Energy Efficiency, GHG Emissions, Industrial - January 9, 2025
DOE Funds Tech to Lower Energy Demand in Industrial Sectors
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) announced that over $136 million was allocated for 66 selected projects to support the research and development of transformational technologies essential for reducing energy demand in key industrial subsectors.
The selected projects will advance technology solutions for core portions of the nation’s industrial base, including the manufacturing of chemicals and fuels, iron and steel, cement and concrete, forest and paper products, food and beverage, glass and other industries. These industries together account for over 75% of the U.S. industrial energy demand and contribute roughly $27 trillion to the U.S. GDP.
“These industrial subsectors are economic engines for our nation, producing critical consumer products and inputs used to make many other manufactured goods,” said Jeff Marootian, principal deputy assistant secretary for DOE’s Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, in a statement. “By focusing on novel technologies and process optimization within these key subsectors, selected projects can bolster competitiveness and create a positive ripple effect for supply chains across our nation’s economy.”
The projects were selected in the following six topics:
- Chemicals and fuels, accelerating next-generation industrial technologies for the production of chemicals and fuels by improving energy and material efficiency, utilizing advanced energy sources, and developing technologies which utilize sustainable chemical feedstocks.
- Iron and steel, advancing innovative, high-impact technology opportunities in the iron and steel industry through alternative ironmaking process technologies, ore improvements, improved steel recyclability, and advanced steel making technologies.
- Food and beverage products, developing and demonstrating high-impact technology solutions for a wide variety of food and beverage operations across a full spectrum of applications.
- Building and infrastructure, developing technologies to address industrial emissions, particularly those inherent to industrial processes, for cement and concrete, asphalt, and glass.
- Forest products, leveraging high-impact technology development opportunities in energy-intensive pulp, paper, and wood products manufacturing through dewatering and drying technologies and fiber preparation, pulping, and chemical recovery processes.
- Industrial Pre-FEED Studies, where preliminary front-end engineering design (pre-FEED) refers to a stage of project development — after basic feasibility study and conceptual design — that develops the initial concept into a detailed design basis and scope of work to ensure a project is economically and technically feasible as well as accurately estimated.
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