Event Calendar

August 2010
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USGBC Northeast Branch Program: LEED for Contractors (Panel Discussion)

October 7, 2010
5:30 pmto8:00 pm

Where: Holiday Inn at the Coliseum, 4111 Paul Shaffer Dr., Fort Wayne, IN 46825
Cost: Individual Chapter Members - FREE; Non-Members - $10

Icon - NortheastLEED for Contractors (Panel Discussion):  What general contractors, subcontractors, and vendors need to know about building LEED projects - from estimating/bidding, through construction, and project closeout.

Register

Free drink ticket for early RSVP (by September 30)

Wind Supply Chain Workshop Scheduled for Thursday, September 16

September 16, 2010
7:45 amto1:30 pm

Where: 318 Main Street, Suite 401, Evansville, IN 47708
Phone: 812.425.8147; Fax: 812.421.5883

Wind power is one of the fastest growing industries in the United States. Across America, tall towers are sprouting up and tapping into a clean, renewable source of electrical energy for our nation. In the recent U.S. Department of Energy’s groundbreaking report, 20% Wind Energy by 2030: Increasing Wind Energy’s Contribution to U.S. Electricity Supply, a benchmark was established that challenges our nation to generate 20% of its electricity from wind by 2030.

Today, the U.S. leads the world in market expansion–shattering all previous records in 2007, by installing 5,244 megawatts of power.

With this rate of growth, there is little spare capacity in the supply chain–and plenty of opportunity for firms looking for new business. With a well-established base of manufacturers with the workforce, research, and technology to support heavy industry and wind turbine component manufacturing, supplying OEMs in the wind sector is an ideal growth market for manufacturing firms in the Tri-State region.

The Wind Supply Workshop will provide business solutions that will illuminate both the safe passages and the harboring shoals that could sink otherwise solid developments. This workshop is the place for major players to gather and advance wind development throughout the Tri-State region.

Reserve your seat today!

The Wind Supply Chain Workshop will take place on Thursday, September 16 from 7:45 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., at The Centre.  The cost is $75 for Chamber members and/or representatives from manufacturing enterprises, and $150 for non-Chamber members and non-manufacturing sector attendees.   For just the luncheon, tickets are $40 or $80 for non-members.

To reserve a seat for this important workshop, please contact Carly Griffin, events manager, at 812.425.8147 or via e-mail at cgriffin@ccswin.com.

The Wind Supply Chain Workshop will be conducted by the Great Lakes Wind Network (GLWN). GLWN is a non-profit, industry-led organization of manufacturers and suppliers whose mission is to increase the domestic content of North America’s wind turbines and grow the supply chain for the industry.

The Wind Supply Chain Workshop Agenda

7:45 a.m. Networking
8:00 a.m.  Welcome   Host
8:15 a.m. Program Overview Ed Weston, GLWN Director
8:20 a.m. Local Wind Success Story Guest Manufacturer
8:35 a.m. Market Opportunities Ed Weston
This session will focus on the following key topics
•         Industry Size
•         Market Update
•         Growth
•         Major Players
•         Trends and Issues
9:20 a.m. Networking Break
9:40 a.m. Anatomy of a Wind Turbine Dale Reckman, GLWN Director, Field Services
This session provides an overview of turbine components including:
•        Nacelles
•        Towers
•        Blades
•        Major Subsystems
•        Industry Sectors
10:50 a.m. Networking Break
11:10 a.m. Structure of the Supply Chain/ Operations and Maintenance Patrick Fullenkamp, GLWN Director, Technical Services
•        What OEMs Buy
•        Who OEMs Buy From
•        Aftermarket Sales and Service
11:40 a.m. Next Steps Ed Weston
•        Getting Connected
•        Tips for Manufacturers
Noon Keynote Speaker and Luncheon Jonathan Fahey, Forbes Magazine

More info

Ohio wants to dump manure problem on ECI

Muncie Star Press
PORTLAND — Manure applied to farm fields surrounding Grand Lake St. Marys in western Ohio has helped poison the 13,000-acre lake.
And one of the state of Ohio’s solutions — transporting future manure to farm fields outside the watershed, including fields in Indiana — has alarmed some Hoosiers in East Central Indiana…

Barbara Sha Cox of Indiana CAFO Watch called the Ohio EPA’s recommendation “frightening.” “We must expect IDEM (Indiana Department of Environmental Management) to be very proactive because we have so many CAFOs (Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations) in Indiana that we do not need to take Ohio’s manure to clean up their watershed,” Cox said. “I don’t think we have the proper regulations, and we already have so much manure brought over from Ohio.”
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NW Ind. group wins grant to improve air quality

The Republic
MERRILLVILLE, Ind. — A northwestern Indiana nonprofit has won a $630,000 federal grant to improve southern Lake Michigan’s air quality by retrofitting ships’ engines.
South Shore Clean Cities Inc. will use the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency grant to update older, diesel-powered ships with more efficient and environmentally friendly technology.
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Cummins on Track For 26,000 EPA 2010 Engines

InsideINdianaBusiness.com Report
Columbus-based Cummins Inc. (NYSE: CMI) says it has built more than 20,000 heavy-duty and midrange engines that are compliant with 2010 emission standards from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. The engines with Selective Catalytic Reduction technology have been in production for seven months and should total 26,000 by the end of the month.

Cummins has developed and certified 13 engine families to the EPA and California Air Resources Board (ARB) regulations to serve over 60 OEM customers in 180 vehicle installations. The ISX15 Family 1 engines feature On-Board Diagnostics (OBD) with improved emissions control warnings and alerts to the vehicle operator. OBD will be required by the EPA and will be featured on all engine families beginning in 2013.
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Remy to Produce New Electric Drive System

InsideINdianaBusiness.com Report
Pendleton-based Remy International Inc.’s subsidiary, Remy Electric Motors LLC, is partnering with MotoCzysz LLC on a new electric drive system. The companies say the system was originally designed to fit a motorcycle, but because of its compact size can provide efficiency to automobile and other vehicle manufacturers. The unit is expected to be available in the second quarter of 2011.

The unique drive system leverages Remy’s patented High Voltage Hairpin (HVH) electric motor technology and patent-pending cooling and integration technology from MotoCzysz. The resulting breakthrough is a “complete electric drive system” optimized to elicit and manage the full performance benefit of the powerful Remy motor. The new integrated D1g1tal Dr1ve is the first of its kind of a new classification of complete electric drive solutions. Its compact size, originating from motorcycle racing and winning performance, are expected to provide a remarkable efficiency advantage to automobile and other vehicle manufacturers.
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Indiana Company Poised to Lead Emerging Energy Sector

InsideINdianaBusiness.com Report
An Indiana-based fuel pellet supplier has expanded operations in Sullivan County with the aim of capturing a major share of the U.S. market. American Pellet Supply LLC says it has utilized $4 million in private investment to build new facilities and purchase specialized manufacturing equipment. The company says the U.S. fuel pellet industry is expected to become a $1 billion energy sector by the end of the decade.

Extremely popular in Europe where up to 50% of homes are heated with fuel pellets, fuel pellet use has more than doubled in the United States in the past few years. According to energy experts, the U.S. fuel pellet industry is expected to become a billion-dollar energy sector by the end of the decade for heating residences and businesses.
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Alternative Energy Panel Assembles in Muncie

InsideINdianaBusiness.com Report
The leader of an alternative energy component manufacturer in Muncie says a sense of urgency needs to be placed on smaller companies and suppliers in the emerging sector. Mursix Corp. President Todd Murray says we hear a lot about big companies such as EnerDel Inc., Allison Transmission Inc. and Cummins Inc. (NYSE: CMI), but smaller firms are just as important.

Speakers for the event include:
• Mr. Paul Mitchell, President & CEO - Energy Systems Network
• Dr. Michael J. Hicks, Director – Miller College of Business – Ball State University
• Mr. Eric Burch, Director of Policy – Indiana Office of Energy Development
• Mr. Jim Staton, Energy Team Leader – Indiana Economic Development Corporation
• Mr. Kintaro Otsuka, Senior Manager, Supply Chain Management – EnerDel, Inc.
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Local racing-fuel supplier expands territory to 26 states

IBJ.com
A subsidiary of Carmel-based Telamon Corp. that supplies racing teams with ethanol-based fuel made from Indiana corn has signed contracts giving it a distribution channel in 26 states…

National Biofuels Distribution LLC began marketing the fuel, dubbed Ignite, last September to sprint and midget car teams that run on the dirt tracks prevalent throughout the Midwest.
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Jasper Alternate Fuels to Distribute Systems For Michigan Company

InsideINdianaBusiness.com Report
Jasper Alternate Fuels, a division of Jasper Engines & Transmissions, has signed a deal with Michigan-based Icom North America to install propane liquid-injection fuel systems on commercial fleet vehicles in North America. Jasper says it expects to sell more than 5,000 systems during the first three-years of the contract.

“Icom’s bi-fuel system allows owners to operate their vehicles in either a gasoline-only or a propane-only mode without affecting normal driving,” Zoglman pointed out. “Installation is non-invasive and the engine’s original computer serves as the main system controller, a feature fleet managers like to see with an aftermarket alternative fuel system.”
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