The Department of Energy is making $100 million in government stimulus money available to researchers with ideas for radically different energy technologies.
The DOE on Monday announced the second portion of the ARPA-E program and said that "concept papers" for three research areas--fuels, capturing carbon dioxide from coal plants, and long-range electric vehicle batteries--are due by the middle of next January. Energy Secretary Steven Chu and Commerce Secretary Gary Locke unveiled the green-tech research program in conjunction with the start of international climate treaty talks in Copenhagen, which got under way Monday.
| Date Of Record Release | 2010-01-05 17:56:52 |
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| Description | The Department of Energy is making $100 million in government stimulus money available to researchers with ideas for radically different energy technologies. The DOE on Monday announced the second portion of the ARPA-E program and said that "concept papers" for three research areas--fuels, capturing carbon dioxide from coal plants, and long-range electric vehicle batteries--are due by the middle of next January. Energy Secretary Steven Chu and Commerce Secretary Gary Locke unveiled the green-tech research program in conjunction with the start of international climate treaty talks in Copenhagen, which got under way Monday. |
| Classification | |
| Resource Type | |
| Format | |
| Subject | |
| Source | CNET |
| Keyword | Energy conservation, Research |
| Selector | ATEEC |
| Date Of Record Creation | 2010-01-05 17:50:08 |
| Education Level | |
| Date Last Modified | 2010-01-05 17:56:52 |
| Creator | Martin LaMonica |
| Language | English |