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EERC Partners with Cummins Power Generation for Demonstration Project
[September 10, 2010]

EERC Partners with Cummins Power Generation for Demonstration Project


Sep 10, 2010 (Close-Up Media via COMTEX) -- The Energy & Environmental Research Center (EERC) at the University of North Dakota, in partnership with Cummins Power Generation, Inc., said it has begun a project to demonstrate the production of heat and power from high-moisture biomass.

In a release, EERC said that Cummins Power Generation, a company focused on the design and manufacture of power generation equipment, headquartered in Minneapolis, Minn., has provided the electrical generator for the project, a key component in producing 35-40 kilowatts of power a day, enough for one home.

"We are extremely pleased by the level of commitment Cummins Power Generation has made to this project and want to express our thanks to Cummins for providing the technology necessary to make this demonstration possible," said EERC Director Gerald Groenewold. "A system such as this will provide a first step toward providing commercial entities the motivation to utilize opportunity fuels for energy generation." "The Cummins generator, which normally runs on natural gas, has been modified to run on synthetic natural gas (syngas) produced by an EERC-developed advanced gasification unit," said EERC Research Scientist and Project Manager Nikhil Patel.


The EERC's gasification unit can convert a range of fuels, such as forestry, agricultural, and industrial biomass waste; animal waste; waste plastics; and railroad ties or cable poles as well as a range of coals, into clean syngas. Together, the Cummins and EERC technologies will work in harmony as a gasification-based combined heat and power technology, with a variety of applications.

"Depending on the circumstances, this combined technology could help industries, farms, and many waste-producing facilities in meeting their own energy needs while utilizing fuels that have disposal costs and liabilities. Users of the technology would also be able to sell green energy back to the power grid, which would provide a financial benefit," said Patel.

The outcome of the project will lead to the development and demonstration of engine performance on syngas, producing data for environmental permitting and providing strategies for achieving emission levels that meet current and future environmental regulations, which are critical for successful commercialization of combined heat and power technologies.

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