DOE RAMPS UP CARBON CAPTURE R&D
The Department of Energy has announced roughly $62 million for carbon capture projects in recent days.
The department Feb. 16 awarded seven projects roughly $44 million for cost-shared research and development to design and test advanced carbon capture technologies. That includes $6 million in federal funding (in addition to $1.5 million in non-DOE funding) for Project Tundra in North Dakota, which would retrofit an existing coal facility with carbon capture technologies. Other projects cross-cutting the country include Duke Energy’s East Bend Station in Kentucky and at Nebraska Public Power District’s Gerald Gentleman Station. DETAILS
DOE Feb. 22 selected another six projects to receive $17.6 million to address cost and operational challenges with current carbon capture technologies that are commercially available for industry and providing for additional development at coal-fired power plants. DETAILS
DOE this month had also announced $6.5 million for carbon capture and other advanced fossil energy projects, including co-funding $875K with the University of North Dakota and partners to help design a pilot plant that will utilize the groundbreaking Allam Cycle zero-emission coal technology.
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