Quadrennial Technology Review Workshop, 6507-6508 [2015-02307]
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 24 / Thursday, February 5, 2015 / Notices
Energy, National Energy Technology
Laboratory, P.O. Box 10940, Pittsburgh,
PA 15236; Telephone (412) 386–7417;
Email: jessica.sosenko@netl.doe.gov.
Section
209(c) of title 35 of the United States
Code gives the U.S. Department of
Energy (DOE) the authority to grant
exclusive or partially exclusive licenses
in Department-owned inventions where
a determination can be made, among
other things, that the desired practical
application of the invention has not
been achieved, or is not likely to be
achieved expeditiously, under a
nonexclusive license. The statute and
implementing regulations (37 CFR 404)
require that the necessary
determinations be made after public
notice and opportunity for filing written
comments and objections.
KW Associations, LLC, a small
business, has applied for a partially
exclusive license to practice the
invention and has a plan for
commercialization of the invention.
DOE intends to grant the license, upon
a final determination in accordance
with 35 U.S.C. 209(c), unless within 15
days of publication of this notice,
NETL’s Technology Transfer Manager
(contact information listed above),
receives in writing any of the following,
together with supporting documents:
(i) A statement from any person
setting forth reasons why it would not
be in the best interest of the United
States to grant the proposed license; or
(ii) An application for a nonexclusive
license to the invention, in which
applicant states that it already has
brought the invention to practical
application or is likely to bring the
invention to practical application
expeditiously.
The proposed license will be partially
exclusive, subject to a license and other
rights retained by the United States, and
subject to a negotiated royalty. The
exclusive field of use is: Industrial
processes exhibiting diffuse current
paths, such as specialty steel and alloy
processing, industrial microwave
processing, solid state energy systems,
and other high temperature industrial
processes. DOE will review all timely
written responses to this notice, and
will grant the license if, after expiration
of the 15-day notice period, and after
consideration of any written responses
to this notice, a determination is made
in accordance with 35 U.S.C. 209(c) that
the license is in the public interest.
rljohnson on DSK3VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
14:46 Feb 04, 2015
Jkt 235001
Issued: January 20, 2015.
Grace M. Bochenek,
Director, National Energy Technology
Laboratory.
[FR Doc. 2015–02297 Filed 2–4–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Quadrennial Technology Review
Workshop
Office of the Under Secretary
for Science and Energy, Quadrennial
Technology Review Task Force,
Department of Energy.
ACTION: Notice of open meeting and
request for public comment.
AGENCY:
The Department of Energy
(DOE) is conducting a comprehensive
assessment of science and energy
technology research, development,
demonstration, and deployment (RD3)
opportunities to address our nation’s
energy-linked economic, environmental,
and security challenges. This
comprehensive document—the 2015
edition of the DOE’s Quadrennial
Technology Review, or QTR–2015—is
examining an ‘‘all of the above’’ range
of energy technologies to inform the
configuration of the Department’s
programs and priorities, industry and
university engagement, and national lab
activities, and will serve as a key input
into the Department’s forthcoming
Science and Energy Plan.
DATES: A series of open meetings will be
held between February 11 and March 4
to describe work in progress. Written
comments should be submitted on or
before March 9, 2015.
ADDRESSES: The meetings will be held
via webinar and conference call. The
schedule and the web links will be
provided at https://www.energy.gov/qtr
by February 10.
Comments may be submitted
electronically to: DOE–QTR2015@
hq.doe.gov or by U.S. mail to the Office
of the Under Secretary of Science and
Energy, S–4, QTR Meeting Comments,
U.S. Department of Energy, 1000
Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20585–0121.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dr.
Sam Baldwin, S–4, U.S. Department of
Energy, Office of the Under Secretary for
Science and Energy, 1000 Independence
Avenue SW., Washington, DC 20585–
0121. Telephone: (202) 586–0927.
Email: DOE–QTR2015@hq.doe.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
nation faces serious energy-linked
economic, environmental, and security
challenges. Addressing these challenges
requires an aggressive plan for our
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
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Fmt 4703
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6507
science and energy enterprise while
ensuring that America maintains its
leadership in a broad range of science
and technology activities. These
activities include basic and applied
research in the physical sciences,
developing the next generation of
computational technology and
developing and maintaining world class
scientific user facilities. The output of
the QTR process will be coordinated
with the Quadrennial Energy Review
(QER). These planning products will
build and extend existing strategic,
program and budget planning activities
within the Science and Energy offices
and are expected to inform ongoing
budget discussions.
The QTR 2015, focusing on DOE
energy technology RDD&D activities,
builds upon the first QTR in 2011, and
complements the work of the QER,
which focuses on government-wide
energy policy. The 2011 QTR was
developed in response to the Report to
the President on ‘‘Accelerating the Pace
of Change in Energy Technologies
through an Integrated Federal Energy
Policy’’ by the President’s Council of
Advisors on Science and Technology.
The first QTR defined a framework for
understanding and discussing energy
system challenges, established a set of
priorities for the Department, and
explained to stakeholders the roles of
DOE and the national laboratories, the
broader government, the private sector,
academia, and innovation in energy
transformation.
QTR 2015 will describe the nation’s
energy landscape and the dramatic
changes that have taken place in the last
four years. Specifically, it will begin by
building on the first QTR and
identifying what has changed in the
technologies reviewed within it since
2011. It will then identify the RDD&D
activities, opportunities, and pathways
forward to help address our national
energy challenges. QTR 2015 will
approach the analysis from a strong
systems perspective, it will explore the
integration of science and energy
technology RDD&D, it will examine
cross-cutting technology RDD&D, and it
will conduct an integrated analysis of
RDD&D opportunities.
The Department of Energy has the
largest role in the Federal Government
in conducting energy RDD&D. Many
other executive departments and
agencies also play important roles in
developing and implementing energy
RDD&D. In addition, non-Federal actors
are crucial contributors to energy
RDD&D.
Purpose of the Meeting: The purpose
of these meetings is to provide input to
E:\FR\FM\05FEN1.SGM
05FEN1
rljohnson on DSK3VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
6508
Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 24 / Thursday, February 5, 2015 / Notices
the content of the Quadrennial
Technology Review document.
List of Webinars: Individual Webinars
will be held for each of the following
chapters in the QTR document:
Chapter 1—Energy Challenges
Chapter 2—What has Changed Since
QTR–2011
Chapter 3—Energy Systems and
Strategies
Chapter 4—Cleaner and Safer Fuel
Production
Chapter 5—Enabling Modernization of
the Electric Power System
Chapter 6—Clean Electric Power
Technologies
Chapter 7—Increasing Efficiency of
Building Systems and Technologies
Chapter 8—Increasing Efficiency and
Effectiveness of Industry and
Manufacturing
Chapter 9—Transportation
Chapter 10—Enabling Capabilities for
Science and Energy
Chapter 11—U.S. Competitiveness and
R&D Needs
Chapter 12—Integrated Analysis
Chapter 13—Accelerating Science and
Energy RDD&D
Public Participation: The Quadrennial
Technology Review Task Force
welcomes the attendance of the public
for these webinars. Due to time
constraints, we will only be able to
provide clarifying remarks. Written
comments are welcome and encouraged.
Webinar materials will be posted at
https://www.energy.gov/qtr following the
presentation.
Submitting comments via email. Any
contact information provided in your
email submission will not be publicly
viewable except for your first and last
names, organization name (if any), and
submitter representative name (if any).
Your contact information will be
publicly viewable if you include it in
the comment itself or in any documents
attached to your comment. Any
information that you do not want to be
publicly viewable should not be
included in your comment, nor in any
document attached to your comment.
Otherwise, persons viewing comments
will see only first and last names,
organization names, correspondence
containing comments, and any
documents submitted with the
comments.
If you do not want your personal
contact information to be publicly
viewable, do not include it in your
comment or any accompanying
documents. Instead, provide your
contact information in a cover letter.
Include your first and last names, email
address, telephone number, and
optional mailing address. The cover
VerDate Sep<11>2014
14:46 Feb 04, 2015
Jkt 235001
letter will not be publicly viewable as
long as it does not include any
comments.
Include contact information each time
you submit comments, data, documents,
and other information to DOE. If you
submit via mail or hand delivery/
courier, please provide all items on a
CD, if feasible, in which case it is not
necessary to submit printed copies. No
telefacsimiles (faxes) will be accepted.
Comments, data, and other
information submitted to DOE
electronically should be provided in
PDF (preferred), Microsoft Word or
Excel, WordPerfect, or text (ASCII) file
format. Provide documents that are not
secured, written in English, and are free
of any defects or viruses. Documents
should not contain special characters or
any form of encryption and, if possible,
they should carry the electronic
signature of the author.
Confidential Business Information.
Pursuant to 10 CFR 1004.11, any person
submitting information that he or she
believes to be confidential and exempt
by law from public disclosure should
submit via email, postal mail, or hand
delivery/courier two well-marked
copies: One copy of the document
marked ‘‘confidential’’ including all the
information believed to be confidential,
and one copy of the document marked
‘‘non-confidential’’ with the information
believed to be confidential deleted.
Submit these documents via email or on
a CD, if feasible. DOE will make its own
determination about the confidential
status of the information and treat it
according to its determination.
Confidential information should be
submitted to the Confidential QTR
email address: DOE-QTR2015Confidential@hq.doe.gov.
Factors of interest to DOE when
evaluating requests to treat submitted
information as confidential include: (1)
A description of the items; (2) whether
and why such items are customarily
treated as confidential within the
industry; (3) whether the information is
generally known by or available from
other sources; (4) whether the
information has previously been made
available to others without obligation
concerning its confidentiality; (5) an
explanation of the competitive injury to
the submitting person which would
result from public disclosure; (6) when
such information might lose its
confidential character due to the
passage of time; and (7) why disclosure
of the information would be contrary to
the public interest. It is DOE’s policy
that all comments may be included in
the public docket, without change and
as received, including any personal
information provided in the comments
PO 00000
Frm 00011
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
(except information deemed to be
exempt from public disclosure).
Issued in Washington, DC on January 30,
2015.
Michael L. Knotek,
Deputy Under Secretary for Science and
Energy, Office of the Under Secretary for
Science and Energy.
[FR Doc. 2015–02307 Filed 2–4–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
[Docket No. EL15–40–000]
Public Service Electric and Gas
Company v. PJM Interconnection, LLC;
Notice of Complaint
Take notice that on January 29, 2015,
pursuant to section 206 of the Federal
Power Act, 16 U.S.C. 824(e) and Rule
206 of the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission’s (Commission) Rules of
Practice and Procedure, 18 CFR 385.206,
Public Service Electric and Gas
Company (Complainant or PSE&G), filed
a formal complaint against PJM
Interconnection, LLC (Respondent or
PJM), alleging that PJM violated PSE&G
rules governing competitive
transmission solicitations to resolve
operational performance issues at
Artificial Island.1 PSE&G requests that
the Commission order PJM to comply
with its rules in this and all future
transmission solicitations under Order
No. 1000.2
The Complainant certifies that copies
of the complaint were served on the
contacts for the Respondent as listed on
the Commission’s list of Corporate
Officials.
Any person desiring to intervene or to
protest this filing must file in
accordance with Rules 211 and 214 of
the Commission’s Rules of Practice and
Procedure (18 CFR 385.211, 385.214).
Protests will be considered by the
Commission in determining the
appropriate action to be taken, but will
not serve to make protestants parties to
the proceeding. Any person wishing to
1 ‘‘Artificial Island’’ refers to the transmission and
generation infrastructure associated with the second
largest nuclear complex in the United States,
including the Salem 1 and 2 and Hope Creek
nuclear generating units that have a total generating
capacity of 3818 MW.
2 Transmission Planning and Cost Allocation by
Transmission Owning and Operating Pub. Utils.,
Order No. 1000, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,323
(2011), order on reh’g, Order No. 1000–A, 139 FERC
¶ 61,132, order on reh’g and clarification, Order No.
1000–B, 141 FERC ¶ 61,044 (2012), affirmed sub.
nom. S.C. Pub. Serv. Auth. v. FERC, 762 F.3d 41
(D.C. Cir. 2014).
E:\FR\FM\05FEN1.SGM
05FEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 24 (Thursday, February 5, 2015)]
[Notices]
[Pages 6507-6508]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-02307]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Quadrennial Technology Review Workshop
AGENCY: Office of the Under Secretary for Science and Energy,
Quadrennial Technology Review Task Force, Department of Energy.
ACTION: Notice of open meeting and request for public comment.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of Energy (DOE) is conducting a comprehensive
assessment of science and energy technology research, development,
demonstration, and deployment (RD3) opportunities to address our
nation's energy-linked economic, environmental, and security
challenges. This comprehensive document--the 2015 edition of the DOE's
Quadrennial Technology Review, or QTR-2015--is examining an ``all of
the above'' range of energy technologies to inform the configuration of
the Department's programs and priorities, industry and university
engagement, and national lab activities, and will serve as a key input
into the Department's forthcoming Science and Energy Plan.
DATES: A series of open meetings will be held between February 11 and
March 4 to describe work in progress. Written comments should be
submitted on or before March 9, 2015.
ADDRESSES: The meetings will be held via webinar and conference call.
The schedule and the web links will be provided at https://www.energy.gov/qtr by February 10.
Comments may be submitted electronically to: DOE-QTR2015@hq.doe.gov
or by U.S. mail to the Office of the Under Secretary of Science and
Energy, S-4, QTR Meeting Comments, U.S. Department of Energy, 1000
Independence Avenue SW., Washington, DC 20585-0121.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dr. Sam Baldwin, S-4, U.S. Department
of Energy, Office of the Under Secretary for Science and Energy, 1000
Independence Avenue SW., Washington, DC 20585-0121. Telephone: (202)
586-0927. Email: DOE-QTR2015@hq.doe.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The nation faces serious energy-linked
economic, environmental, and security challenges. Addressing these
challenges requires an aggressive plan for our science and energy
enterprise while ensuring that America maintains its leadership in a
broad range of science and technology activities. These activities
include basic and applied research in the physical sciences, developing
the next generation of computational technology and developing and
maintaining world class scientific user facilities. The output of the
QTR process will be coordinated with the Quadrennial Energy Review
(QER). These planning products will build and extend existing
strategic, program and budget planning activities within the Science
and Energy offices and are expected to inform ongoing budget
discussions.
The QTR 2015, focusing on DOE energy technology RDD&D activities,
builds upon the first QTR in 2011, and complements the work of the QER,
which focuses on government-wide energy policy. The 2011 QTR was
developed in response to the Report to the President on ``Accelerating
the Pace of Change in Energy Technologies through an Integrated Federal
Energy Policy'' by the President's Council of Advisors on Science and
Technology. The first QTR defined a framework for understanding and
discussing energy system challenges, established a set of priorities
for the Department, and explained to stakeholders the roles of DOE and
the national laboratories, the broader government, the private sector,
academia, and innovation in energy transformation.
QTR 2015 will describe the nation's energy landscape and the
dramatic changes that have taken place in the last four years.
Specifically, it will begin by building on the first QTR and
identifying what has changed in the technologies reviewed within it
since 2011. It will then identify the RDD&D activities, opportunities,
and pathways forward to help address our national energy challenges.
QTR 2015 will approach the analysis from a strong systems perspective,
it will explore the integration of science and energy technology RDD&D,
it will examine cross-cutting technology RDD&D, and it will conduct an
integrated analysis of RDD&D opportunities.
The Department of Energy has the largest role in the Federal
Government in conducting energy RDD&D. Many other executive departments
and agencies also play important roles in developing and implementing
energy RDD&D. In addition, non-Federal actors are crucial contributors
to energy RDD&D.
Purpose of the Meeting: The purpose of these meetings is to provide
input to
[[Page 6508]]
the content of the Quadrennial Technology Review document.
List of Webinars: Individual Webinars will be held for each of the
following chapters in the QTR document:
Chapter 1--Energy Challenges
Chapter 2--What has Changed Since QTR-2011
Chapter 3--Energy Systems and Strategies
Chapter 4--Cleaner and Safer Fuel Production
Chapter 5--Enabling Modernization of the Electric Power System
Chapter 6--Clean Electric Power Technologies
Chapter 7--Increasing Efficiency of Building Systems and Technologies
Chapter 8--Increasing Efficiency and Effectiveness of Industry and
Manufacturing
Chapter 9--Transportation
Chapter 10--Enabling Capabilities for Science and Energy
Chapter 11--U.S. Competitiveness and R&D Needs
Chapter 12--Integrated Analysis
Chapter 13--Accelerating Science and Energy RDD&D
Public Participation: The Quadrennial Technology Review Task Force
welcomes the attendance of the public for these webinars. Due to time
constraints, we will only be able to provide clarifying remarks.
Written comments are welcome and encouraged. Webinar materials will be
posted at https://www.energy.gov/qtr following the presentation.
Submitting comments via email. Any contact information provided in
your email submission will not be publicly viewable except for your
first and last names, organization name (if any), and submitter
representative name (if any). Your contact information will be publicly
viewable if you include it in the comment itself or in any documents
attached to your comment. Any information that you do not want to be
publicly viewable should not be included in your comment, nor in any
document attached to your comment. Otherwise, persons viewing comments
will see only first and last names, organization names, correspondence
containing comments, and any documents submitted with the comments.
If you do not want your personal contact information to be publicly
viewable, do not include it in your comment or any accompanying
documents. Instead, provide your contact information in a cover letter.
Include your first and last names, email address, telephone number, and
optional mailing address. The cover letter will not be publicly
viewable as long as it does not include any comments.
Include contact information each time you submit comments, data,
documents, and other information to DOE. If you submit via mail or hand
delivery/courier, please provide all items on a CD, if feasible, in
which case it is not necessary to submit printed copies. No
telefacsimiles (faxes) will be accepted.
Comments, data, and other information submitted to DOE
electronically should be provided in PDF (preferred), Microsoft Word or
Excel, WordPerfect, or text (ASCII) file format. Provide documents that
are not secured, written in English, and are free of any defects or
viruses. Documents should not contain special characters or any form of
encryption and, if possible, they should carry the electronic signature
of the author.
Confidential Business Information. Pursuant to 10 CFR 1004.11, any
person submitting information that he or she believes to be
confidential and exempt by law from public disclosure should submit via
email, postal mail, or hand delivery/courier two well-marked copies:
One copy of the document marked ``confidential'' including all the
information believed to be confidential, and one copy of the document
marked ``non-confidential'' with the information believed to be
confidential deleted. Submit these documents via email or on a CD, if
feasible. DOE will make its own determination about the confidential
status of the information and treat it according to its determination.
Confidential information should be submitted to the Confidential QTR
email address: DOE-QTR2015-Confidential@hq.doe.gov.
Factors of interest to DOE when evaluating requests to treat
submitted information as confidential include: (1) A description of the
items; (2) whether and why such items are customarily treated as
confidential within the industry; (3) whether the information is
generally known by or available from other sources; (4) whether the
information has previously been made available to others without
obligation concerning its confidentiality; (5) an explanation of the
competitive injury to the submitting person which would result from
public disclosure; (6) when such information might lose its
confidential character due to the passage of time; and (7) why
disclosure of the information would be contrary to the public interest.
It is DOE's policy that all comments may be included in the public
docket, without change and as received, including any personal
information provided in the comments (except information deemed to be
exempt from public disclosure).
Issued in Washington, DC on January 30, 2015.
Michael L. Knotek,
Deputy Under Secretary for Science and Energy, Office of the Under
Secretary for Science and Energy.
[FR Doc. 2015-02307 Filed 2-4-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450-01-P