HOLLAND (AP) — Michigan was selected for two new advanced battery research facilities as part of a five-year, up to $120 million partnership involving the U.S. Department of Energy, officials announced Friday.
U.S. Sen. Debbie Stabenow joined other officials including Energy Secretary Steven Chu to announce the project. She said in a release that one facility is planned for the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor and the other at Michigan State University's Bioeconomy Institute in the southwestern Michigan city of Holland. Both are part of Argonne National Laboratory's Joint Center for Energy Storage Research.
The University of Michigan said it's expected to get $7 million and its portion will involve about a dozen researchers. Details about the Michigan State facility weren't available Friday afternoon.
Companies involved in the project include Midland-based Dow Chemical and Milwaukee-based Johnson Controls Inc. Johnson Controls announced last month it would buy the automotive business of battery maker A123 Systems Inc., which filed for bankruptcy protection, including its two Michigan factories.
Stabenow said in the release that the centers are "further cementing Michigan's global leadership role in the advanced battery industry."
"These new hubs will bring together Michigan's innovative businesses and universities from across the state to create more breakthroughs in advanced battery technologies right here in Michigan," she said.
Some people have been critical of the government's big investments in the technology, including the $249 million federal grant awarded to A123 Systems three years ago.
The company's bankruptcy filing stoked Republican criticism of President Barack Obama's support for "green" energy companies and A123 became an issue in the presidential campaign.
Chu said in a release Friday that "tremendous advances" have come in the past few years.
"There are very good reasons to believe that advanced battery technologies can and will play an increasingly valuable role in strengthening America's energy and economic security ... upgrading our aging power grid and allowing us to take greater advantage of intermittent energy sources like wind and solar."
Michigan
State to get battery research facility
-
-
Audit questions use of state petroleum tax
Millions of dollars from a petroleum tax have been diverted to plug holes in the state budget and pay interest on debt, Michigan’s auditor general said Friday.
Continued ... -
Lawmaker wants to change fireworks law
A lawmaker has proposed changes following a slew of complaints, safety concerns and confusion about a law that made powerful fireworks legal in Michigan.
Continued ... -
Hope College plans new art museum
Hope College in western Michigan announced Friday that it’s planning a new art museum to provide exhibition space and house the college’s permanent collection.
Continued ... -
Michigan in Brief: 05/17/2013
Michigan may get $2.3M in drug claims; Albion is closing its public high school; Long line already for one tough mayorship.
Continued ... -
Sole survivor of plane crash breaks silence
Cecelia Crocker’s body provides her with a constant reminder of the most traumatic event of her life — one that she doesn’t otherwise remember.
Continued ... -
Michigan in Brief: 05/16/2013
Bricks from MSU building to be sold; Cruise ship will stay in Marquette.
Continued ... -
Surplus may go to roads
There was no dearth of ideas about what to do with the state’s newfound $483 million surplus on Wednesday after Michigan budget experts made the dollar figure official.
Continued ... -
Families in Ohio cancer cluster suing Whirlpool
Families whose children have been among dozens sickened in an Ohio cancer cluster for more than a decade are hopeful that they’ve come up with a cause.
Continued ... - May 15, 2013
-
Report card: Great Lakes still have big problems
A decades-old effort to nurse the battered Great Lakes to health has made progress toward reducing toxic pollution and slamming the door on invasive species, but the freshwater seas continue to face serious threats, a U.S.-Canadian agency said Tuesday.
Continued ... -
Bing won't seek re-election as Detroit mayor
A visibly frustrated Detroit Mayor Dave Bing announced Tuesday that he won’t seek a second term and ripped Michigan officials for not giving him enough time to solve the financially strapped city’s problems on his own.
Continued ... - May 14, 2013
-
Saudi man traveling with pressure cooker arrested
A Saudi man was arrested at Detroit Metropolitan Airport after federal agents said he lied about why he was traveling with a pressure cooker, but his nephew said Monday that it was all a misunderstanding about a device he simply wanted for cooking.
Continued ... - May 13, 2013
-
Memorial wall comes with some tough calls
Deciding which police officers killed in the line of duty belong on a national memorial usually is driven by facts and presents few obstacles.
Continued ... -
Lawmakers debating merit pay for teachers
Michigan teachers’ performance in the classroom would play a bigger role in the amount they get in their paychecks under a proposal being debated in the Republican-controlled state House.
Continued ... - May 12, 2013
-
Road funding talks stuck at a standstill
High-level talks over fixing Michigan's deteriorating roads are at a standstill in the Capitol, with Republican and Democratic leaders still unable to agree much on how to even start.
Continued ... - May 11, 2013
-
Efforts to restore rapids in Grand Rapids get boost
The expansion of a program for restoring and improving urban waterways nationwide is expected to boost efforts to restore rapids to the Grand River in Grand Rapids.
Continued ...
-
Audit questions use of state petroleum tax



