COMMERCIALIZING LITHIUM-ION TECHNOLOGY AT ARGONNE
Filed Wednesday, June 17. 2009
Argonne National Laboratory is a key player in commercializing lithium-ion technology. Illinois can be as well if the state acts quickly. If it takes a village to raise a child, it takes a region to raise economic viability for all.
Interest on last week’s column on lithium-ion battery commercialization has led to some great feedback from prominent readers as well as an interview with Jeff Chamberlin. He’s the senior account manager at Argonne’s office of technology transfer. Photo courtesy of Argonne National Laboratory Firefly Energy co-founder Mil Ovan (a battery company in Peoria, Ill.) also commented: I read your column and am in general agreement that Michigan, Kentucky and Ohio are more aggressive in recruiting battery companies and Illinois needs to get on the power curve. Argonne’s Chamberlin mentioned the same states as well as Indiana as being aggressive contenders that create some good incentives to attract corporate facilities into their states. Illinois has to come from behind to get a plant here in order to get a piece of the $2 billion federal economic development initiative that has been earmarked for this technology endeavor. Let me clarify that these manufacturing plants are high-tech facilities. They’re not like the smoke-stacked steel mills of the last century. Chamberlain pointed out that you should think more of the Google headquarters than something out of the steel works on Chicago’s South Side. The whole concept of using high-capacity batteries for vehicles is moving quickly from concept to commercialization. It would be nice to have a plant in Illinois. Strong Reasons For Hope Chamberlin says there are three reasons that Illinois could still be some type of benefactor to the transitional shift to electric cars:
Some states stand to get a whole new next-generation industry that will provide well-paying jobs to skilled people. That translates into strengthening the tax base and generating more tax revenues that can fund both local and social initiatives. It was pointed out that Argonne in Lemont, Ill. also recently won the Golden Family Award from the Society of Women Engineers. The award recognizes a company in the Chicago area for its commitment to support family issues including the delicate balance between work and family We need more companies that provide real benefits, a decent working environment and a real career future so we can reverse the trend of job erosion in Illinois. Jobs are key for regional sustainability. New taxes are not. Other Hurdles in Silicon Prairie First of all, there is no Silicon Prairie in Chicago. Any comparison to Silicon Valley is a stretch if not a full joke. Let’s stop the cutesy euphemisms and look at the hard realities of what really happens here. There are too many individual facets and fiefdoms in Illinois (and the greater Chicago area) that never seem to collaborate or move in the same direction as compared to the multi-institutional cohesion of Silicon Valley. In Silicon Valley, you have people working together for a common cause. Venture capitalists, entrepreneurs, bankers, politicians, academia and most important the media make up the “recipe for success”. Media? That is the secret ingredient. They have people who understand the technology as well as the total picture in Silicon Valley. They can articulate and spotlight it, which creates a larger and larger following as well as a demand for action. Reporters around here seem to gravitate to the political misfortunes of some and the gratuitous fluff pieces that they think so many will find “cute”. As I have asked in the past: “Where is our equivalent to the San Jose Mercury News?” If technology is covered at all around here by the mainstream press or TV, it’s more likely to cover the next-generation Grand Theft Auto game or the latest pastel iPod case rather than job-creating initiatives that are being discussed here. This lithium-ion battery initiative – along with so many other tech-related concepts – should be spotlighted. We need to get interest intersecting from all the institutions to push this along. We also need the common reader understanding that real jobs can be had in Illinois if our political structure pursues them. If it takes a village to raise a child, it takes a region to raise economic viability for all. Carlinism: Regional sustainability depends on getting next-generation commerce in place. Next-generation commerce needs to have next-generation infrastructure to build upon. Last modified on 2010-02-08 21:03 Trackbacks
Trackback specific URI for this entry
No Trackbacks
Comments
Display comments as
(Linear | Threaded)
No comments
The author does not allow comments to this entry
|
Powered by
Serendipity 1.2
