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April 10, 2012Gasification. It’s a versatile technology that uses coal to produce power, chemicals, and fuels. Inherently low in air emissions, solid byproducts, and wastewater, commercial gasification plants have proven capable of exceeding the most stringent reg...Hydrocarbons and Geothermal Energy Office
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March 27, 2012The Energy Department announced the investment of more than $5 million in two projects—led by 3M Company in St. Paul, Minnesota, and Eaton Corporation in Southfield, Michigan—that will lower the cost of advanced fuel cell systems by developing and ...Alternative Fuels and Feedstocks Office
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February 24, 2012A recent analysis conducted by the Lawrence Berkley National Laboratory (LBNL) and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) suggests that lower capital costs and continued increases in wind turbine productivity will drive down the levelized cost...Integrated Energy Systems Office
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February 24, 2012Approximately 75,000 Americans are currently employed by the U.S. wind energy industry, and that's solely for projects on land. Imagine what will h...Integrated Energy Systems Office
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February 10, 2012Hydrocarbons and Geothermal Energy Office
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January 30, 2012Quarterly Nuclear Deployment Summary.Office of Nuclear Energy
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January 17, 2012An innovative clean coal technology project in Texas will supply electricity to the largest municipally owned utility in the United States under a recently signed Power Purchase Agreement, the U.S. Department of Energy announced today.Hydrocarbons and Geothermal Energy Office
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Press ReleasesJanuary 4, 2012An online mapping portal to help oil and natural gas operators comply with a revised New Mexico waste pit rule has been developed by a team of New Mexico Tech researchers.Hydrocarbons and Geothermal Energy Office
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Energy ProfileDecember 21, 2011How a new bioplastic is not only reducing waste, it also playing a valuable role in offsetting our need for foreign oil.Energy.gov
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BulletinDecember 19, 2011Since opening its doors for business in May, the Wind Technology Testing Center (WTTC), in Boston, Massachusetts, has come up to full speed testing the long wind turbine blades produced for today's larger wind turbines.Integrated Energy Systems Office