Our latest Recovery-Act-in-Action installment features some exciting  new technology, 100 good-paying manufacturing jobs, and the  public/private co-investment that is critical to job growth right now.
It’s all taking place in Indianapolis, Indiana, where Allison  Transmission is building a new factory to make hybrid systems that go  into energy efficient trucks, buses and other commercial vehicles.   The  new plant, and the 100 folks Allison expects to put to work in it, was  partially financed by a $62.8 million Recovery Act grant from the  Department of Energy as part their advanced battery grant program.
There’s a lot to like about this project.  Once the new plant is  fully operational, it will crank out more than 20,000 hybrid propulsion  systems each year.   If you’re like me, your reaction to that is a)  wow!...and b) um, what’s a hybrid propulsion system?
Laurie Tuttle, Allison’s VP of Hybrid Programs, was kind enough to  explain it to me.  As I understand it, these are systems that take  energy that a vehicle generates that would be otherwise wasted, and  reuses that energy.   For example, when a vehicle slows down,  conventional breaks create friction and heat.  “Regenerative breaking”  recovers that energy and stores it in the battery for later use in  acceleration or, on commercial vehicles, for other purposes like  powering a boom on a utility truck.
That saves gas, so fuel efficiency in these hybrids are typically goosed by 25-30 percent.
Allison’s long-range plan was to start developing these new systems  over the next few years.  But the Recovery Act grant, matched by about  $68 million of capital from their private investors, enabled them to  accelerate the production, creating jobs now when they’re most needed,  and giving our industry the head start it needs to be globally  competitive in the production of clean energy transportation. 
Ms. Tuttle tends to be pretty technical in discussing this stuff, but  she got downright emotional when she described the positive impact this  new investment is having on their community, telling me, “Goodness, to  be able to bring these jobs right here to our heartland…it just feels  great.”
You don’t see a lot of people getting all choked up about building  systems that capture and recycle kinetic energy.  But I think those of  us who are rooting for new jobs in American manufacturing, lasting  opportunities for middle-class workers, and energy efficiency are right  with her on this one.
 
0 comments:
Post a Comment