Issue 26
 October 2013

Howdy!

 

Welcome to the October 2013 issue of News Briefs, the Texas A&M Energy Institute's e-newsletter. News Briefs is intended to keep you informed about all the good things going on in energy research at EI and Texas A&M University as well as state, national and international energy-related news that affects all of us.

  

We encourage you to forward News Briefs on to your friends and colleagues.  If you aren't already a subscriber and would like to receive our monthly e-newsletter, please click the "Join our Mailing List" button on the lower right.

 

We also invite you to visit the Energy Institute's web site at http://energy.tamu.eduPlease note that our e-mail address has changed.  You may now reach us at tamuenergy@tamu.edu.

 

If you have any questions, comments or ideas for future issues, please contact Lisa Groce at 979.458.1644 or tamuenergy@tamu.edu.

 

Thank you,

 

John A. Pappas

Interim Director, EI

In This Issue
Energy Institute Exhibits at 42nd Annual Turbomachinery Symposium
Energy Institute Supporting Partner for Defense Energy Summit November 11-13, 2013
Energy Club Fall Activities Appeal to Broad Student Audience
Texas A&M Receives Award for Energy Efficiency
Data Shows China Passing US as Biggest Oil Importer
Focus on the Fellows
Energy Institute Exhibits at 42nd Annual Turbomachinery Symposium

For the third consecutive year, the Texas A&M Energy Institute participated in the 42nd Annual Turbomachinery Symposium Exhibition. The event was held September 30 - October 3, 2013 at the George R. Brown Convention Center in Houston, Texas. 

 

This year's event broke attendance records with 5,857 attendees representing 53 countries, an increase of nearly 400 from the previous year. The exhibition included 322 companies from the turbomachinery and pump industries displaying full-size equipment, cutting-edge technology and emerging industry trends.

 

The Symposia's technical program included 90 sessions led by accomplished industry leaders from around the world. Topics covered included compressors, steam and gas turbines, expanders, pumps and drivers, and auxiliary equipment such as couplings, bearings, gearboxes, dry gas seals and annular seals.

 

The Turbomachinery Symposium began in 1971 and the Pump Symposium began in 1984. In 2011 the symposia were combined and are now held jointly every fall in Houston Texas. The Pump & Turbo Symposia has become a staple event for industry professionals and leading companies. Built on a history of success, this annual event promotes professional development, technology transfer, peer networking, and information exchange among industry professionals.

 

The event was organized by the Turbomachinery Laboratory, part of the Texas A&M Engineering Experiment Station (TEES) and The Texas A&M University System.

 

For more information on Pump & Turbo 2013 including the full technical program list, exhibiting company list, post-event profile and more, please visit: http://pumpturbo.tamu.edu/ or email info@turbo-lab.tamu.edu.

 

Proceedings from previous symposia are available free to download online at turbolab.tamu.edu/proc/. The technical content from Pump & Turbo 2013 will be added to this collection in March 2014.

Energy Institute Supporting Partner for Defense Energy Summit November 11-13, 2013

Join the Nation's energy, business and defense leadership as they accelerate the development and deployment of new energy and infrastructure solutions and projects.

 

The Defense Energy Summit delivers the entire defense energy ecosystem, focusing on the needs and solutions of energy providers, project financiers, early and growth-state companies, defense contractors, military installations and purchasing agents. This unique event brings together the business of the energy industry with the urgent needs of the defense community, convening National stakeholders in the building of a Defense Energy Center of Excellence. 

 

For further information about the Defense Energy Summit, please visit www.defenseenergy.com. Information about the Defense Energy Center of Excellence may be found at www.defenseenergy.org.

 

The Energy Institute is a supporting partner of the 2013 Defense Energy Summit. Use the code 13TAME10 for a 10% registration discount.

 

Energy Club Fall Activities Appeal to Broad Student Audience

The Texas A&M Energy Club kicked off the 2013 fall semester with a full calendar of events and activities open to students across the university. 

 

- On October 10, the club held a movie screening of Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room. During the screening, Energy Club members were privy to the inner workings of the 2001 California energy crisis and the fall of the largest energy company in America. The story presents a company at the crossroads of money, power, and greed and how powerful forces that married shady accounting, unscrupulous public policy, and lots of natural gas and electricity were able to bankrupt a company and yet change the American energy landscape forever.
 

- On October 16, 2013, Brandon Knapp, an accounting major and Fightin' Texas Aggie Class of 2015, led the club's first Energy 101 Series discussion on natural gas basics and natural gas trading. This lively discussion helped to introduce some of our business-minded members to the basic technical features of natural gas exploration and transmission while educating our technical-minded members on how natural gas is marketed and sold.
 

- Also on October 16, 2013, the Energy Club introduced a new program entitled "Project Energy". The Club looks to create a bed of innovation where Aggie ingenuity and innovation can foster energy related ideas. The club will fund a winning project to be completed next semester and showcased at its marquee event The Evening of Energy.

 

Upcoming activities & events:

 

- October 29 & 30, 2013 - Small Field Trips Series: Texas A&M Nuclear Science Center - Texas A&M University is rich in resources and facilities - many of them located on campus. The Energy Club plans to take full advantage of having these resources in close proximity and will use small field trips to provide hands-on experiences to economics and engineering students. The October field trip will be to the Texas A&M Nuclear Science Center and will give attendees an overview of the basics of nuclear energy. Texas A&M boasts one of the most distinguished Nuclear Engineering departments in the nation.
 

- November 6 - Energy Industry Jobs Survey, Eugene Rubio, Managing Director at RTC Group LLC

 

The Energy Club is a university-wide organization that seeks to bring together the A&M energy science, technology, policy, and business communities through initiatives focusing on understanding the global energy challenges and possible solutions through discussion and education. By focusing on interdisciplinary interaction and cooperation, the Energy Club hopes to provide a connection among different energy research institutes at Texas A&M.

 

For more information about the Energy Club, check them out on their Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/tamuenergyclub.

Texas A&M Receives Award for Energy Efficiency

Posted: October 1, 2013 

by Karen E. Bigley, bigleyK@tamu.edu, TAMU Times

 

Texas A&M University has been presented the top award bestowed by the International District Energy Association in recognition of its achievements in energy efficiency, resource optimization and environmental sustainability.

 

The Award of Excellence was presented to Jim Riley, Texas A&M's executive director of Utilities & Energy Services, at the 3rd Global District Energy Climate Awards and Summit in New York City.

 

Texas A&M's CHP system prevents an estimated 99,600 tons per year of carbon dioxide emissions. Texas A&M University Utilities & Energy Services Department has added 50 megawatts of cogeneration to provide highly reliable and efficient cooling, heating and power for over 60,000 occupants in 19 million square feet of space on the university campus, while cutting energy use by 45% per square foot and saving over $162 million since 2002.

 

"Utilities & Energy Services has provided the leadership and expertise to achieve these excellent results, but the full support of university management and the campus community has been essential for success," Riley said.

 

Selected by an international panel of experts, nine international entities received Awards of Excellence and two receive Special Awards for Innovation and Integration of Renewable Energy, as part of Climate Week NYC. The Summit gathered industry leaders from across North America, Europe and the Middle East to discuss new innovations in district energy infrastructure.

 

Utilities & Energy Services is part of the Division of Administration and is responsible for utility production and generation, energy procurement, utility distribution and delivery, energy services and demand-side management, and solid waste and recycling services.

 

In addition to Texas A&M, the following entities received Awards of Excellence: Aberdeen Heat & Power in Aberdeen, Scotland; Qatar Cool in Doha, Qatar; Cornell University in Ithaca, New York; Helsingin Energia in Helsinki, Finland; Falu Energi & Vatten in Falun, Sweden; Twence in Hengelo, The Netherlands; and District Energy St. Paul in St. Paul, Minnesota.

 

Special Recognition Awards for Innovation and for Integration of Renewable Energy were presented to: Fortum in Joensuu, Finland and Princess Nora University for Women in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

 

For additional details, photographs and case study information, please visit the International District Energy Association website.

Data Shows China Passing US as Biggest Oil Importer

Posted: Friday, October 11, 2013 

by Joe McDonald, The Associated Press

 

BEIJING (AP) - China has achieved another world-beating status its leaders don't want: biggest oil importer.

 

China passed the United States in September as the world's biggest net oil importer, driven by faster economic growth and strong auto sales, according to U.S. government data released this week. Chinese oil consumption outstripped production by 6.3 million barrels per day, which indicates the country had to import that much to fill the gap, the Energy Information Administration said this week.

 

"China's steady growth in oil demand has led it to become the world's largest net oil importer, exceeding the United States in September 2013,'" the agency said in a report. "EIA forecasts this trend to continue through 2014."

 

China's economic boom has raised incomes and increased its global influence. But it also has spurred demand for imported oil and gas, which communist leaders see as a strategic weakness. Rising auto ownership has left China's cities choking on smog and added to pressure on Beijing from its own public to curb pollution and from other nations to rein in surging greenhouse gas emissions.

 

The United States, with a population about one-third the size of China's, still consumes far more oil per person than China does. In September, Americans used 18.6 million barrels per day of oil and other liquid fossil fuels, while China used 10.9 million, according to the EIA's Short-Term Energy Outlook. U.S. production was 12.5 million barrels per day, while that of China was 4.6 million.

 

China's economy, the world's second-largest, is cooling but still is forecast to grow by nearly 8 percent this year, well above forecasts for the U.S. The Chinese auto market, the biggest by number of vehicles sold, also is cooling but sales still rose by 11 percent in August.

 

Beijing is encouraging development of wind and solar power and use of autos powered by batteries or natural gas. But gasoline is expected to remain the country's main vehicle fuel in coming decades.

 

The government has launched initiatives to improve China's energy intensity, or the energy consumed for each unit of economic output. It has reported progress but still is far behind developed economies. Until the late 1990s, China supplied its oil needs from domestic sources including the vast Daqing field in the northeast. But the economic boom outstripped its production capacity while output from existing sources is forecast to decline.

 

That has forced China to rely more heavily on imports, especially from Saudi Arabia and Iran. Communist leaders see that as a strategic weakness because of possible instability in the Gulf and Iran's political isolation.

 

EIA noted that China's domestic oil production was hampered over the past two months by summer flooding. State-owned oil companies and their foreign partners are spending heavily to look for new oil sources in China and to develop alternatives such as methane from coal beds. But they have yet to find new deposits that match the size of Daqing.

 

Abroad, Chinese state-owned oil companies have invested billions of dollars to develop oil and gas sources in Iraq, Central Asia and Africa. Some of that is meant for export to China but much of it is sold in other markets. At the same time, U.S. import demand has weakened as hydraulic fracturing and other technologies open up new domestic sources of supply.

 

American demand for oil and other liquid fuels rose by about 110,000 barrels per day, or just 0.6 percent, in the first nine months of this year, due partly to improved engine efficiency, the EIA said. It said consumption is forecast to fall by 0.4 percent next year.

 

Overall, the United States still should be the biggest oil consumer next year at about 18.7 million barrels per day, down from its peak of 20.8 million in 2005, according to the EIA. It said China's consumption next should be about 11 million barrels per day.

 

Focus on the Fellows

With a generous donation of $40,000 from ConocoPhillips, the Energy Institute awarded eight fellowships to support outstanding graduate students doing energy research. Over 60 applicants from numerous departments were nominated for this competitive award. The award recipients are known as "Energy Institute Fellows."

 

Each month, a Fellow will be featured in the highlights section of News Briefs.  This month's featured Fellow is Robert Ehrmann, a PhD candidate in the Department of Aerospace Engineering.

 

Robert's research project is entitled "The Effect of Realistic Roughness on Wind Turbine Airfoils." For a brief abstract of Robert's research, click here.  

 

To see the complete listing of EI Fellows, visit our web site at http://energy.tamu.edu/.

 

The Energy Institute (EI) is addressing the world's energy challenges through research, development and deployment. The Institute matches researchers and world-class facilities with internal and external partners to define and solve energy problems and turn those solutions into useful global products.

 

Energy Institute Fellow
Robert Ehrmann,
PhD Candidate,
Department of Aerospace Engineering

 

 Research Abstract

 

 

  

 

  

 

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