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Startup Rentricity recovers energy from water systems

By | October 13, 2010, 3:15 PM PDT

Rentricity's Flow-to-Wire system mimicks pressure reduction valves and monitors the efficiency of energy recovery.

The ancient Greeks harnessed the power of water to grind wheat. Over a millennium later, a start-up is evangelizing its system to generate electricity from hydrokinetic energy recovered from U.S. water utilities.

Rentricity, a Manhattan based company founded by former W-Technologies chief marketing officer Frank Zammataro and Asea Brown Boveri combustion engineer Al Spinell, has developed a system called Flow-to-Wire. Rentricity is also developing information services to help utilities manage and monitor its energy recovery systems.

Flow-to-Wire recovers energy by mimicking the pressure reduction valves (PRVs) that are used to relieve excess pressure in water supply systems. Excess energy is recovered rather than being dissipated as heat.

PRVs keep pipelines within pre-defined pressure ranges, and are frequently deployed at locations where water is traveling downhill and pressure rises.

Rentricity deployed a Flow-to-Wire system in Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania early this month. The system captures energy from the pipes that run water between the Beaver Run Reservoir and a nearby water treatment plant; the recovered energy is re-purposed to help power the utility’s pumps.

The Westmoreland installation costs US$323,000, and will generate 30 kilowatts of electricity, the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review reports. The Flow-to-Wire installation will save the Municipal Authority of Westmoreland County $40,000 per year in energy costs.

Rentricity has identified 6,500 PRV sites in the US that have the potential to 520 mWs of clean energy from $1.5 billion of installed capital cost, according to the company. Other hydrokinetic energy projects have sought to generate power from tidal forces.

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David Worthington

About David Worthington

David Worthington is a contributing editor for SmartPlanet.

David Worthington

David Worthington

Contributing Editor

David Worthington has written for BetaNews, eWeek, PC World, Technologizer and ZDNet. Formerly, he was a senior editor at SD Times. He holds a degree from Temple University. He is based in New York.

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David Worthington

David Worthington

David does not have financial holdings that would influence how or what he covers. Occasionally he consults for other companies; should David cover a topic in which a client is involved, he will disclose this fact in his writing. His views do not represent those of ScaleOut Software.

He writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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RE: Startup Rentricity recovers energy from water systems
Another good idea for the use of waste energy. Assuming minimal maintenance costs and an equipment lifetime of not less than 10 years, the device will pay for itself.

I'm sure there are many other sources of waste energy that can be recovered. Too bad only electric cars and trucks can take advantage of regenerative braking.
Posted by bhartmann
14th Oct 2010
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Is it really cost effective?
I agree with b....

With the dollar amounts given we are looking at 8 years for the project to pay for its self if there are zero maintence costs.

How long is the hardware expected to last?

With even modest annual maintenance costs you could be looking at a break even in 20 years.

Will it last that long?

Is it worth doing?
Posted by Hates Idiots
14th Oct 2010
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"Spell-Check" wouldn't have caught this
DAVID - paragraph #3 -
"Flow-to-Wire recovers energy by mimicking the pressure reduction valves (PRVs) that are used to relief excess pressure in water supply systems. Excess energy is recovered rather than being dissipated as heat."
should be "relieve" .
Unfortunately, I agree with Hates Idiots - I don't believe the cost of the infrastructure will be recoverable by the electricity produced.
Posted by JTF243@...
14th Oct 2010
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RE: Startup Rentricity recovers energy from water systems
@JTF243 thanks
Posted by David Worthington
14th Oct 2010
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