DOE MAKING STRIDES ON BATTERY STORAGE
Energy Department Under Secretary for Science Paul Dabbar told House Science Chairman Lamar Smith at a Jan. 30 hearing that major aspects of Smith’s House-approved bill (H.R. 589), such as prioritizing advanced nuclear instructure and making national lab facilities more accessible to the private sector, could be enacted by the Energy Department regardless of whether it becomes law. “We certainly support the points that are raised [and] we actually have quite a bit of flexibility” to enact them, Dabbar said at the Jan. 30 hearing.
Dabbar also stressed that his office was working directly with more than 85 companies – including United Technologies, Dow, General Motors and Johnson Controls – to develop battery storage technologies. “These are real companies who want to make real money, who are taking our technologies and are moving them forward,” Dabbar said. “It is a high priority of the department.”
There is “only upside” to the future of battery storage technology, added Under Secretary of Energy Mark Menezes. There are a variety of different options, both those nearing the market and those subject to basic research at the department. These technologies have a “bright future but we do see a bit of urgency,” Menezes said.
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