2. Our Leadership “… the Pentagon isn’t seeking these alternative fuels just to protect our environment; they’re pursuing these homegrown energy sources to protect our national security .” –President Barack Obama “… in the end, it is a matter of energy independence and it is a matter of national security .” –Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus
3. U.S. Petroleum Consumption 33% DON (34% of DoD) Tactical Energy Consumption Shore 57% 25% Overall Energy Consumption Overall Energy Sources 26% 16% 1% Petroleum Electricity, Natural Gas, Other Nuclear Renewables Energy Consumption Navy Petroleum Consumption in Perspective U.S. Government (2% of U.S.) 75% 40% Aviation 38% Maritime Department of Defense (93% of US.) Naval Energy Profile 6% Shore 16% Expeditionary
4. Increase Alternative Energy Sources Ashore Sail the “Great Green Fleet” Reduce Non-tactical Petroleum Use Energy Efficient Acquisitions Increase Alternative Energy Department-wide By 2020, at least 50% of shore-based energy requirements will be met by alternative sources; 50% of Department installations will be net-zero Department will demonstrate a Green Strike Group in local operations by 2012 and sail it by 2016 By 2015, Department will reduce petroleum use in vehicles by 50% Evaluation of energy factors will be mandatory when awarding contracts for systems and buildings By 2020, 50% of total Department energy consumption will come from alternative sources Our Energy Goals
16. Columbia Power Technologies & Oregon State University Wave Buoy - Sea Trial Underway Seattle Deployment Site
Notes de l'éditeur
This graphic underscores the challenge of the collective “we.” DoD is not a market maker, but it is the largest government and individual petroleum consumer and can serve as a technology leader. The Navy is the second largest fuel user in DOD, after the Air Force and before the Army. While the DON is a significant consumer of fuel, neither DON nor DOD can affect the price of oil. Therefore, both are at the mercy of the market – both the stability of supplies and fluctuations in price. We have to define and execute our own destiny. Navy energy use is dominated by tactical operations and petroleum fuel in particular. Currently, the Navy is highly dependent on petroleum to run its planes, ships, and vehicles. Aviation and maritime forces consume the bulk of petroleum, followed by tactical vehicles (i.e. mobility platforms and equipment for expeditionary forces, including Marine Corps), non-tactical vehicles (i.e. ground transportation at DON facilities), and facilities. The vast majority of alternative energy utilized by DON is derived from nuclear sources, rather than renewables or biofuels. DoD used 119 million barrels of petroleum in FY08. Blue Navy used 29.4 million barrels (not including Marine Corps).
USMC EXFOB: - Phase one of the experiment simulated the energy and water demands of a Marine unit at forward operating bases similar to those in Afghanistan. The initial phase determined the baseline requirements of company-size and smaller FOBs. - Phase two, evaluating existing commercial technologies to meet the Marines' needs and increasing power generation efficiency to sustain a small base. - Phase three will be the end user evaluation. Equipment will be sent to Afghanistan to see how well it fares in a combat environment. - The fourth and final phase will facilitate future science and technology efforts by gathering data on experimental systems. Miramar Implementation Progress: Renewable Energy Utilization Land Fill Gas (LFG) Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) Three (3) MW (25,000 MWh/year) from contiguous landfill Appropriations ECIP: 700-800 kW PV ARRA (150 kW PV car port and PV street lights, solar hot water with all new boilers and solar hot water heating (2 hangars) Miramar Implementation Progress: Microgrid Microgrid baselining and assessment One line electrical diagram HOMER assessment DEW assessment • Distributed Energy Resources implementation “benchmark” Electrical load: 50,000 MWH/yr, 6 MW (average demand) Distributed Energy Resources Renewables (LFG-3 MW/25,000 MWH/yr, PV, SHW) Fossil (CHP-2.5MW/? MWH, D-G 5 MW (estimate)) • Controls (Microgrid level-pending, systems level (ESPC)) • Grid interconnection (discussion with SDG&E) • Demand response (discussion with SDG&E, private sector option) Miramar Progress: Fleet and Infrastructure Biodiesel/compressed natural gas on site and in use( E85 pending) Nearly 30% of vehicle fleet fuel used was alternative fuel Large number of AFVs/NEVs in inventory Vehicle inventory and fuel use data received and strategic assessment pending Opportunity: Alternative fuel use and petroleum reduction mandates focus on 0.5% of total Miramar fuel use. USMC Net Zero Energy Installations Pilot: MCAS Miramar, CA – DoD-DOE Initiative to build a Net Zero Communities/installations. Which include: Efficient Building Retrofits Efficient New Buildings Renewable Energy Utilization Electric grid Opportunities Vehicle Fleets
FOR RENEWABLE GOALS: DON needs 2 million Mbtu/year new renewable to meet SECNAV goals DON needs 500,000 Mbtu/year installed to meet NDAA 2007/2010 goals Solar: Hawaii solar MAC – first task order in December 2010 assuming no problems pop up Camp Pendleton – two 1.4 MW projects, one under construction, should be completed December 2010, second is FY11 MILCON Advanced Metering Initiative: All remaining metering contracts will be awarded in FY11 and FY12 to meet EPAct 05 goals for electric metering Gas, steam, and water meters are also being installed with 2016 goal as outlined in EISA 2007 Small Modular Reactors (SMR): CNA continuing to study – Sept draft with Nov final feasibility study planned FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY: MAY NOT BE RELEASABLE UNDER FOIA EXEMPTION 5
This is a Public/private venture. Our contractor puts up the money to develop the resource, he also operates the plant and owns the electricity produced. Navy provides the land and geothermal resource and receives a percentage of the contractors revenue. DON can take either revenue for power or a combination of the two. This revenue finances our energy program world-wide. Navy Geothermal Program Office, NREL, Guam Power Authority, Guam Energy Office Local assessment wk of 19 APR supports test drilling Guam Energy Office (GEO) has ARRA grant fund - Working NEPA issue