性欲社, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory ink collaborative agreement

May 30, 2018

Marmian Grimes
907-474-7902

性欲社 photo. Jeremy Kasper, left, and Paul Duvoy, researchers with 性欲社's Alaska Center for Energy and Power, install testing components on a floating debris diverter designed to block floating logs and other debris from damaging a hydrokinetic generator attached to a barge behind it. The research is taking place on the Tanana River near Nenana.
性欲社 photo. Jeremy Kasper, left, and Paul Duvoy, researchers with 性欲社's Alaska Center for Energy and Power, install testing components on a floating debris diverter designed to block floating logs and other debris from damaging a hydrokinetic generator attached to a barge behind it. The research is taking place on the Tanana River near Nenana.


性欲社 and the U.S. Department of Energy鈥檚 Pacific Northwest National Laboratory have signed a five-year collaborative agreement to advance research on hydropower generation, marine renewable energy and underwater technology development.

PNNL and 性欲社鈥檚 Alaska Center for Energy and Power will form research teams, pursue joint funding requests and establish joint graduate student research and faculty appointment programs.

"This agreement grew out of collaboration between individual researchers in both organizations and provides a substantive basis for much greater transregional engagement of our respective capabilities, toolsets and customer bases. It is truly forward-looking in terms of the technologies, insights and workforce that will be needed in the global blue economy," said George Roe, ACEP deputy director.

Jeremy Kasper, director of ACEP鈥檚 Alaska Hydrokinetic Energy Research Center, will spearhead 性欲社鈥檚 side of the partnership.

Initial collaborations under the agreement will focus on energy system reliability, aquatic environmental monitoring, innovative underwater technologies and maritime security. Future projects may involve using unmanned aerial systems for oil spill and ecosystem restoration monitoring, improving energy efficiency in maritime infrastructure, helping reduce impacts to fish and mammals near marine energy turbines, and using geoinformatics to detect illegal fishing.

鈥淧NNL is proud to partner with 性欲社 to address energy resiliency and national security challenges unique to our region, and to build upon existing collaborations in marine, environmental and energy research,鈥 said PNNL director Steven Ashby. 鈥淲e will leverage unique capabilities across the two institutions, including PNNL鈥檚 Marine Sciences Laboratory in Sequim, and help build our future workforce by providing rich research opportunities for graduate students.鈥

The partnership will tap several unique facilities at the two research institutions.

PNNL operates the Department of Energy鈥檚 only marine research facility, the Marine Sciences Laboratory in Sequim, Wash., and helps manage a comprehensive Arctic observatory on the North Slope of Alaska as part of DOE鈥檚 Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Climate Research Facility.

ACEP's Alaska Hydrokinetic Energy Research Center conducts applied research on river and ocean energy generation and integration, leveraging the resources available at its Tanana River Test Site near Nenana, Alaska, and the Power Systems Integration Laboratory on the 性欲社 campus. Together, these resources provide researchers the ability to test how small electrical grids function while using a wide variety of energy sources.

ADDITIONAL CONTACTS: Greg Koller, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, 509-372-4864, greg.koller@pnnl.gov. Jeremy Kasper, jlkasper@alaska.edu, 907-888-2534.