Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by WOSlinker (talk | contribs) at 22:24, 6 March 2017 (tidy coord params in infobox). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy
Agency overview
Formed1981 (1981)
Superseding agency
  • Office of Conservation and Renewable Energy
JurisdictionUnited States Government
HeadquartersWashington, D.C.
Agency executive
  • Steven Chalk, Assistant Secretary (Acting)
Parent departmentUnited States Department of Energy
Websiteenergy.gov/eere

The Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE) is an office within the United States Department of Energy. Formed from other energy agencies after the 1973 energy crisis, EERE's mission is to help support the development of clean, renewable and efficiency energy technologies to America and support a global clean energy economy. The Office of EERE is led by the Assistant Secretary of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, who oversees three technology sectors: renewable energy, sustainable transportation, and energy efficiency. Within these sectors are 11 major technology offices and programs that support research, development, and outreach efforts.

History

EERE has been established from several previous agencies within the United States Executive branch following the 1973 energy crisis. It has foundations in the former agencies Federal Energy Administration, the Energy Research and Development Administration, the Energy Resource Council, and the Atomic Energy Commission, all established prior to the establishment of Department of Energy (DOE) in 1977 (Pub. L.Tooltip Public Law (United States) 95–91, 91 Stat. 565, enacted August 4, 1977).[1] The 1978 National Energy Act consolidated several of the former agencies into the DOE, and created an office that focused on energy efficiency and renewable fuels. The agency had undergone several different names since 1978 to reflect its changing scope, including the Office of Conservation and Solar Applications (CSA), the Office of Conservation and Solar Energy (CSE), and the Office of Conservation and Renewable Energy (CRE). The agency gained its current name, the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, in 1993.

Management and organization

The EERE's mission is defined as "to create and sustain American leadership in the transition to a global clean energy economy." [2] The office also develops initiatives to advance specific technologies.[3]

The Office of EERE is led by the Assistant Secretary of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, who is appointed by the president and confirmed by the U.S. Senate. The current Acting Assistant Secretary is Steve Chalk.[4]

EERE oversees the National Renewable Energy Laboratory in Golden, Colorado.

Additionally, EERE oversees the management and operation of the National Renewable Energy Laboratory and provides funding to 12 of the U.S. Department of Energy's national laboratories:

Budget

The Office of EERE's annual budget is determined by annual congressional appropriations. EERE received $1.82 billion in fiscal year 2014,[5]$1.91 billion in fiscal year 2015,[6] and requested $2.72 billion for fiscal year 2016 and $2.89 billion for fiscal year 2017.[7] These funds are divided among the 11 EERE programs and initiatives, as well as program direction costs such as salaries, travel, training and administrative support, and facilities and infrastructure.

Organizational structure

EERE is divided into 3 main technology sectors—sustainable transportation, renewable energy, and energy efficiency—that are made up of 11 different technology offices. In addition, it includes corporate support functions and offices. These supporting offices include:

  • Office of Strategic Programs
  • Office of Business Operations
    • Golden Field Office
  • Office of Financial Management

Sustainable transportation sector

A scooter modified to use hydrogen as fuel within its internal combustion engine

The Vehicle Technologies Office supports the research, development, and deployment of efficient transportation technologies. It supports technologies such as plug-in electric vehicles, batteries, electric drive technologies, advanced combustion engines, lightweight materials,[8] and alternative fuels, including natural gas and propane.[9]

The Bioenergy Technologies Office supports research, development, and deployment projects for advanced biofuels.[10]

The Fuel Cell Technologies Office conducts research, development, and deployment in hydrogen and fuel cell technologies.[11]

Renewable energy sector

The Solar Energy Technologies Office, also known as the SunShot Initiative, funds cooperative research, development, demonstration, and deployment projects by private companies, universities, state and local governments, nonprofit organizations, and national laboratories. It focuses on photovoltaics, concentrating solar power, soft costs (the non-hardware costs of solar), commercializing technologies, and integrating solar with the grid.[12]

The Geothermal Technologies Office supports research and development for geothermal technologies.[13]

The Wind Energy Technologies Office conducts research and development activities in land-based and offshore wind power and works with national laboratories, universities, laboratories, and industries.[14]

The Water Power Program researches, tests, evaluates, and develops hydropower and hydrokinetic energy technologies.[15]

Energy efficiency sector

The Building Technologies Office supports research, development, and deployment activities to reduce energy use in U.S. buildings. The office's long-term objective is to reduce the energy use intensity of homes and commercial buildings by 50% or more.[16]

The Federal Energy Management Program seeks methods and technology to reduce energy use and increase the use of renewable energy at federal agencies.[17]

The Advanced Manufacturing Office works with industry, small business, universities, and other stakeholders and supports research into energy-efficient technologies for industries.[18]

The Weatherization and Intergovernmental Programs Office works with state and local governments to promote the use of energy efficiency and renewable energy.[19] The office is made up of the State Energy Program, the Weatherization Assistance Program, and policy and technical assistance experts that provide resources for clean energy solutions.

  • The State Energy Program provides funding and technical assistance to state and territory energy offices and assists with strategic energy planning, implementing executive orders, legislation, and local ordinances, and managing local retrofits and land-use plans.[20]
  • The Weatherization Assistance Program provides grants to states, U.S. territories and Native American tribes to provide weatherization services for low-income families. The program's direct funding recipients—state-level agencies—contract with local governments and community action agencies to provide weatherization services.[21]
  • The state and local policy and technical assistance team assists state, local, tribal, and K-12 school district employees with energy planning, policy and program design, energy data management, financing solutions, and renewable and energy-efficient energy technologies.[22]

Public outreach

EERE manages the Energy Saver website that promotes energy-efficient technologies for heating, cooling, and weatherizing buildings and lists tips for saving electricity and fuel.[23]

The Office of EERE sponsors several activities aimed at public outreach and engagement in energy efficiency and renewable energy technologies.

Academic competitions

The Solar Decathlon held at the National Mall in 2009

The Solar Decathlon is a competition held every other year where collegiate teams design, build, and operate solar-powered houses. The competition winner is the team that best blends affordability, consumer appeal, and design with optimal energy production and maximum efficiency. These homes are judged in 10 contests.[24]

In the EcoCAR 3 challenge, 16 university teams redesign a Chevrolet Camaro to reduce its environmental impact without reducing its performance. It is sponsored by DOE and General Motors and managed by Argonne National Laboratory.[25]

The Race to Zero Student Design Competition teaches college students about the building science field by challenging them to design zero energy ready homes.[26]

In the BioenergizeME Infographic Challenge, students in grades 9-12 use technology to research, interpret, apply, and then design an infographic that responds to one of four cross-curricular bioenergy topics.[27]

The Collegiate Wind Competition is a contest where college teams are judged by their ability to design a wind turbine based on market research, develop a business plan to market the product, build and test the turbine against set requirements, and demonstrate knowledge of siting constraints and location challenges for product installation.[28]

In partnership with the Center for Advanced Energy Studies and the Idaho National Laboratory, the Geothermal Technologies Offices hosts a competition for high school and university teams. Teams of two to three members research data, interpret information, and design an infographic that tells a compelling story about the future of geothermal energy.[29]

The Hydrogen Student Design Contest "challenges undergraduate and graduate students worldwide to apply design, engineering, economic, environmental science, business and marketing skills to the hydrogen and fuel cell industries." [30]

Other competitions

In the Georgetown University Energy Prize competition, cities and counties with populations between 5,000 and 250,000 compete for a multi-year $5 million prize for demonstrating energy use reduction over a two-year period.[31]

he Cleantech University Prize provides competitive funding for business development and commercialization training to clean energy entrepreneurs.[32]

The Wave Energy Prize is aims to increase the number of organizations involved in wave energy converter technology development.[33] In 2016, 92 registered teams competed not only for the $1.5 million prize, but for opportunities at seed funding and access to testing facilities, experts in the field, and an online "marketplace" that connected teams, investors, and contributors.[34]

References

  1. ^ Relyea, Harold; Thomas P. Carr (2003). The executive branch, creation and reorganization. Nova Publishers. p. 29. {{cite book}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  2. ^ Office of EERE: About Us
  3. ^ Allgov.com: Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy
  4. ^ Office of EERE Organization Chart
  5. ^ Fiscal Year 2016 Appendix: Budget of the U.S. Government
  6. ^ Department of Energy FY 2016 Congressional Budget Request
  7. ^ Office of EERE: EERE's FY 2017 Congressional Budget Request
  8. ^ Office of EERE: About the Vehicle Technologies Office
  9. ^ NGT News: DOE's Vehicle Technologies Office to Achieve Goals with Alt Fuels
  10. ^ Office of EERE: About the Bioenergy Technologies Office
  11. ^ Office of EERE: About the Hydrogen and Fuel Cell Technologies Office
  12. ^ Office of EERE: About the SunShot Initiative
  13. ^ Office of EERE: About the Geothermal Technologies Office
  14. ^ Office of EERE: About the Wind Energy Technologies Office
  15. ^ Office of EERE: About the Water Power Technologies Office
  16. ^ Building Technologies Office Multi-Year Program Plan: Fiscal Years 2016 – 2020
  17. ^ Office of EERE: About the Federal Energy Management Program
  18. ^ Office of EERE: Advanced Manufacturing Office: Key Activities
  19. ^ Office of EERE: Weatherization and Intergovernmental Website
  20. ^ Office of EERE: State Energy Program Guidance
  21. ^ Office of EERE: Weatherization Assistance Program
  22. ^ Weatherization and Intergovernmental Programs Office, March 2016
  23. ^ Energy Saver website
  24. ^ Solar Decathlon Contests
  25. ^ EcoCAR 3: An Advanced Vehicle Competition
  26. ^ Office of EERE: U.S. Department of Energy Race to Zero Student Design Competition
  27. ^ Office of EERE: BioenergizeMe Infographic Challenge
  28. ^ Office of EERE: Collegiate Wind Competition
  29. ^ Center for Advanced Energy Studies: Geothermal Design Challenge 2016
  30. ^ Hydrogen Student Design Contest: About the Contest
  31. ^ Georgetown University Energy Prize: FAQs
  32. ^ Berkeley Energy and Climate Institute: Program History
  33. ^ Wave Energy Prize: What is the Wave Energy Prize?
  34. ^ The White House, President Barack Obama: Prizes Creating "Waves" in the Energy Sector

External links

Public Domain This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the United States Department of Energy.