Foundation, The Alcoa Foundation, Annie E. Casey Foundation, Charles Stewart Mott Foundation, The City of Cleveland, Deaconess Community Foundation, East Ohio Conference of the United Methodist Church, Eaton Corporation, Enterprise, Eva L. and Joseph M. Bruening Foundation, Fred A. Lennon Charitable Trust, The George Gund Foundation, George W. Codrington Charitable Foundation, The Hitachi Foundation, PMA Educational Fund, RPM Corporation, The Thomas H. White Foundation, and The U. S. Department of Labor. The Charles Stewart Mott Foundation provides major support for the Sector Skills Academy. To learn more about the new fellows and the Academy, please visit: www.sectorskillsacademy.org
Last month marked the "creative destruction" of a major Cleveland eyesore, as Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson, Cleveland City Councilman Jay Westbrook (Ward 18), and community, business, and resident stakeholders gathered to kick-off the demolition of the 170,000 sq. ft. former Trinity Building on Cleveland's west side.
The Detroit Avenue property was best known as the home to the Monarch Aluminum Company in the 1950s. Cudell Improvement, Inc. and WIRE-Net applauded the city's leadership in acquiring the property through tax foreclosure and for making this site the pilot project for the City's new Industrial-Commercial Land Bank Program. A $2.5M investment by the City in demolition and environmental clean up will convert the property into a new 5½ acre for light industrial uses.
In addition to Mayor Frank Jackson and Councilman Westbrook, family members of the former owners of Monarch, as well as, John Magill, Ohio Department of Development, Tracey Nichols, Cuyahoga County Department of Development, John Colm, WIRE-Net President & Executive Director, and Anita Brindza, Executive Director, Cudell Improvement, Inc participated in the event.
WIRE-Net's 2006-2008 Strategic Plan speaks to the need to redevelop manufacturing company properties in the urban core to ensure the city has a healthy tax and employment base and manufacturing firms have room to expand. The Trinity property affords an opportunity for one or more companies to have a modern space in an area supported by new infrastructure. WIRE-Net has welcomed the opportunity to be a part of that process.
2 comments:
No No No...I am all for industrial development but the Trinity site should be developed residentially; in fact, all of the industry in that area should be relocated to the Midland Steel location.
The area of the Trinity site is ripe for a lakeside community, industry adds nothing to that area, and the Midland Site has good access to the interstate and its large and accommodating.
Why would the city encourage any industries that close to the lake? A factory offers jobs and that is excellent…but when too close to homes they depreciate property value.
I am so serious about this…the triangle piece of land that Trinity parcel resides on should be developed much like Battery Park, the Ferry Cap and Screw should not have been refurbished it and the other smaller buildings should have all been cleared. Franklin Ave extended to Detroit at West Blvd and the grid streets 91st, 93rd and 95th Streets completed through to the extension of Franklin Ave.
I think a large mistake is being made; the site needs further consideration and should not be developed industrial.
This site is not adjacent to the lake (what is close anyway?).
It has been cleaned to an industrial standard, meaning that much more would have to be invested to get it to a residential standard to allow that kind of redevelopment.
Modern factories can be good neighbors, even to residents, provide jobs and add to our tax base.
Post a Comment