May-June 2009

Uninterrupted and Renewable

The concept of pairing UPS with sustainable technologies is getting a closer look.

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By Carol Brzozowski

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Going forward means thinking outside of the box, says Gougler. “How can we take our existing product and maybe advance some of the componentry or integrate the existing product with other products, and have a system that is green or can be more easily applied in sustainable energy type applications?” he asks.

Some sustainable technologies—such as the development of inverters for photovoltaics, microturbines, or wind power—may be expensive to produce, but competition and increased demand may drive the price down, Gougler says. “The cost and some of the uncertainty are probably the two biggest challenges from a manufacturing standpoint, in terms of where we want to go with our own technology and how we can participate in some of these markets,” he says.

Other companies participating in these markets include AKI Power Systems. The German company provides UPS systems for wind turbines. Power Systems and Controls makes a battery-free power protection system that relies on a ride-through motor generator with rotational energy while the diesel generator comes online. Caterpillar also integrates battery-free UPS with generator sets.

There are some drawbacks to be considered in sustainable energy, Jones points out. “Denmark has more wind energy than any other country in the world,” he says. “Denmark also has the highest cost per kilowatt hours of any country in the world; it’s a mixed blessing. You don’t get the ups and downs of petroleum products. By the same token, the technology does cost something. As far as renewable energy being less expensive, wind energy stays about the same.

“There’s not much you’re doing with wind energy than turning a big motor with a propeller in the wind, so the big change is in doing it at a bigger scale,” he adds. “They’re making bigger wind turbines, and they’re making wind turbines for off-shore in the three- to five-megawatt range, which was probably unheard of three years ago.”

Jones says he believes most sustainable energy activities will center on wind. “It is a proven technology, and the subsidy issue has been resolved by Congress, which makes a payback for a wind farm very attractive,” he says. “If you can find a site that has a fair amount of wind blowing, you’re in business pretty quickly.”

The long-term challenge is its impact to the utility system over time, Jones says. “It’s one thing to have a wind farm as maybe 1% of your total generating capacity,” he says. “If the wind stops blowing and you lose that 1%, you can increase the 99% that’s left—a nuclear, oil, or a coal plant can pretty quickly compensate for that.

“But what happens when 20% of your generating system is wind, and the wind stops blowing?” he asks. “If you’re a utility, how do you instantaneously make up for that 20% loss? You basically have to have some sort of standby capacity generator available at a second’s notice to produce power, so that presents some interesting challenges for the utility system for the future.

“If we keep pushing wind energy, and it gets to be bigger, wind energy storage would be helpful, because you can now store the energy that’s available instantaneously,” he continues. “If you don’t do that, you’ve really got to build more plants to take up the slack and keep the system running.”

Jones does not believe it’s in the country’s best interest to “put all of our eggs in one basket,” with respect to renewable energy. “We need to continue looking at different technologies,” he says. “We’ve tried ethanol corn, and now they’re doing biomass, algae, and solar cells, and still looking at fuel cells. All of those things together need to keep going. Who knows what’s going to be the ultimate fuel source?”

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Despite the short-term decrease in oil prices, there’s a limited supply, says Jones. “It’s still going to be a political type of energy subject to price spikes and disruptions,” he says. “We just have to get used to that and concentrate on long-term development of alternative sources.

“Because of the fact that we are more interconnected, more wired, and—from an industrial standpoint—more focused, having power continuity is becoming more critical,” adds Jones. “There’s a different attitude toward power reliability, power continuity, and power quality than there has been in the past.”    

Author's Bio: Carol Brzozowski is a journalist in Coral Springs, FL.

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