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USU project among finalists for $3 million solar energy tech prize

A team of USU researchers is getting some national attention for a project that could give electric vehicle batteries a second life as solar energy storage. The team from USU’s Utah Power Electronics Lab includes professors Hongjie Wang and Regan Zane as well as doctoral students Marium Rasheed and Mohamed Kamel. Working with Maryland-based research firm Dream Team, the researchers are developing technology that could adapt batteries retired from electrical vehicles for storing solar energy. “That would solve two problems,” said Wang, the project’s principal investigator. “One is how to handle the retired batteries from electrical vehicles. And the second one is to reduce the solar energy storage cost.”

USU Team Develops Solar Energy Storage Systems Using Retired Batteries

USU Apr 29, 2021 LOGAN - A team of researchers from Utah State University were named one of ten finalists in the nationwide American-Made Solar Prize competition. For their submission, researchers from the Utah Power Electronics Lab partnered with Dream Team, a Maryland-based security research firm, to develop solar energy storage systems using “retired” batteries from electric vehicles, or EVs. The technology could dramatically reduce the cost of solar energy storage, making the adoption of solar energy more accessible and economically viable for widespread use. “The target here is to reduce the cost of solar energy storage systems by 50 percent,” said Hongjie Wang, assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering. “The cost of electrical vehicle retired batteries is much lower, and we can use them to directly fuel energy storage systems with the active life-balancing technologies that we developed.”

Storage - Utah State University Team Named Finalist in National Solar Prize Competition - Renewable Energy Magazine, at the heart of clean energy journalism

Thursday, 29 April 2021 A team of researchers from Utah State University were named one of 10 finalists in the fourth round of the nationwide American-Made Solar Prize competition. Supported by the U.S. Department of Energy and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, the American-Made Solar Prize is a $3 million prize competition designed to transform the best ideas around solar into technology solutions that are ready for market. Last year, 121 teams submitted ideas to this three-stage competition. In December, 20 semifinalist teams were selected to move on in the competition. And on April 9, the ten finalist teams were announced, each earning a $100,000 cash prize, $75,000 in technical support funding, and a spot to compete in the final contest this September.

Selling items on social media without a licence? You could face a fine of Dh100,000

Dubai: If you are interested in becoming a social media business, whether you would like to sell clothes, shoes, perfumes or even your own craftwork to customers, it is essential to make sure you apply for the right business licence to operate legally in the UAE. Gulf News spoke with Mohamed Gamal, Legal Advisor at Kaden Boriss Legal Consultants, Dubai, who said that people can face strict penalties for selling items online – whether through a website or through social media accounts – if they are not licenced. Mohamed Gamal, Legal Advisor at Kaden Boriss Legal Consultants, Dubai Mohamed Gamal, Legal Advisor at Kaden Boriss Legal Consultants, Dubai

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