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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2006
April
U. of I. group seeking ideas
to improve energy efficiency on campus
Sharita
Forrest, News Editor
217-244-1072; slforrest@uiuc.edu
4/5/06
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
Got a bright idea for a clean-energy project? The Energy Subcommittee
of the Committee on a Sustainable Campus Environment wants to hear it.
The subcommittee is requesting proposals
on projects or programs that would provide the campus with new clean
energy sources or help the campus reduce its energy consumption and
costs.
Anyone – including students, faculty or staff members and businesses
– may submit a letter of inquiry proposing a project or program
that could be implemented on campus. Examples of possible projects include
competitions that improve energy efficiency of the residence halls or
other campus buildings, exchange programs where fluorescent light bulbs
replace incandescent bulbs, energy audits of campus buildings or the
development of permanent demonstration projects using renewable energy
sources.
Funding for approved projects would be provided in part by the clean
energy technology fee that students pay each semester. The $2 fee, which
students approved in a March 2003 referendum, was implemented during
the fall 2003 semester and supports the use of clean energy and energy
efficient technologies on campus. The fee generates about $70,000 per
semester and its implementation was promoted by the Students for Environmental
Concern and the Illinois Student Senate.
“Sustainability is one of the key initiatives in our strategic
plan,” said Chancellor Richard Herman. “This program complements
our goal of transforming the campus into a learning laboratory for demonstration
of sustainable technologies.”
The program has helped catalyze several environmentally responsible
energy initiatives that the university believes will save energy and
costs for its facilities, said Matt Malten, campus sustainability coordinator.
These projects also will help improve the university’s environmental
performance and provide hands-on learning opportunities for students.
Among the initiatives that the clean energy fee program is supporting
is the proposed wind farm on campus that will supplement the power generated
by Abbott Power Plant. Three utility-scale wind turbines will be installed
on the South Farms and will feed energy into the campus electrical distribution
system, providing approximately 2.7 percent of the electricity needed
on campus, without the air pollution and atmospheric emissions produced
by coal or natural gas. About $300,000 in funding for the $5.7 million
wind farm project will come from the clean energy fee program; the Illinois
Clean Energy Community Foundation is providing a $2 million grant and
the university will provide the remaining funds.
The wind turbine project is expected to be substantially completed by
fall 2007, about a year later than originally anticipated because heightened
interest in renewable energy - and the development of large-scale wind
farms, such as the 267-turbine Twin Groves Wind Farm being constructed
in eastern McLean County - have caused a backlog among equipment manufacturers.
The Facilities and Services Division is working with a consultant who
is advising on possible sources for the equipment, assisting with the
request for proposals process and helping finalize a site. The site
that is being proposed is located 1/2 to one mile northeast of the new
beef and sheep complex near the intersection of Old Church Road and
Race Street.
The clean energy fee program also is supporting development of a small-scale
wind turbine project being built by the U. of I. chapter of Engineers
Without Borders, a nonprofit
humanitarian organization that partners engineers and engineering students
in sustainable projects intended to improve the quality of life for
people in developing communities. The turbine, which will have exchangeable
wooden blades 10 feet in diameter, will be placed on the roof of a campus
building and will furnish some of the selected building’s energy.
Several classes will be using the turbine for demonstration and educational
purposes.
One of the busiest buildings on campus, the Illini Union, also will
benefit from the clean energy fee program.
The energy subcommittee will be providing $50,000 in funding for an
energy audit of the Illini Union
by the Smart Energy Design Assistance Center, a program partly managed
by the School of Architecture
that promotes energy efficiency and energy conservation practices in
small- to medium-sized for-profit businesses. The funding will be applied
toward the audit and proposed building modifications may be implemented.
This is the first time that the energy subcommittee has requested proposals
for projects to support.
“Our committee’s first priority was to get the wind turbine
project well on its way, and having accomplished that, the committee
felt that it would be important to seek additional input and ideas from
the campus community,” said Jennifer Walling, chair of the energy
subcommittee.
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