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Fuel Cells and Renewable Energy to help power tomorrow’s battlefield.
By Allen Gibson,
HomelandDefenseStocks.com
Sept 2004
The
military of the future is going to be a much more energy-efficient organization,
if recent announcements of R&D contracts are any indication. From the Air
Force to the Army to DARPA and the DoD, the services are actively exploring ways
to use advanced technology to make their processes more of a closed energy loop,
for both strategic and tactical reasons. The commercial fuel cell market is
poised to explode within the next 10 years, as sales are predicted to soar to
$3.3 billion by 2006 and $10 billion by 2009, according to Technology Training
Corporation. And the military is increasingly looking to commercial applications
that can be repurposed for the military with a much lower cost factor.
Potentially, this is very good news for commercial fuel-cell specialists like
Astris Energy, who have spent seventeen years weaning alkaline fuel cells out of
the space program by discovering how to build them without the need for costly
platinum components Astris’
latest power generator has a total system efficiency of more than 50% –
several multiples higher than gasoline generators.
It’s
those kind of energy efficiency figures that have the Army, for example, working
with DARPA ( Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency) to create the “Mobile
Integrated Sustainable Energy Recovery” (MISER) program. The idea is simple,
but brilliant. Use the plastic garbage from field operations to fuel
field operations, by converting the plastics into generator fuel of the type the
army calls ‘logistics fuel,’ i.e.: diesel, which can then be used in a fuel
cell.
Plastic
packaging waste has an energy content approaching diesel’s, so a military
unit, which crates lots of garbage, could achieve well over 100 percent
self-sufficiency in generator fuel. In the process,
they would save millions of gallons of costly diesel, which, according to Allied
Business Intelligence (ABI), costs the military anywhere from $1 to $400 per
gallon to deliver on the battlefield! On site fuel cells would also
significantly reduce the truck and manpower ‘logistics tail’ needed to
deliver that expensive diesel and will also likely save lives, since fuel
convoys are a favourite target in war zones such as Iraq.
CellTech
Power of
Westborough
,
Mass.
, has spent
the last 6 years researching and developing its anode and cell technology to run
directly on any fuel from coal to natural gas, and says it hopes to have the
MISER plastic-based version running within three years.
At the
same time,
Polytechnic
University
and DNA 2.0 in
Los Altos
,
Calif.
, will use a novel enzyme catalyst approach to make a
high-value bioplastic for military packaging. The carbon to make the new
plastics is from plant oils, such as corn, sunflower and soybean. The resulting
bioplastic is designed to be easily useable in the fuel conversion process.
The race
is on to replace batteries on the battlefield.
Another
area of intense R&D activity is in micro fuel-cells, which can be used to
run everything from mobile phones to computers. Some experts think fuel cells
will find their first widespread use in portable electronics, since “micro
cells” offer far higher energy densities than batteries. And considering that
the airborne infantry had to carry 22 different types of batteries into
Iraq
, the appeal of fuel cells
becomes obvious.
They could allow a
typical laptop to operate unplugged for ten hours or more, as well as
eliminating the need for battery chargers and AC adapters.
“DARPA
is particularly focussed on small energy sources of the type we could use in a
micro-air vehicle or to power the gear a soldier has to carry on the
battlefield,” says spokesperson Jan Walker.
“Currently, we tend to use batteries, which means a soldier has to carry
enough batteries for the length of the mission. But if we could develop a fuel
cell for the soldier, it would be lighter to carry.”
The
Air Force also wants micro cells, but in their case it’s for laptop computers.
General Dynamics’ C4 Systems has won a 1.3 Million dollar Air Force contract
to develop 10 prototype tablet computers powered by direct-liquid fuel cells
that could be used by special operations forces for portable air traffic
control.
Medis
Technologies, a participant in the project, has indicated that in a few quarters
it could have a commercially available fuel cell product similar to the one
being used by General Dynamics in the project. Medis has already successfully
demonstrated liquid fuel cell systems that operate portable electronic devices.
This could be part of a growing trend in the
U. S.
military.
It’s placing greater emphasis on using technologies and products that are
commercially available, and then integrating and developing them for military
usage, according to a C4 vice president.
Which,
if you think about it, is another aspect of reducing waste. It’s called
re-cycling.
The
Department of Defense (DoD) is also in on the act, awarding Nanomaterials
Discovery Corporation a $2.5 million contract for the development of its fuel cell technology.
NDC
is working on a new class of fuel cells powered by high-energy materials such as
propellants and explosives. Ultimately, says the Company, such cells could
enable development of miniature power supplies for fusing and arming munitions.
That, in turn, could mean land mines that turn themselves off after a set period
of time. Another life saver. And saving lives, after all, is the ultimate in
renewable energy!
Astris
is a late-stage development company committed to becoming the leading provider
of affordable fuel cells and fuel cell generators internationally. Over the past
21 years, more than $17 million has been spent to develop Astris' alkaline fuel
cell for commercial applications. Astris is commencing pilot production of its
POWERSTACK(tm) MC 250 technology in 2004. Astris is the only publicly traded
company in
North
America
focused exclusively on the alkaline fuel cell. Additional information is also
available at the company's website at http://www.astris.ca.
Long
favored as the fuel cell of choice for the
US
space program because of its
reliability, efficiency, and durability, alkaline fuel cell technology was
recently included in new R&D funding available from the US Department of
Energy. Astris Energi Inc. has been
working on the integration of alkaline fuel cells with stationary and portable
power generators. Their 2.4 kW Model
E8 Generator is quiet and emission free, making the compact, self-contained
powerplant ideal for military and civilian applications.
It can be used as a backup power supply, an off-grid power source in
mission critical applications, a portable field generator, or as the energy
source in small vehicle fleet applications.
The E8, which uses hydrogen instead of fossil fuels, has a total system
efficiency of more than 50%, a figure unequalled by any other device in its
class, and several times higher than conventional gasoline generators.
At the heart of the E8 is Astris’ POWERSTACK™ MC250 alkaline fuel
cell, a low cost, highly efficient fuel cell module that starts up rapidly even
in sub-zero temperatures. Its inherent ability to operate in ambient
temperatures (-25oC to +50oC), simplicity of design, and reliability make it
ideal for critical military applications.
Allen R.
Gibson
Allen R.
Gibson has over twenty-five years of experience in media and corporate
communications. He has been a reporter, television producer, and marketing
communications consultant for public companies in both the US and Canada.
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