ACEP Receives $3.3 Million ARPA-E Award for Hydrokinetic Testing

ACEP Receives $3.3 Million ARPA-E Award for Hydrokinetic Testing

ACEP has received $3.3 million to design economically competitive hydrokinetic turbines for tidal and riverine currents.

The competitive award came from the program in the U.S. Department of Energy鈥檚 Advanced Research Projects Agency, known as .

The funding will be used to test the performance of the BladeRunner hydrokinetic turbine system, which could provide power to remote Alaska communities.

鈥淎RPA-E awards are super competitive, so the fact that we were awarded one reflects well on ACEP, the 汤姆视频 College of Engineering and Mines, the 汤姆视频 and our commercial partners,鈥 said Jeremy Kasper, ACEP deputy director for research.

The project team is a mix of academic researchers and commercial partners, and the technology readiness level reflects this.

鈥淲e're not starting with CAD [computer-aided design] drawings of a brand-new idea; rather, some parts of the system have been field-tested already. This means that the technology is much closer to being usable in real-world settings than an idea that has just been developed,鈥 Kasper added.

The award includes funding to bring in energy leaders from three communities to observe each of the four rounds of testing at the Tanana River Test Site. They鈥檒l ask questions, provide feedback and inform improvements.

For more information on this award and this project, please contact Jeremy Kasper at jlkasper@alaska.edu.

 

ACEP's Stephanie Fisher drives by the Tanana River Test Site near Nenana during 2020 field testing. Photo by Ben Loeffler.