| 1/11/10 - Lineage Power Corporation announced that it is the recipient of a
U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) $2.4 million research and development grant
to develop technologies that minimize the power loss and heat generation
that occurs as electricity moves through the ever-growing wired, wireless
and broadband service provider infrastructures.
Via the American Recovery
and Reinvestment Act, Lineage Power's DOE application was funded based on
the potential superiority over currently used technologies, while offering
good potential economic benefits through reduced operating costs. The
Lineage Power Total Efficiency technology is estimated to
save over a billion kilowatt hours annually by reducing power consumption
and cooling costs within telecom central offices and large data centers.
"As consumer demand for mobile smartphones, eBook readers and tablet
computers increases, telecom infrastructures will be pushed to support
thousands of voice, video and data applications," said Craig Witsoe, CEO of
Lineage Power. "Existing 3G and new 4G/LTE wireless networks that deliver
these applications require increased power capacity and optimal conversion
efficiency. Our U.S.-based engineering team is proud to have been selected
by the Department of Energy to help carriers cost-effectively achieve their
sustainability objectives."
Information technology and telecommunications facilities account for
approximately 120 billion kilowatt hours of electricity annually -- or 3
percent of all U.S. electricity use. Rapid growth in the U.S. data center
industry is projected to require two new large power plants per year just
to keep pace with the expected demand growth. Without gains in efficiency,
the industry will face increasing costs and greenhouse gas emissions, along
with challenges to the reliability of the electricity service.
The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act is providing funding for
research, development and demonstration projects in three subject areas:
equipment and software, power supply chain and cooling. Lineage Power's
research program is classified as a power supply chain project. The DoE
funded research will document the impact of Lineage Power's technology in
telecom carrier's central offices and large data centers to deliver
quantifiable data that telecom operators can use to lower cooling costs and
recapture energy typically lost in the power conversion process.
"These Recovery Act projects will improve the efficiency of a strong and
growing sector of the American economy. By reducing energy use and energy
costs for the IT and telecommunications industries, this funding will help
create jobs and ensure the sector remains competitive," said U.S. Energy
Secretary Steven Chu. "The expected growth of these industries means that
new technologies adopted today will yield benefits for many years to come."
Lineage Power's end-to-end Total Efficiency architecture is designed to
help telecommunications carriers, wireless operators, Internet service
providers (ISPs) and large enterprises achieve their sustainability
objectives by recapturing 50 to 70 percent of energy typically lost in the
power conversion process. The Lineage Power Total Efficiency (TE)
Architecture approach includes hardware, software and services for central
offices, mobile switching centers, cell sites and data centers. Completely
backwards compatible to leverage currently deployed energy systems, the new
TE architecture products deliver end-to-end efficiency approaching 97
percent across a wide range of normal load conditions.
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