Fuel cell
converts gas into heat and electricity without producing carbon emissions
The crown
estate development near Piccadilly in London. Photograph: Miller Hare Ltd
Fuel cell
technology used to power Nasa's space shuttle will provide light and heat for
Al Gore's new London headquarters.
The fuel
cell, which converts gas into heat and electricity without producing carbon emissions, has been installed in a major crown estate development in Regent
Street in the capital.
"The
fuel cell is a real flag in the sand, demonstrating what is possible in terms
of energy efficiency and carbon reduction," said the crown estate's head
of development, Alastair Smart. The cost of the new system, the first of its
kind to be installed in the UK, has not been revealed but Smart said: "It
offers a commercially viable and sustainable source of energy. One of the main
reasons for this is that the infrastructure lasts for 20 years, a lot longer
than traditional systems."
Climate
campaigner and former US vice-president Gore said the £400m Quadrant 3
redevelopment showed a "sophisticated commitment to sustainability".
The headquarters of his sustainable investment company, Generation Investment
Management, will be sited in the new buildings.
The cell
was developed by US company FuelCell Energy. It will emit 38% less carbon
dioxide than using electricity from the grid and heat from gas-fired boilers,
according to the crown estate, which says 350 tonnes of carbon dioxide
emissions will be saved per year. Unlike fossil-fuel-burning power plants, the
fuel cell produces power with virtually no nitrogen oxide (NOx), sulfur dioxide
(SOx) or particulate matter (PM) pollution.
The new
plant forms part of the central energy system that serves 500,000 sq ft of
offices, shops, flats, restaurants and hotels in the Quadrant development.
Mike
Rinker, at the US Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
(PNNL), said: "Combined heat and power fuel cell systems can help
commercial buildings with high energy demands reap significant savings in
energy cost and use. We anticipate this type of system could reduce the fuel
costs and carbon footprint of a commercial building by approximately 40%,
compared with conventional electricity and heat use." PNNL is testing its
fuel cell system at 10 businesses in California and Oregon.
Other
companies are developing washing-machine-sized fuel cells, which could power
individual homes.
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