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Corporate Social Responsibility
News
3.22.2006 ET
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CSR News from:
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Owens Corning Announces Breakthrough Single-end Roving for Wind Energy
WindStrand Allows Longer, Stiffer, Lighter Blades for up to 20 Percent Less Cost Than Other High-Performance Materials
Product is First Application of Company's new Stronger, Lighter High Performance Reinforcement Platform, HiPer-tex
(CSRwire) Owens Corning (OWENQ.OB) announced at the European Wind Energy
Conference and Exhibition in Athens, Greece, a breakthrough single-end
roving and knitted fabric, WindStrand, which will allow the wind
energy market to take another step forward in competing successfully
against other alternative energy sources by reducing the cost per
kilowatt-hour (kwh.) The product will allow turbine manufacturers to
increase blade lengths by as much as six percent and deliver up to 12
percent more power -- for up to 20 percent less cost than any competing
carbon-glass hybrid solution currently on the market.
In addition to the cost and performance benefits of WindStrand, the
product also provides manufacturers with the traditional processability of
glass, combined with the stiffness strength and weight of other
high-performance materials.
Other product highlights compared to conventional E-glass include:
Up to 35 percent higher tensile strengths
Up to 17 percent higher stiffness (modulus)
Enhanced fatigue, impact, aging, corrosion, and temperature
resistance
A New, Revolutionary Reinforcements Platform
The product, which is targeted to be commercially available in late 2006,
is the first application using the new Owens Corning high-performance
reinforcement platform, HiPer-tex, which is the result of a
revolution in glass melting, fiberizing and sizing technology. The new
reinforcement will be produced using the Owens Corning next-generation
fiber glass manufacturing process, which has a significantly smaller
environmental footprint than other technologies currently in use. The
performance statistics for WindStrand are based on extensive beta testing
in the field, and design blade optimization by an independent research
establishment based in the Netherlands Composite Technology Centre (CTC).
CTC studied the effects of replacing traditional E-glass with WindStrand
for several components in a 44-meter long rotor or blade, suitable for a
2.5 MW wind turbine.
"For 67 years, since the original invention of fiberglass, we've delivered
sustainable, energy saving solutions that truly transform markets and
enhance lives," said Chuck Dana, Owens Corning Composites Solutions
Business president. "To continue that pioneering history with the
introduction of a new product for wind energy, which is key to our
collective ability to meet the rising demand for energy and to safeguard
the security of energy supplies, is absolutely at the heart of our
corporate purpose and our spirit of true innovation."
Wind Energy has Come of Age
The price parity per kwh of generated power varies considerably between
different sources of energy. To further comply with the commitments made
by the European Union under the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, a recent EU Directive
stipulates the need to help double the share of non-fossil renewable energy
sources, such as wind, from six percent to 12 percent of gross energy
consumption in Europe by 2010. The cost and performance benefits of
innovations like WindStrand are essential to helping renewable energy
sources like wind energy move to the next level of adoption in the global
market.
This is the first time the EU has adopted legislation aimed at promoting
the production of energy from renewable resources and is the first step on
the road to attaining a sustainable energy system. If targets throughout
the EU are met, the consumption of green electricity will rise from 14
percent to 22 percent by 2010.
However, wind energy power generation is not restricted to Europe. India
is the fourth largest producer of wind-based power after Germany, Spain
and the United States, and China's current wind energy plan is to reach 20
gigawatts by 2020. In Latin America, Brazil offers the greatest potential
where wind energy could provide a cost-effective alternative to
hydroelectric systems in some areas of the country where water is best
used for irrigation.
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