The National Science Foundation (NSF) has awarded a five-year, $4.5 million grant to UC Santa Cruz to fund a cooperative research and education program on renewable energy involving universities in the United States and Denmark. The project addresses the technical, social, and economic aspects of community-scale renewable-energy microgrids.
"The issues of how to integrate renewable energy sources like wind and solar power with the existing electrical grid have not been fully explored. It's not just a technical problem, because the technical issues are coupled with the economics and sociology of how people use energy," said principal investigator Michael Isaacson, the Kapany Professor of Electrical Engineering in the Baskin School of Engineering at UC Santa Cruz. In addition to UC Santa Cruz, the primary partners in the program are UC Davis and two Danish institutions, Aalborg University and the Technical University of Denmark. Faculty at these institutions have worked together for several years on a renewable energy summer program that brought together U.S. and Danish students for hands-on, project-based earning in both countries. The new grant allows a significant expansion of this program.
Further information
• UCSC news
Contacts
Chresten Træholt
+45 4525 3518, ctr@elektro.dtu.dk
Arne Remmen
+45 9635 8318, ar@plan.aau.dk
Mikkel Bülow Skovborg
+1 650 575 7516, mbs@innovationcenterdenmark.com