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Transcript of Electrical Generating Systems Association 2009 Fall Technical and Marketing Conference September...
Electrical Generating Systems Association2009 Fall Technical and Marketing Conference September 13-15, 2009Colorado Springs, Colorado
Mr. Michael PaddenProject Manager
Department of DefenseProject Manager Mobile Electric Power (PM MEP)
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Strategic Importance of Tactical Electric Power
Current Tactical Electric Power Landscape
Tactical Electric Power Vision
Upcoming Business Opportunities
*Report of the Defense Science Board Task Force on DoD Energy Strategy
Generators are the Army’s single largest user of fuel on the battlefield during wartime.*
Category
Peacetime
OPTEMPO
Wartime
OPTEMPO
Combat Vehicles 30 162
Combat Aircraft 140 307
Tactical Vehicles 44 173
Generators 26 357
Non-Tactical 51 51
Total 291 1040
Army Fuel consumption in peacetime and wartime (million gallons per year)
4
Maintain or enhance operational effectiveness while reducing total force energy demands
Increase energy strategic resilience by developing alternative/assured fuels and energy
Enhance operational and business effectiveness by institutionalizing energy considerations and solutions in DoD planning and business processes
Establish and monitor Department-wide energy metrics
2006 – SECDEF creates Director Defense Research Engineering Energy Security Task Force (ESTF) & directs Defense Science Board (DSB) to evaluate/propose Energy Strategy
2007 – ESTF analysis results in $300M+ plus-up in Power & Energy
2008 – DSB releases Final Report on DOD Energy Strategy
2008 – Congress directs OSD establish an “energy czar” position
2008 – Army establishes Energy Security Task Force to develop way-forward
2008 – Army establishes Senior Energy Council & establishes a Senior Executive position responsible for energy activities
5
Exorbitant Demand for Electrical Power
Excessive Proliferation:2,000 different makes,models, and sizes
Ineffective Logistical Support
1965 Southeast Asia
1967 DOD Ad Hoc
Working Group
Established
Vietnam
Identified need for a Department of Defense Standard Family of Mobile Electric Power Generating Sources
US Army designated as lead standardization activity
Established Project Manager Mobile Electric Power to execute mission
Codified in Department of Defense Directive and Joint Operating Procedures
6
Establish, maintain, and provide a DOD Standard Family of Mobile Electric Power Generating Source (MEPGS); includes follow-on fuel cells and thermoelectric devices
Provide advice and consultation on how to improve and/or expand the standardization of MEPGS across DOD
Approve/Disapprove all requests for non-standard MEPGS
Army Regulation 700-101AFI 63-110(I)NAVFACINST 4120.12MCO 11310.27DLAI 4120.16
Logistics
Joint OperatingProceduresManagement and Standardization ofMobile ElectricPower GeneratingSources
HeadquartersDepartments of the Army, the Air Force, the Navy, Marine Corp, Defense LogisticsAgencyWashington, DC2 September 2003
UNCLASSIFIED
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Deputy Under Secretary of
Defense (Logistics and
Material Readiness)
Program Execution
Standardization
Army102,493 Gen Sets (82%)1,264,105 kW (60%)
Marine Corps7,698 Gen Sets (6%)179,802 kW (9%)
Navy1,594 Gen Sets (1%)84,588 kW (4%)
Air Force13,340 Gen Sets (11%)576,547 kW (27%)
Program Executive Officer Command
Control Communications
Tactical
Under Secretary of Defense (Acquisition
Technology & Logistics)
Assistant Secretary of the
Army (Acquisition Logistics &
Technology)
DoD Total Requirements125,125 Generator Sets2,104,952 kilowatts (kW)
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Purpose: To achieve common, mutually satisfactory solutions to shared requirements and problems.
Joint Standardization Board Members: DoD Project Manager Mobile Electric Power
(PM MEP) (Chairman) Marine Corps Systems Command
(MARCORSYSCOM) Naval Facilities Engineering Command
(NAVFAC) Air Force Warner Robins Air Logistic Center
(WR-ALC)
Interest Areas: AMMPS/LAMPS/STEP Prime Power Sources Intelligent Power Distribution Hybrid Power Sources Alternative Energy Power Sources
MEPGS: Mobile Electric Power Generating Sources LAMPS: Large Advance Mobile Power SourcesAMMPS: Advance Medium Mobile Power Sources STEP: Small Tactical Electric Power 9
Operation in harsh environments High and low ambient temperatures Dust Reduced acoustic and thermal signatures Low noise
High performance, rugged systems EMI/EMC/EMP Shock resistance Noise and vibration Resistant to nuclear, biological, and chemical (NBC)
Deployability and flexibility Interoperability with NATO equipment Fully transportable and mobile Reliability and maintainability
Advanced control systems and human-machine interfaces Prognostics and diagnostics Automatic sequencing and paralleling
Tactical Quiet Generators
Deployable Power Generation & Distribution System (DPGDS)
Military Tactical Generator
Power Units/Power Plants (PU/PP)
Power Distribution Illumination System Electrical (PDISE)
2kW2kW 3kW3kW 5kW5kW 10kW10kW 15kW15kW 30kW30kW 60kW60kW 100kW100kW 200kW200kW
840kW
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Advanced Medium Mobile Power Sources (AMMPS)
Improved Environmental Control Unit (IECU)
5kW5kW 10kW10kW 15kW15kW 30kW30kW 60kW60kW
9/18/36/60k BTUH
Benefits and Savings Soldier Safety 24/7 operation of mission-critical equipment Reduction in spare parts, maintenance, fuel
consumption Organically supported Reduce Division fuel consumption by 275k
gallons per year Reduce Division maintenance by 71k hours
per year Reduce carbon dioxide emissions by 2400
tons per year
Total Net Present Value Savings $5 million: 15 year peacetime
scenario $150 million: 10 year peacetime/5 year low intensity conflict
$200-250 million: 10 year peacetime/5 year high intensity conflict
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Produced 10,427 generators Issued 10,808 generators
Fielded 126 Units with 2,212 generators Completed 273 supply transactions with 3,721
generators Filled 208 customer orders with 4,875 generators
Customer Order Details Other Services - 145 orders with 1,858 generators Foreign Military Support – 17 orders with 523 generators Other Army – 46 orders with 2,494 generators
Trained 275 maintainers and 460 operators
As of: 31 Jul 09
Past
Electric Power GenerationMilitary Standard Generators
Electric Power DistributionDistribution Illumination Systems Electrical (DISE)
Environmental Control UnitsMilitary Standard Environmental Control Units
Future
Central Cooling Solution
Next Generation Power Sources AMMPS LAMPS STEP
Intelligent Power Distribution
Notional
Co-Generation
Alternative/Hybrid Energy
SMART-T
FDECU 7
FDECU 6
FDECU 3
FDECU 2FDECU 1
FDECU 5
FDECU 4 LOGPLANS
S3PLANS
ADAMDTSS-L
A
AA
AA
T
CIC
BSN T
T
SMART-T
Technology Driven Warfighter Focused
Notional
15
Present
Improved ECUsTactical Quiet
Generators
Central Power Solution
Power Distribution Illumination Systems Electric (PDISE)
Military Standard Environmental Control Units
Smart Grids
Integrated and Intelligent Battlefield Power Management
On-board Vehicle Power (APUs, hybrids, energy storage)
Large Power Sources Forward Operating Bases/Combat Outposts Prime Power/Directed Energy Weapons Systems
Low Power Systems Soldier power (battery replacements or hybrids) Battery standardization
Unattended ground sensors power
Fuel reduction and use of alternative renewable energies
APU – Auxiliary Power Unit 17
Establishes PM MEP as System of Systems Integrator (SOSI) for Battlefield Electric Power Integration
Expands PM MEP charter across entire electric power spectrum for the Army
Identifies key areas of focus Standard power generation Power consumer and power
generating sources database Defining battlefield power
architectures
18
Product Director position established August 2009
Provide centralized management of the Army’s battery program
System of Systems approach to development, integration and sustainment
Maximize standardization across product lines
Manage strategic “way-forward” for battery development, procurement, and disposal
Provide strategic guidance to the Science & Technology community for the development of advanced technology
19
Approach Holistic Power
Architecture Scalable, Integrated
Micro-grids Intelligent Power
Management Plug-and-Play
Capability Benefits
Increased Capability Improved Efficiency Reduced Fuel
Consumption Smaller Logistics
Footprint Power Surety
Conventional Generators/ and
Supporting EquipmentLogistic and Indigenous
Fuels
Increased Performance/Silent Watch or Maintenance
Solar
Utility Infrastructure
On Vehicle PayloadSupport
Wind
Islands of Utility Power
TemporaryExport
Alternative/Renewable Power
Intelligent Power Management and Distribution
Small Power Sources/Advanced Power Sources
1kW Diesel 100-200kW LAMPS (Large Advanced Mobile Power Systems)
Energy Storage
NZ+ JCTD(Net Zero Plus Joint Capabilities Technology Demonstration)
FAST Demo(Field Assistance inScience and Technology)
Green CP (Command Post)
Automatic Phase Balancing (Three-Phase to Single-Phase)
HI-POWER(Hybrid Intelligent)
Co-Generation Integrated Systems
25-300W
FY07 FY08 FY09 FY10 FY11 FY13 FY14 FY15FY12 FY16
AMMPS CumminsAdvanced Medium Mobile Power Sources
STEP TBDSmall Tactical Electric Power
LAMPS TBDLarge Advanced Mobile Power Sources
IECUImproved Environmental Control Unit
PDISE FidelityPower Distribution Illumination System Electrical
60k BTUH DRS
9, 18, 36k BTUH
120k BTUH TBD
2kW MTG Dewey ElecMilitary Tactical Generator
3kW TQG DRSTactical Quiet Generator
5, 10, 15kW TQG DRSTactical Quiet Generator
30 & 60kW TQG L-3Tactical Quiet Generator
100 & 200kW TQG DRSTactical Quiet Generator
Re-buy
CRDTE PRODUCTION
CRDTE PRODUCTION
CRDTE PROD
RDTE PRODC
Re-buyPRODUCTION
PRODUCTION
TQG PRODUCTION Begin AMMPS
Begin AMMPSTQG PRODUCTION
PRODUCTION
CRDTE PRODUCTION
PRODUCTION Begin LAMPS
COMPETITIVE RE-BUY
CRDTE PRODPROD
TQG Cascade Program PRODUCTION
B
B
B
B HI-Power I-Power/Electricore Hybrid-Intelligent Power
HDT & Mainstream
Tactical Quiet Generator Cascade Program: RFP 3QFY 2010/contract award 1QFY2011
Large Advanced Mobile Power Sources (LAMPS) development: contract award 1QFY2011
Small Power Sources Production Rebuy (2 & 3kW generators) FY2011
Advanced Medium Mobile Power Sources (AMMPS) competitive re-buy: FY2011 or 2012
Small Tactical Electric Power (STEP) systems development: contract award 1QFY2012
HI-Power System Development and Demonstration: FY2012
Prime Power System Development and Demonstration: FY2012
BTUH – British Thermal Units per Hour RFI – Request for InformationBAA – Broad Area AnnouncementRFP – Request for Proposal
Communications – Electronics Research, Development, and Engineering Center (CERDEC) Broad Agency Announcements: Power Technology, W909MY-07-R-0016: Proposals
due 30 Sept 2009 Alternate Energy, W909MY-08-R-0017:
Open/continuous Environmental Control Technology, W909MY-09-R-
0001: Open/continuous Recovery – Smaller, Lighter Co-Generation and
Absorption Environmental Control Technologies, W909MY-09-
R-0011: Open/continuous
Mr. Michael Padden 703-704-3162 Project Manager, Mobile Electric Power [email protected]
Lt Col Edward Taylor (USMC) 703-704-3160 Product Manager, Small Power Systems (0.5-3kW)/Improved Environmental
Control Units (IECU) [email protected]
LTC Gordon (Tim) Wallace (USA) 703-704-3155 Product Manager, Medium Power Systems (5-60kW) [email protected]
Lt Col Bob Thoens (USAF) 703-704-0132 Product Manager, Large Power Systems (100-920kW)/Power Distribution
Illumination System Electrical (PDISE) [email protected]
Mr. Cory Goetz 703-704-3939 Product Director, Batteries [email protected]
www.pm-mep.army.mil
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