Bloom Energy press conference: Bloom box officially unveiled (Full Version)

All Forums >> [Community Discussions] >> Dungeon of Political and Religious Discussion



Message


Brain -> Bloom Energy press conference: Bloom box officially unveiled (2/25/2010 12:47:52 AM)

This will solve a lot of problems, economic, political, and environmental (global warming).  It was originally a NASA project to have energy on mars.  I think the government should get something to pay down the debt and they said they’re hiring.

VIDEO

http://news.yahoo.com/video/local-15749667/18317742

http://news.yahoo.com/video/local-15749667/18313107

http://news.yahoo.com/video/tech-15749651/18320156

Bloom Energy press conference: Bloom box officially unveiled


By Michael B. Farrell Michael B. Farrell – Wed Feb 24, 5:06 pm ET

San Francisco – The veil has been lifted on Bloom Energy, the secretive energy start-up that has been quietly installing its fuel-cell servers that promise cleaner and cheaper energy at some of Silicon Valley’s biggest businesses

The Sunnyvale, Calif., company says that it has developed a new method of making fuel cells, which generate electricity through an electrochemical reaction, that could take the technology from being largely a niche pursuit to one that is broadly accepted by both large companies and small homeowners alike.

“When we heard about Bloom, we thought this is way too good to be true,” said Jim Kennedy, chairman of Cox Enterprises, at Wednesday’s official Bloom Energy launch.

“But you have to try something that looks so good.” Like all the business luminaries – such as the cofounder of Google and chief operating officer of Wal-Mart – that Bloom Energy assembled for its coming-out party, which was held at eBay's San Jose campus, Mr. Kennedy has installed Bloom’s servers with much success. He put his at TV stations in Oakland, Calif., and San Francisco. (The Monitor wrote about how the Bloom Energy Servers, or boxes, work here and here.)

Bloom has developed a new type of solid-oxide fuel cell that can run on a variety of fuels – such as bio-gas and natural gas – and withstand high temperatures. The boxes, which contain stacks of fuel cells, sit on location and provide 100 kilowats of power at, reportedly, 8 to 10 cents a kilowatt-hour.
 
The potential benefit of a system like this is that it locates the source of energy closer to the customer, lessens reliance on the grid, and promises to lower carbon emissions.

"We believe that we can have the same kind of impact on energy that the mobile phone had on communications.

Just as cell phones circumvented landlines to proliferate telephony, Bloom Energy will enable the adoption of distributed power as a smarter, localized energy source,” said K.R. Sridhar, cofounder of Bloom, in a statement.

It will allow customers, he said, to "lower their energy costs, reduce their carbon footprint, improve their energy security."

But many experts say that, while Bloom Energy has made significant inroads, and has an impressive list of backers that include former Secretary of State Colin Powell, the real test will be whether or not it can bring down the price of its servers, which cost around $800,000.

Its current customers are also enjoying state and federal tax incentives to pursue clean energy.
 
In an interview with “60 Minutes,” Bloom Energy cofounder K.R. Sridhar said he anticipated that within the next decade Bloom could sell units big enough to power the average American home for about $3,000.

Forbes.com’s Jonathan Fahey asks: “Are we really falling for this again? Every clean tech company on the planet says it can produce clean energy cheaply, yet not a single one can.”

But, he writes, “the company has managed to tap into the hype machine like no other clean-tech company in memory.”

http://news.yahoo.com/s/csm/20100224/ts_csm/282773




mefisto69 -> RE: Bloom Energy press conference: Bloom box officially unveiled (2/25/2010 3:52:27 AM)

I've been following the Bloom progress - fantastic. I can't wait until it's available to the average consumer. All the commercial entities using/testing them are Very happy with the savings and ease of use. I doubt if consumers will get much savings if the Power companies start buying into this technology. Solar is prohibitively expensive and what savings do we really enjoy form nuclear?




DarkSteven -> RE: Bloom Energy press conference: Bloom box officially unveiled (2/25/2010 6:04:20 AM)

Let's run the numbers.  If it costs $800Kand produces electricity at 8c per kw-hr, then it will produce 10 million kw-hr (ignoring fuel and maintenance costs). 

I haven't been able to find typical household usage figures but suspect that it's about 50K kw-hr/month.  That's 600K kw-hr per year.  So it'll take about 10-20 years to pay back the initial outlay.

So it's a breakthrough and needs a lot more work, and it's not cost competitive yet.

If it hits a payback of 1-2 years, it'll start making sense.  The only way to get there is to have government subsidies.  I feel on the fence about that....




DomKen -> RE: Bloom Energy press conference: Bloom box officially unveiled (2/25/2010 6:22:40 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: DarkSteven
I haven't been able to find typical household usage figures but suspect that it's about 50K kw-hr/month.  That's 600K kw-hr per year.  So it'll take about 10-20 years to pay back the initial outlay.

That's about an order of magnitude too high for power consumption.

Your average household circuit is 15 amps and the average home has 4 to 6 circuits. 75 amps at 120 volts is 9 kW/hour or 6480 kW/hours per month.




DarkSteven -> RE: Bloom Energy press conference: Bloom box officially unveiled (2/25/2010 6:27:06 AM)

Ken, I think you're low as I was high.  Each room will have its own circuit, and then you need to add in HVAC. the water heater, and the W/D and range.  I imagine that about 1000 kw-hrs per month would be a good estimate.

If this thing takes 50-100 years to pay back...




DomKen -> RE: Bloom Energy press conference: Bloom box officially unveiled (2/25/2010 6:32:02 AM)

Yeah I'm probably on the low side. 10000 kW/h is probably a good ballpark. Which does put the Bloom Box well out of reach for most people. The price should come down with mass production but honestly I don't see that sort of thing being a major part of the future energy system. Roof top wind turbines and solar panels is clearly a better more economical solution for most homes and businesses.




DarkSteven -> RE: Bloom Energy press conference: Bloom box officially unveiled (2/25/2010 6:37:31 AM)

Okay, my apologies.  I reread the article.  The $800K units are for commercial outfits.  Bloom's goal is to produce units for $3K, and those will be used for households.

That's not unreasonable.  The question then becomes what the fuel costs would be.






Page: [1]

Valid CSS!




Collarchat.com © 2025
Terms of Service Privacy Policy Spam Policy
0.03125