Upload
others
View
5
Download
0
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
2018USA’s Largest
Energy, Utility & Environment ConferenceMarch 5-7 | San Diego, CA
Keynote Panelists:
EUEC | P.O. Box 66076, Tucson, AZ 85728 | (p) 520.615.3535 | (f) 602.296.0199 | [email protected] | www.euec.com
21st AnnualSan Diego Convention Center
111 W Harbor Dr, San Diego, CA 92101
2019USA’s LargestUSA’s Largest
Energy, Utility & Environment ConferenceFebruary 25-27 | San Diego, CA
Keynote Panelists:
EUEC | P.O. Box 66076, Tucson, AZ 85728 | (p) 520.615.3535 | (f) 602.296.0199 | [email protected] |
www.euec.com
Brochure
EUEC2019: 22ND ANNUAL ENERGY, UTILITY, ENVIRONMENT CONFERENCEUSA’s Largest Professional Networking & Educational Event of its kind with 20 CEUs
400 SPEAKERS MAKE PRESENTATIONS IN 11 TRACK PROGRAM
Current Technologies & Strategies for Compliance, Operations & Management of Electric Utilities & Transportation Electrification
1
2,000 ATTENDEES | 400 SPEAKERS | 200 EXHIBITS
EUEC 2019 HELD CONCURRENTLY WITH TE-EXPO
EUEC INTRO ......................................... ............................................... 1TABLE OF CONTENTS ..............................................................................2SCHEDULE ............................................. .............................................. 3KEYNOTE ............................................... ............................................. 4SPEAKING TRACKS ................................................................................5UTILITIES ATTENDING ............................................................................. 6PROGRAM AT-A-GLANCE ................................................................ 7
TRACKSA: REGULATORY UPDATE .......................................................................9B: CEms & AIR QUALITY .............................................................................12C: sO2, NOX, Hg, sCR, CONTROL & OPTImIzATION ....................................15D: POWER GEN & ENERGY SERVICES ..................................................17E: SOLID WASTE, LANDFILL GAS, BIOFUELS .........................................20F: RENEWABLE ENERGY ........................................................................22G: O&M, DDD & EHS ............................................................................25H: ELG, CCR, CCS & FGD ....................................................................28I: WATER & 316(B) COOLING TOWER .................................................31J: UTILITY FLEET & TRANSPORTATION ELECTRIFICATION .....................34K: BATTERY, STORAGE & CHARGING ..................................................37
EXHIBITSEUEC FLOOR PLAN ...............................................................................41EUEC EXHIBITING COMPANIES ...........................................................43REGISTRATION FORM ...........................................................................44TE-EXPO ................................................................................................45TE-EXPO EXHIBITING COMPANIES ......................................................46TE-EXPO FLOOR PLAN .........................................................................47SPONSORSHIP OPPORTUNITIES ...........................................................49HOTELS ..................................................................................................50
EV CHARGING, BATTERY & ELECTRIC FLEETEV CHARGING, BATTERY & ELECTRIC FLEET
TE-EXPO.comTE-EXPO.comTRANSPORTATION ELECTRIFICATION
FEBRUARY 25-26, 2019| SAN DIEGO, CA
TABLE Of CONTENTs
Who should attend?INDUSTRY LEADERS AND POLICY MAKERS:• CORPORATE ENERGY & SUSTAINABILITY EXECUTIVES• RENEWABLE ENERGY ENTREPRENEURS• BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT PROFESSIONALS• UTILITY AND ENERGY EXECUTIVES• LAWYERS, ACCOUNTANTS AND CONSULTANTS• U.S. LEGISLATORS, GOVERNMENT AGENCIES• SCIENTISTS AND RESEARCHERSUTILITIES• PROJECT DEVELOPERS
DECISION MAKERS:• ELECTRIC UTILITIES & ELECTRIC VEHICLES• ARCHITECTS/ENGINEERS/SCIENTISTS• CO-GENERATORS/SELF-GENERATORS• CNG (COMPRESSED NATURAL GAS)• FUEL SUPPLIERS• INDEPENDENT POWER PRODUCERS• EQUIPMENT MANUFACTURERS• POWER INDUSTRY CONSULTANTS• DESIGNERS AND CONSULTANTS• RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT ORGANIZATIONS• HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGERS AND RECRUITERS• CONTINOUS EMISSION MONITORS AND SPECIALISTS
PROgRAm gUIDE TO
ATTEND, sPEAk & EXHIBIT
REGISTRATION NOW JAN 25 FEB 1 ONSITEATTENDEE FULL REGISTRATION $995 $1,095 $1,195 $1,395GOVERNMENT, UTILITY, SPEAKER, EXHIBITOR $595 $695 $795 $1,395TE-EXPO, FLEET, VIP $495 $595 $695 $1,395
3 4 © 2019
2019 Keynote Speakers Monday, February 25th, 2019
Facilitate information exchange and foster cooperation between energy, utility, transportation industries, regulators, and government, for the protection of our environment and energy security.
MISSION STATEMENT
SB350: TRANSPORTATION ELECTRIFICATION PANEL
US EPA AIR PROGRAMS UPDATE William Wehrum - INVITED — 8:00AM - 8:30AMAssistant Administrator, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
THE FUTURE FOR CARBON FREE FOSSIL ENERGYLou Hrkman — 9:00AM - 9:30AMDeputy Assistant Secretary, Clean Coal & Carbon Management, U.S. Department of Energy
SDG&E PROGRAMS FOR TRANSPORTATION ELECTRIFICATION & EVSMichael M. Schneider — 9:30AM - 10:00AMVice President, Clean Transportation and Asset Management San Diego Gas & Electric (SDG&E) & Southern California Gas Co. (SoCalGas)
TRANSPORTATION ELECTRIFICATIONRICHARD COREY - INVITED — 10:00AM - 10:30AMExecutive Officer, California Air Resources Board
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA EDISON TRANSPORTATION ELECTRIFICATIONLAURA RENGER - 10:30AM - 11:00AMPrinciple Manager of Air Quality & Climate, Southern California Edison
PACIFIC GAS & ELECTRIC - TE PROGRAMDAVID SAWAYA — 11:00AM - 11:30AMClean Transportation Strategy, Pacific Gas & Electric
HIGHLIGHTS OF EUEC2019 & TE-EXPOPrabhu Dayal — 11:30AM - 11:45AMChairman, Electric, Utility, Environment Conference
ELECTRIC SECTOR HELPING LEAD THE ENERGY TRANSFORMATIONRobert C. Rowe — 8:30AM - 9:00AMPresident and CEO, Northwestern Energy
EUEC 2019 & TE-EXPO SCHEDULE
Sunday | February 247:00 am - 7:00 pm Registration12:00 pm - 6:00 pm Exhibit Set-up5:00 pm - 7:00 pm Welcome Reception
Monday | February 257:00 am - 7:00 pm Registration
12 pm - 7:00 pm Exhibits Open
8:00 am - 12:00 pm KEYNOTE12:00 pm - 1:00 pm Networking Lunch 1
1:00 pm - 3:00 pm Tech Session 13:00 pm - 3:30 pm Networking Break 2
3:30 pm - 5:30 pm Tech Session 25:00 pm - 7:00 pm Networking Reception 3
Tuesday | February 269:00 am - 7:00 pm Exhibits Open7:30 am - 9:30 am Tech Session 39:30 am - 10:00 am Networking Break 4
10:00 am - 12:00 pm Tech Session 412:00 pm - 1:00 pm Networking Lunch 5
1:00 pm - 3:00 pm Tech Session 53:00 pm - 3:30 pm Networking Break 6
3:30 pm - 5:30 pm Tech Session 65:00 pm - 7:00 pm Networking Reception 7
Wednesday | February 277:30 am - 9:30 am Tech Session 78:00 am - GOLF at Torrey Pines
10:00 am - 12:00 pm Tech Session 8
8:00 am 12:00 pm Exhibit Tear Down-
sCHEDULEs & EvENTs
CHAIRmAN’s WELCOmE RECEPTION BY THE WATERfRONT
Sun, Feb 24th| 5 pm to 7 pmTORREY PINEs gOLfINg EvENT
Wed, Feb. 27, 2019 at 8:00AM
5 6 © 2019
J1. SB350 TE - SCE, PG&E, SDGEJ2. EV Trucks & Buses - Fleet AFVJ3. EV, Hybrid, Fleet, SustainabilityJ4. Micro-Grid, EV ChargingJ5. FLEET O&M, Software & Off-roadJ6. Ultra Clean LD/MD/HD, FLEETJ7. Utility Fleet ManagementJ8. CARB Regs, Incentives & Funding, AB739, FLEET Law, VW Funding
A: REgULATORY UPDATE
B: CEms & AIR QUALITY
C: sO2, NOX, Hg, sCR, CONTROL & OPTImIzATION
D: POWER gEN & ENERgY sERvICEs
E: sOLID WAsTE, LANDfILL gAs, BIOfUELs
f: RENEWABLE ENERgY
g: O&m, DDD & EHsH: ELg, CCR, CCs & fgDI: WATER & 316(B) COOLINg TOWER
J: UTILITY fLEET & TRANsPORTATION ELECTRIfICATION
k: BATTERY, sTORAgE & CHARgINg
sPEAk
sUBmIT YOUR ABsTRACT ON-LINE• http://www.euec.com/submit-abstract• All speakers limited to 20 minutes • E-Mail PowerPoint by January 31st
How to make a 20-minute PowerPoint Pesentation at eueC & te-exPo
K1. Battery & Energy StorageK2. EV Charging K3. Residential & Commercial ChargingK4. Battery Storage & ChargingK5. Fuel Cell, Li-Ion, H2, BatteriesK6. EV, Battery, Storage& ChargingK7. EV Battery Manufacture & Supply ChainK8. Battery & Transportation SafetyK9. Other
TRACK J: TE & UTILITY FLEET
EUEC sPEAkINg TRACks
TE-EXPO sPEAkINg sEssIONs
K: BATTERY, STORAGE, CHARGING
AESAlabama Power Company ALLETE Alliant Energy Corporation Ameren Corporation American Electric Power American Municipal Power, Inc. Arizona Electric Power Cooperative Arizona Public Service Company Associated Electric Cooperative, Inc. Austin Energy Avista UtilitiesBasin Electric Power Cooperation Big Rivers Electric Burbank Water & Power Calpine Corporation Catawba County Government Utilities Central Iowa Power Cooperative Central Minnesota Municipal Power Agency Clarke Public Utilities Cleco Corporation Commonwealth EdisonCon Edison Con Edison Clean Energy Connecticut Natural Gas Constellation Energy Consumers Energy CPS Energy Dakota Gasification CompanyDeseret Power Diamond Generating Corporation Dominion Generation DTE Energy Duke Energy Dynegy East Kentucky Power Cooperative EDF IncEdison Electric Institute Empire District Electric Company Encina Power Station ENGIE North America ENMAX Energy CorporationEntergyEversource Energy Exelon NuclearExelon Power FirstEnergy Corp. Florida Power & Light Company Georgia PowerGrand Bahama Power Company Great River Energy Guam Power AuthorityGuam Public Utilities Commission Hawaiian Electric Hoosier Energy Independence Power & Light Intermountain Power Service Corporation JEA Kansas City Board of Public Utilities Kansas City Power & Light KU Energy,LLC Lafayette Utilities SystemLansing Board of Water & Light LG&E Lhoist North AmericaLos Angeles Department of Water and PowerLouisville Gas & Electric Lower Colorado River Authority
Luminant Madison Gas & Electric Michigan South Central Power AgencyMidAmerican Energy Company Minnesota Power Minnkota Power Cooperative, Inc. Mohave Electric Cooperative, Inc.Montana-Dakota Utilities Company Muscatine Power and Water Nebraska Public Power District Newmont Nevada Energy Investment NextEra Energy NiSource Northern Indiana Public Service Co. Northern Star Generation NorthWestern Energy Nova Scotia Power NRECA NRG Energy NV Energy OGE Energy CorpOklahoma Gas & Electric Company Old Dominion Electric Cooperative Omaha Public Power District Oncor Electric Delivery Oneta Power, LLCOrange Grove Energy Pacific Gas & Electric PCPS Energy PECO Energy Platt River Power Portland General ElectricPPL EnergyPlus LLC PPL Montana Power CompanyPrairie State Generating Co. Puget Sound Energy - PSE Riverside Public Utilities Rochester Public Utilities Rodan Energy Solutions Inc. Rural Electric Cooperative Sacramento Municipal Utility District Salt River Project San Diego Gas & Electric San DIego Water Authority Santee Cooper SCANA Schneider Electric Seattle City Light Sempra US Gas and Power Sierra Power Company SoCal Gas Co. Southern California Edison Southern Company Southern Connecticut Gas Southern Power Company SUEZSunflower Electric Power Corporation TenaskaTennessee Valley Authority Texas Municipal Power Agency TransCanadaTri-State Generation and Transmission Tucson Electric Power Twin Oaks PowerVectren Corp. WEC Energy Group Westar Energy Xcel Energy
Electric Utilities Attending EUEC
7 8 © 2019
Monday | February 25th
Tuesday | February 26th
Wednesday | February 27th
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
ATrack B C D E F G H I J K
1:00PM to 3:00PM
3:30PM to 5:30PM
1:00PM to3:00PM
3:30PM to 5:30PM
7:30AM to 9:30AM
10:00AM to 12:00PM
7:30AM to 9:30AM
10:00AM to 12:00PM
Regulatory Update - Air
NSR
Regional Haze & More
Decommis -sioning of
Power Plants
Power Plant O&M
EHS, EMIS & Safety
CCR & ELG Compliance
Mgmnt.
Coal Ash, CCR & FGD
CCR Rule
Coal Ash, CCR
CCS & Rare Earth
Elements
Wastewater, Ground Water, Remediation,
Elg, Fgd
316(b), Cooling Tower
316(b), ELG, FGD,
Wastewater
CEMs & PEMs
Monitoring, Testing &
Spectrometry
SO2, NOx, Hg,
Compliance
Control & Optimization
DSI, ACI, Activated
Carbon, SCR & SNCR
Project Finance & Risk Management
Power Plant Technologies
Renewable Energy
Renewable Energy Project Development
RE SmartGrid & MicroGrid
GHG & Green Projects
Energy Policy &
Power Plants
Permits & Compliance
Monitoring, Testing &
Instrumentation
FGD, ELG, CCR & CCS
Caa, Bact, Neshap,
Nepa
Environmental Sustainability
& Utilities
Emission Control Tech. &
Strategies
Pv, Solar
Plant Performance
& Material Handling
Drones, Data Mgmnt &
Monitoring
Fed & State Regs & Utility
Challenges
SO2, NOx, Hg Control Tech.
Energy & Cybersecurity
Fuel Cell Microgrid &
Energy Storage
Water Supply & Security
T&D, Underground
Utilitites / Substations, Transformers
Energy Policy, Demand &
Rates
Hydro, Geothermal,
& Renewables
Re, Sustainability
& Green
Operations&
Optimization
Monitoring &
Instrumentation
Monitoring, Testing &
Instrumentation
Modeling And Satellite
Data
Wastewater & Water
Treatment
Energy Efficiency & Sustainability
SB350 Transportation Electrification
Ev, Phev, Hybrid, Fleet Sustainability
O&M, Outage Management
Advance Clean Trucks - AFV & ZEV
Fleets
Battery & Energy Storage Systems
EV Charging
ResIdential & Commercial
Charging
Battery, Storage & Charging Systems
Fuel Cells, Li-ion, H2, Batteries
EV battery, Storage & Charging
EV, Battery, Manufacturer
& Supply chain
Health & Safety
Advanced Clean Trucks &
Buses
Fleet O&M Software & Off-road
Equip
Ultra Clean LD/MD/HD
Remote Sensing & Nh3
Monitoring
316(b), ELG, &
Wastewater
Building Technologies Utility Fleet
Waste to Energy -
Case Studies
Biogas, Biofuels,
Biodiesel, Algae
LMOP - Landfills &
Landfill Gas
LFG / CNG / LNG,
Pipelines
Remediation, Recycling &
Special Wastes
Landfill Management & Compliance
Carb Regs, Ab739, Fleet
Law, Vw Funding
REGULATORY UPDATE
CEMS &AIR QUALITY
SO2, NOX, Hg, SCR,
CONTROL & OPTIMIZATION
RENEWABLE ENERGY
O&M, DDD & EHS
ELG, CCR, CCS & FGD
WATER & 316(b)
COOLING TOWER
SOLID WASTE, LANDFILL GAS,
BIOFUELS
UTILITY FLEET & TRANSPORTATION ELECTRIFICATION
BATTERY, STORAGE & CHARGING
POWER GEN & ENERGY
SERVICESSessions
Room 1 Room 2 Room 3 Room 5A Room 5B Room 7B Room 8 Room 9 Room 10 Room 11Room 4Room #
SCHEDULE AT-A-GLANCE
9 10 © 2019
2019TRACk | A |REgULATORY UPDATE
A1. REGULATORY UPDATE - AIRA1.1 ENERGY INDUSTRY REGULATIONS, 2019 - 2020John Kinsman, Sr. Director - Environment, Edison Electric Institute
A1.2 ACE RULE UPDATEJay Holloway, Partner, Williams Mullen
A1.3 EPA CONSOLIDATES ITS MODELING POSITIONSGale Hoffnagle, Senior Vice President, TRC
A1.4 THE AFFORDABLE CLEAN ENERGY RULE: EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOWAllison Wood, Partner, Hunton Andrews Kurth LLP
A1.5 AFFORDABLE CLEAN ENERGY RULE: CHANGES IN EPA’S BENEFIT-COST ANALYSISKate Shouse, Analyst in Environmental Policy, Congressional Research Service
A1.6 MOVING INTO THE 21ST CENTURYBill Smalling, Attorney, The Law Offi ce of C. William Smalling, PC
A2. FED & STATE REGS & UTILITY CHALLENGESA2.1 AIR REGULATORY CHALLENGES FACING THE NATION’S ELECTRIC COOPERATIVESDaniel Chartier, Regulatory Director, Environ. Policy, Nat’l Rural Electric Coop. Assoc.
A2.2 CALIFORNIA CAP AND TRADE MARKET AND POST 2020 UPDATEMike Taylor, President, Emission Advisors, Inc.
A2.3 UTILITY LEVEL ADAPTATION IN A POST-MITIGATION ENVIRONMENTJesse Frederick, Vice President, WZI, Inc.
A2.4 WHAT DOES CALIFORNIA’S AB 617 MEAN FOR REGULATED SOURCES?Heidi Rous, Director, ESA; Anitra Rice
A2.5 AFFORDABLE CLEAN ENERGY RULE: USEFUL LIFE AND HEAT RATE IMPROVEMENTSKyle Kropf, Engineering Manager, Black & Veatch
TRACK A ADVISORY BOARD & DESCRIPTIONIn the 22 year history of EUEC, this track is one of the most popular, with capacity attendance. Presentations are made by leaders and experts on current regulations that impact the electric utility industry. Updates on upcoming regulations, and discussions from regulatory and industry perspectives. Practical examples and case histories provide senior utility executives and decision makers options and strategies for compliance.
Monday | 3:30PM - 5:30PM
Monday | 1PM - 3PM
TRACk | A | REgULATORY UPDATE
A3. CAA, BACT, NESHAP, NEPAA3.1 CLIMATE CHANGE AND TORT LITIGATION: THE PLAINTIFF’S BAR IS CIRCLINGAaron Flynn, Partner, Hunton Andrews Kurth LLP
A3.2 BATTERY STORAGE AS BACT - ANALYSIS OF EAB PSD PERMIT CHALLENGESMatthew Dobbins, Senior Associate, Vinson & Elkins
A3.3 EMERGING ISSUES IN BACT DETERMINATIONS FOR GHG EMISSIONSAndrew Knudsen, Associate, Hunton Andrews Kurth LLP
A3.4 STATIONARY COMBUSTION TURBINE NESHAP - RISK AND TECHNOLOGY REVIEWLeslie Witherspoon, Manager, Environmental Programs, Solar Turbines Incorporated
A3.5 ENERGY AND UTILITY SECTOR IMPLICATIONS OF NEPA REFORMStacey VanBelleghem, Partner, Latham & Watkins LLP
A3.6 A MODIFIED NEPA PRE-PLANNING APPROACH TO SHORTEN EIS TIMEFRAMESBrian Buck, Vice President, Stantec Consulting
A4. NSR A4.1 NSR REFORM - SHOULD WE EXPECT RMRR RELIEF?Scott Osbourn, Principal, Trinity Consultants
A4.2 NSR REFORM RECENT CHANGESGurinder Saini, Sr. Environmental Engineer, RTP Environmental Associates, Inc.
A4.3 NEW SOURCE REVIEW REFORM (REDUX)Makram Jaber, Partner, Hunton Andrews Kurth LLP
A4.4 THE CONTINUED EVOLUTION OF NSR UNDER THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATIONDavid Jordan, Partner, ERM
A4.5 A DIVE INTO EPA’S SOURCE SPECIFIC ACTIONS: CONTINUITY OR CHANGE?Eric Hiser, Partner, Jorden, Hiser & Joy, PLC
A4.6 RECENT GUIDANCE & PROPOSED CHANGES TO NSR APPLICABILITY DETERMINATIONSMichael Rinkol, Environmental Engineer, Black & Veatch
A5. REGIONAL HAZE & MOREA5.1 LATEST DEVELOPMENTS IN 2ND DECADAL REVIEW FOR THE REGIONAL HAZE RULERobert Paine, Associate Vice President, AECOM; Jeff Connors
A5.2 PLANNING FOR REGIONAL HAZE ROUND 2Ryan Templeton, Environmental Engineer Specialist, Arizona DEQ
A5.3 STRATEGY FOR THE REGIONAL HAZE RULE 2ND PLANNING PERIODJeremy Jewell, Principal Consultant, Trinity Consultants; Christine Chambers, Neelesh Sule
A5.4 REASONABLY DEFINING REASONABLE PROGRESSMegan Berge, Partner, Baker Botts, LLP
A5.5 “ENVISION” IMPROVEMENTS IN SUSTAINABILITYDusty Miller, Environmental Scientist, Black & Veatch
Tuesday | 7:30AM - 9:30AM
Tuesday | 10AM - 12PM
Tuesday | 1:00PM - 3:00PM
11 12 © 2019
2019TRACk | A |REgULATORY UPDATE
A6. ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY & UTILITIESA6.1 IMPROVED REGULATORY RESULTS THROUGH ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITYNicholas Morgan, Project Manager, Kleinschmidt Associates; Kimberly Long
A6.2 A STRATEGIC APPROACH TO CONSERVATION STEWARDSHIPKimberly Long, Environmental Performance Improvement Manager, Exelon Corp.
A6.3 CASE STUDY: HACKING INTO A CULTURE OF INNOVATION, SUSTAINABILITY, AND D6CARBONIZATIONCaitlin Horsley, Sustainability Manager, Portland General Electric
A6.4 UTILIZING PUBLIC-PRIVATE CONSERVATION PARTNERSHIPS TO RECOVER SPECIES AND MAINTAIN OPERATIONAL FLEXIBILITYJoe Drumm, Natural Resources and Stewardship Manager, Southern Company
A6.5 SUSTAINABLE PERFORMANCE AT TVA: CUSTOMER IMPACT AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTMonte Matthews, Sr. Mgr & Deputy Chief Sustainability Offi cer, Tennessee Valley Authority
A6.6 LADWP... ADDRESSING ENERGY-WATER NEXUS AND SUSTAINABLE WATER SUPPLIESDelon Kwan, Manager of Resources Development, L.A.Department of Water & Power
A6.7 PRAIRIES TO POLLINATORS:DAIRYLAND POWER COOPERATIVE’S SEEDS OF CHANGEBrad Foss, Senior Environmental Biologist, Dairyland Power Cooperative
A7. PERMITS & COMPLIANCEA7.1 AIR QUALITY COMPLIANCE LESSONS DURING A UNIVERSITY CHP COMMISSIONINGCo-Chair - Brian Petermann, Senior Project Manager, POWER Engineers, Inc.
A7.2 NEW FOSSIL FUEL-FIRED GENERATION UNITS - FEASIBILITY CONSIDERATIONSThomas Pritcher, Vice President/National Air Quality Service Line Director, ECT
A7.3 NSPS SUBPART TTTT MORE STRINGENT THAN NAAQS - PERMITTING CASE STUDYJeremy Townley, Managing Consultant, Trinity Consultants
Wednesday | 7:30 AM - 9:30 AM
Wednesday | 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM
Tuesday | 3:30 PM - 5:30 PM TRACk | B |CEms & AIR QUALITY
B1. CEMS & PEMSB1.1 SMART SAMPLE HANDLING SYSTEMS FOR CEMS AND PMS (CO-CHAIR/SPONSOR)Philipp Zimmel, Area Sales Manager, JCT Analysentechnik GmbH
B1.2 ULTRA-LOW PPM NH3 & NOX MEASUREMENTS MADE RELIABLY WITH QCLDave McMillen, Business Development Manager, Emerson Automation Soltions; Jesse Underwood, Dr. Paul Miller
B1.3 STACK GAS ANALYSIS BY TUNABLE DIODE LASER (TDL) ANALYSISFrank DeThomas, Vice President Process & Environmental, HORIBA Instruments, Inc.
B1.4 DEVELOPMENT, CERTIFICATION AND OPERATION OF A PEMSRichard Hovan, Director-EIS Business Development, Wunderlich-Malec; Jennifer Fantich
B2. MONITORING, TESTING & INSTRUMENTATIONB2.1 INTRODUCTION OF THE PTR-TOF-MS INTO COMPLIANCE TESTINGPeter Zemek, SVP Emerging Technologies, Montrose Environmental, Inc.
B2.2 RICE & CT UNITS PERFORMANCE TESTING CONSIDERATIONSHolly Hills, Senior Enviornmental Envineering Associate, Sargent & Lundy, Emily Kunkel
B2.3 CEMS: DESIGN, BUILD AND INSTALLATION CONSIDERATIONSLarry LaFrance, AQ/Measurement Section Manager, AECOM, Frank Tringale, Phaneendrra Uppalapati
B2.4 SOURCES OF SO2 ANALYSIS INACCURACY IN LOW-SO2, HIGH-HUMIDITY SAMPLINGCraig Sunada, Vice President, Product Development, Perma Pure, LLC.
B2.5 EPA’S ELECTRONIC REPORTING TOOL (ERT)Kathleen (Katie) Shonk, Quality Manager, Air Quality Services, LLC.
B2.6 ENHANCED MEASUREMENT OF LOW-CONCENTRATION FORMALDEHYDE EMISSIONSKevin Crosby, VP Technical, Montrose Environmental, Inc.
TRACK B ADVISORY BOARD & DESCRIPTIONAn excellent “must attend” training session for experts and operators of CEMs. This Track includes EPA policy and procedures for accurate monitoring, reporting, and auditing of emissions pursuant to Part 75 of the Acid Rain Program and the Clean Air Interstate Rule. Presentations on how to submit monitoring plans, QA/QC tests, and Emissions & Generation Resource Integrated Database (eGRID). Other expert presentations and programs include MATS, egrid, RATA, Appendix D & E, Electronic Monitoring data, QA/QC program for Cylinder gases. AQ and fenceline monitoring, and modeling.
Monday | 3:30PM - 5:30PM
Monday | 1PM - 3PM
13 14 © 2019
2019TRACk | B |CEms & AIR QUALITY
B3. MONITORING, TESTING & INSTRUMENTATIONB3.1 FLOW MONITOR K-FACTOR CALCULATIONSCindy Whitaker, Manager, Air Monitoring & Testing, Environmental Affairs, Louisville Gas & Electric - Kentucky Utilities; Matt Gentry, Airfl ow Sciences
B3.2 ADVANCES IN CONDENSABLE PARTICULATE MATTER MEASUREMENTDavid Elam, Vice President & Project Director, TRC
B3.3 TUNABLE DIODE LASER (TDL) FOR STACK GAS ANALYSISFrank DeThomas, VP Process and Environmental, Horiba Instruments, Inc.
B3.4 A STATE’S DILEMMA - REGULATING NH3 CEMS SYSTEMBarbara Marshik, Global Power & Emissions Market Segment Manager, Servomex
B3.5 IMPACTS OF EPA REGION 6 GUIDANCE ON CMS DOWNTIME & DATA CALCULATIONJP Kleinle, Project Manager, ALL4
B3.6 FACTORS AFFECTING PERFORMANCE OF NAFION DRYERS WITH SO2 AND NOXGene Bohensky, Director, Application/Partner Learning, Perma Pure, LLC.; Craig Sunada
B4. MONITORING, TESTING & SPECTROMETRYB4.1 NEW DEVELOPMENTS IN PROTON TRANSFER REACTION MASS SPECTROMETRY (PTR-MS)Steve LaZar, Business Development Consultant, The RJ Lee Group
B4.2 UTILIZING TUNABLE LASER SPECTROSCOPY (TDLS) FOR NH3 COMPLIANCEGary Cacciatore, Midwest Regional Sales Manager, Cemtek KVB-Enertec
B4.3 LOW LEVEL NOX MONITORING ON FAST START TURBINES AND 7E PERFORMANCESChris Hall, Manufacturing Planning Manager, Thermo Fisher Scientifi c; Joe Vaglio
B4.4 STRATEGIES TO MINIMIZE CEMS DOWNTIMEEric Wiley, Managing Consultant, Trinity Consultant
B4.5 SPECIATED HG EMISSION AS A FUNCTION OF FUEL TYPE AND CONTROL DEVICEJeremy Whorton, Business Development Manager, Thermo Fisher Scientifi c; Jeff Socha
B4.6 TIPS FOR MANAGING A CEMS AND DAHS WITH LIMITED RESOURCESMatt Swanson, District Manager, West, VIM Technologies, Inc.; Brad Blase
B5. MODELING AND SATELLITE DATAB5.1 DISPERSION MODELING FOR STRATEGIC ANALYSIS OF SO2 COMPLIANCEGeorge Schewe, Principal Meteorologist/Consultant, Trinity Consultants
B5.2 BUOYANT LINE SOURCE IMPLEMENTATION ISSUES IN AERMODRichard Hamel, Air Quality Meteorologist, ERM; Milena Borissova, Carlos Szembek
B5.3 ANALYSIS OF UPDATES TO AERMOD’S PRIME AND BPIP DOWNWASH ALGORITHMSJeff Connors, Manager, Air Quality Engineering and Studies, AECOM; Mary Kaplan, Robert Paine, Olga Samani
B5.4 ADVANCED SATELLITE ATMOSPHERIC MONITORING IS NO LONGER PIE IN THE SKYPhilip Father, CEO, Scepter, Inc.
B5.5 MONITORING METHANE EMISSIONS AT THE SOURCE FROM SPACEJean-Francois Gauthier, Director, Business Development, GHGSat; Stephane Germain
B5.6 PRIME2 BUILDING DOWNWASH ENHANCEMENTSSergio Guerra, Senior Environmental Engineer, GHD; Ron Petersen, Petersen Research and Consulting, LLC
Tuesday | 1:00PM - 3:00PM
Tuesday | 7:30AM - 9:30AM
Tuesday | 10AM - 12PM
TRACk | B |CEms & AIR QUALITY
B6. DRONES, DATA MGMNT& MONITORINGB6.1 DRONES, SENSORS USE IN DENIED ENVIRONMENTS AND UTILITIES Bruce Arvizu, Sr. Partner, Airworks Productions; Eric Pacheco
B6.2 AEROCEMS - USING UNMANNED AERIAL VEHICLES (UAV’S) FOR STACK TESTINGGeoffrey Klotz, President, CEMS Experts
B6.3 NEW FLEXIBLE CROSS PLATFORM SOLUTION FOR DAHS & OPERATOR WORKPLACENadezhda Semeniaka, CEO, LLC LOGOSGRUP
B6.4 THE EVOLUTION OF PART 75 - DATA MANAGEMENT AND REPORTINGCo-Chair - Katie Lindblom, Business Development, Trace Environmental Services; David B. Martin
B6.5 APPLICATION OF CEMS: AUTOMATED EMISSIONS REDUCTIONGrace Mitchell, Data Analyst, WattTime
B7. MONITORING & INSTRUMENTATIONB7.1 LASER UPDATE FOR CROSS DUCT AND OPEN PATH MEASUREMENTBernadette Shahin, National Applications Manager, M&C TechGroup North America
B7.2 IMPLEMENTING A SUCCESSFUL START-UP PERFORMANCE TESTING PROGRAMDan Grabowski, Project Director, TRC Environmental Corporation; Anthony Sakellariou
B7.3 ALTERNATIVE PORTABLE SOLUTION FOR REFERENCE METHOD TESTINGDr. Dietmar Doll, Head of Research and Development, MRU Instruments, Inc.
B7.4 SOLID STATE ANALOG METER WITH CYBER-SECURITY PROTECTION IN THE NUCLEAR POWER INDUSTRYDr. Otto Fest, President, OTEK Corp.; Chris Foster
B8. REMOTE SENSING & NH3 MONITORINGB8.1 AIR QUALITY MONITORING SYSTEM FOR CHALLENGING LOCATIONSRoland Zepeck, Sales Director, JCT Analysentechnik GmbH
B8.2 DATA MANAGEMENT FOR EMISSIONS, FENCELINE AND COMMUNITY MONITORINGAndrew Montz, Owner, DR DAS Ltd.
B8.3 ADVANCES AND NEW DIRECTION IN AMMONIA SLIP MONITORING IN CALIFORNIABhaskar Chandan, Supervising Air Quality Engineer, South Coast Air Quality Management District; Dipankar Sarkar
Tuesday | 3:30PM - 5:30PM
Wednesday | 7:30AM - 9:30AM
Wednesday | 10AM - 12PM
15 16 © 2019
2019TRACk | C sO2, NOX, Hg, sCR, CONTROL & OPTImIzATION
C1. SO2, NOX, HG, COMPLIANCEC1.1 NOX CONTROL, AND A LOT MORE, WITH CATALYTIC CERAMIC FILTERSKayla Olson, Senior Process Engineer, Tri-Mer Corporation
C1.2 USE OF HALOGEN ADDITIVES TO INCREASE FUEL FLEXIBILITYJ. Duncan Kish, Sales Account Manager, ADA-ES, Inc.; Alyssa Fuller
C1.3 OPTIMIZING ACI COST-PERFORMANCE WITH ADVANCED PAC PRODUCTS (INV)Martin O’Brien, Applications Engineer, Calgon Carbon; Richard Mimna, Jenalle Brewer, Michael Pealer
C1.4 DITCHING YOUR MAJOR SOURCE MACT REQUIREMENTSKim Alfonsi, Senior Environmental Consultant, Barr Engineering Co.; Tony Widboom
C1.5 REACT® SYSTEM CHEMISTRY FOR MULTI-POLLUTANT CONTROL OF SOX, NOX, HG AND PMRegina Rodriguez, Chief Operating Offi cer, Carbonxt; David Mazyck, Christine Valcarce
C2. EMISSION CONTROL TECH. & STRATEGIESC2.1 A CASE STUDY: ENHANCED SO3 TOLERANT PAC WITHOUT THE USE OF HALOGENSRegina Rodriguez, Chief Operating Offi cer, Carbonxt; David Mazyck, Lindsey Costin
C2.2 NEW TECHNOLOGY IMPROVEMENTS FOR RETROFITS AND SYSTEM UPGRADESSean Dooley, Environmental Solutions, Nol-Tec Systems, Inc.
C2.3 SIMULATIONS OF TRAFFIC EMISSION REDUCTION STRATEGIES: MADRID EPISODERoberto San Jose, Professor, Technical University of Madrid (UPM); Rosa Gonzalez, UCM; Juan Perez, Libia P’erez, UPM
C2.4 MERCURY ADSORPTION TESTS USING ACTIVATED CARBONSSang-Sup Lee, Associate Professor, Chungbuk National University; Tanveer Ahmad, Sinang Choi, Jeong Min Park
This Track provides presentations on Advanced technologies and strategies, for compliance with Mercury, SO2, NOx, CO2, PM and HAPs emission limits at coal-fi red boilers. Includes control strategies and measurement for SCR, DSI, MATS, ACI. CHP, buolding technologies, energy effi ciency and management.
TRACK C ADVISORY BOARD & DESCRIPTION
Monday | 3:30PM - 5:30PM
Monday | 1PM - 3PM
TRACk | C sO2, NOX, Hg, sCR, CONTROL & OPTImIzATION
C3. SO2, NOX, HG CONTROL TECH.C3.1 NEW FINDINGS IN HG CONTROL THROUGH FGD & HYDROCLONE IMPROVEMENTSMark Pastore, VP Technology, EES, Inc.
C3.2 NOVEL TREATMENT SYSTEM FOR MERCURY AND SELENITE REMOVALVladimir Dozortsev, Development Manager Trace Metals, Aqua Metrology Systems, Ltd.
C3.3 TREATING TAIL GASES IN THE ENERGY SECTORScott Bayon, Director of Sales, Anguil Environmental Systems, Inc.
C3.4 APPROACH TO APPLY BATS TO CONTROL MERCURY EMISSION FOR ENERGY UTILIZATIONEun-Song Lee, Student, Yonsei University; Hana Jang, Yong-Chil Seo, Jin-Ho Sung
C3.5 NOX REDUCING CONTROL IN 870MW PC BOILER WHICH HAS OPPOSITE BURNERSYoungjun Ham, Supervisor, Korea South-East Power Co.; Inchan Park, Sooseok Kim
C4. DSI, ACI, ACTIVATED CARBON, SCR & SNCR C4.1 USING MERCURE AND OTHER IMPROVEMENTS TO REDUCE PAC CONSUMPTIONJon Norman, Manager-Sales/Technology, United Conveyor Corp;William Clark, GE Power
C4.2 SODIUM SORBENTS FOR HIGHER EFFICIENCYCo-Chair - Michael Atwell, Sales Dvlpmnt Mngr, Solvay Chemicals, SOLVAir Solutions; Cornelia Cretiu
C4.3 PRE-SCR INJECTION OF HYDRATED LIME FOR PLANT OPERATIONAL BENEFITSEric Fairbairn, Product Manager - Flue Gas Treatment, Mississippi Lime Company
C4.4 EMISSION SOLUTIONS VIA DISPERSION AND DISTRIBUTIONSean Dooley, Environment Solutions, Nol-Tec Systems, Inc.
C4.5 MERCURY CAPTURE IN THE WET SCRUBBER WITH WETJECTTM
Regina Rodriguez, Chief Operating Offi cer, Carbonxt; David Mazyck, Lindsey Costin
C5. CONTROL & OPTIMIZATIONC5.1 SO2, HG, NOX MODULAR PROCESSES FOR ADDRESSING SCRUBBER EMISSIONSBrian Traylor, VP, Sales and Marketing, Semi-Bulk Systems, Inc.; Charles Alack
C5.2 EFFICIENCY/OPTIMIZATION FEEDBACK CONTROL IMPLEMENTATION USING PEMSRichard Hovan, Director, EIS Business Development, Wunderlich-Malec; Mark McKee
C5.3 IMPROVING HG CONTROL WHILE REDUCING PAC INJECTION RATESBrad Radl, Chief Technology Offi cer, Griffi n Open System, LLC
C5.4 ESP PERFORMANCE IMPROVEMENTS BY REDESIGN OF ANTIQUATED COMPONENTSRobert Mastropietro, Sales, Nol-Tec / Lodge-Cottrell; Chris Roglieri
C5.5 BUSINESS INTELLIGENCE AND DATA LITERACY FOR UTILITY PROFESSIONALSDavid Cox, Founder, FirmoGraphs, LLC
Tuesday | 1:00PM - 3:00PM
Tuesday | 7:30AM - 9:30AM
Tuesday | 10AM - 12PM
17 18 © 2019
TRACk | D |POWER GEN & ENERGY SERVICES
D1. ENERGY POLICY & POWER PLANTSD1.1 THE ELECTRIC POWER INDUSTRY: TRANSFORMING THE FUTUREJason Smith, Manager, Environmental Policy and External Affairs, Edison Electric Institute
D1.2 DECARBONIZING POWER GENERATION BY USING HYDROGEN AS A GAS TURBINE FUELMichael Welch, Industry Marketing Manager, Siemens Industrial Turbomachinery Ltd.
D1.3 WHY ENERGY MASTER PLANNING?Kristen Parkhurst, Mechanical Engineer, Black & Veatch
D1.4 UTILITIES SECURITY AND OT CHALLENGES OF TODAY AND TOMORROWCharlie Von Stetten, V.P. National Accounts, Unlimited Technology, Inc.; Oscar Herbosa
D1.5 HRSG DESIGN WITH ONLINE MODE CHANGEOVER CAPABILITYHira Shaukat, I&C Engineer, Engro Fertilizers Ltd.; Bilal Afzal
D2. PLANT PERFORMANCE & MATERIAL HANDLINGD2.1 ADAPTING TO A NEW WORLD: THE CHANGE FROM BASELOAD TO CYCLING OPSUna Nowling, Technology Leader, Fuels and Reliability, Black & Veatch
D2.2 COST AND PERFORMANCE BASELINE FOR FOSSIL ENERGY PLANTS: BIT. COAL/NGAlexander Zoelle, Senior Chemical Engineer, Leidos; Mark Woods, KeyLogic; R.J. James, Travis Shultz, Timothy Fout, USDOE/NETL; Marc Turner, Leidos
D2.3 MANAGING LOGISTICS FOR SCHEDULED OUTAGES IN POWER AND ENERGYAngela Eliacostas, President and Founder, AGT Global Logistics
D2.4 GENERATOR MODEL VALIDATION USING NONTRADITIONAL GENERATOR MSRMNTSTariq Rahman, Principal Engineer, SDG&E; Isaac West, Kamal Garg, Schweitzer Engineering Laboratories; Hassan Ghoudjehbaklou, SDG&E
D2.5 ADVANTAGES OF ANNUAL CRITICAL PUMP FIELD TESTINGKurt Schumann, President, ProPump Services, LLC; Bob Morgenstern
TRACK D ADVISORY BOARD & DESCRIPTION
Monday | 3:30PM - 5:30PM
Monday | 1:00PM - 3:00PM
This Track includes - Transmission & Distribution; Demand and Rates, Energy Policy, Cyber Security, Power Plant converion Technologies, Distributed Generation, Building Technologies, CHP & Grid Stability.
2019TRACk | D |POWER GEN & ENERGY SERVICES
D3. ENERGY AND CYBERSECURITYD3.1 THE NATION’S FIRST CYBER-SECURE UTILITY MICROGRID AT AMERENEmily LeJeune, Microgrid Applications Manager, S&C Electric Company
D3.2 IDENTIFYING AND MITIGATING CYBER RISKTimothy Corbett, Founder and President, Cyber Security Service
D3.3 IGNORANCE IS NO EXCUSE: COMBUSTION SYSTEMS STANDARDS AND CODES 101Dave Baxter, Senior Managing Director - Western US, Relevant Solutions
D3.4 BRIDGING THE DIVIDE BETWEEN OT & IT SECURITY IN THE UTILITIES INDUSTRYAmy Williams, Vice Pres. of Cyber Services, Unlimited Technology, Inc.
D3.5 EFFECTIVE SECURITY AWARENESS TO PROTECT THE POWER GRIDJeffrey Struik, Principal Cyber Security Engineer / Owner, Cyber Strike Solutions, LLC
D3.6 INFORMATION VS INTELLIGENCE-THE HUMAN FACTOR THAT MAKES IT ALL WORKJohn Bryk, Cyber and Physical Threat Intelligence Analyst, DNG-ISAC
D4. T&D, UNDERGROUND UTILITIES/SUBSTATIONSD4.1 SUBSURFACE INVESTIGATION METHODOLOGYJosh Dotson, Energy Division Manager, GPRS
D4.2 LEAK DETECTION 101: THE HISTORY OF NATURAL GAS LEAK DETECTIONBryan Chambers, International Sales Manager, Heath Consultants Incorporated
D4.3 CHALLENGES IN ENVIRONMENTAL PERMITTINGBenjamin Becker, Environmental Compliance Specialist, Black & Veatch
D4.4 HOW EFFICIENT ARE THE BRAZILIAN ELECTRICITY DISTRIBUTION COMPANIES?Sandra Xavier, Professor, Goiano Federal Institute; J.W. Marangon Lima, Federal University of Itajuba; A.L.M. Lopes, University of Minas Gerais
D4.5 MITIGATING IMPACTS TO BIRDS FROM TRANSMISSION LINESTom Hamer, Senior Wildlife Ecologist, Hamer Environmental
D5. ENERGY POLICY, DEMAND & RATESD5.1 INCLUDING CUSTOMER NEEDS IN RATE DESIGNTed Kelly, Principal & Senior Project Manager, Burns & McDonnell
D5.2 IS GREEN THE NEW BLACK... THE RISE AND FALL OF NATURAL GAS?Anthony Cirillo, Senior Project Director, AECOM
D5.3 MANAGERS’ ROADMAP FOR CREATING TRUE INNOVATION IN THE ENERGY INDUSTRYAlex Goryachev, Senior Director, Innovation Strategy & Programs, Corporate Strategic Innovation Group, Cisco Systems
D5.4 THE EFFECT OF ARCTIC BLASTS & GLOBAL WARMING SOLUTIONS ACT ON ISO-NEStephen Slocomb, Principal, Epsilon Associates
D5.5 CLIMATE ACTION AND ADAPTATION FOR THE CITY OF SAN ANTONIOAngela Rodriguez, Director, Climate & Sustainability, CPS Energy; Doug Melnick, City of San Antonio; Danielle Vitoff, Navigant Consulting, Inc.
Tuesday | 7:30AM - 9:30AM
Tuesday | 10:00AM - 12PM
Tuesday | 1PM - 3PM
19 20 © 2019
TRACk | D |POWER GEN & ENERGY SERVICES
D6. PROJECT FINANCE & RISK MANAGEMENTD6.1 APPLICATION OF HAZARD AND OPERABILITY (HAZOP) ANALYSIS IN POWER PLANTSCo-Chair - Daniel Azukas, Project Associate, Sargent & Lundy; Jason Gerol, Ryan Krone
D6.2 BUILDING A SMARTER TOMORROW: RESILIENT BUILDING, RESILIENT GRIDDouglas Kot, Head of Section, Sustainable Buildings and Communities, DNV GL
D6.3 ANALYTICAL RESULT AUTOMATION FOR PROACTIVE RISK MANAGEMENTPaul Banfer, Chief Technology Offi cer/Vice President, EISC
D6.4 A COMPREHENSIVE APPROACH TO RISK MANAGEMENTBrian Payer, Strategic Operation Program Manager, Sphera
D6.5 IMPACT OF SOCIAL MEDIA ON RISK COMMUNICATIONSJoab Ortiz, Public Involvement Manager, Burns and McDonnell; Adam Renz, Pattern Energy
D7. POWER PLANT TECHNOLOGIESD7.1 DEVELOPING BEST PRACTICES FOR LONG-TERM RELIABILITYJohnny Howze, Plant Manager, Georgia Power
D7.2 INTERNET OF THINGS - DEPLOYMENT FOR EXISTING POWER PLANTSHarry Sim, CEO, Cypress Envirosystems
D7.3 HARDWARE UPGRADES FOR OPTIMIZING GT MAINTENANCEMichael Dolan, Chief Engineer, HYTORC Corporation
D7.4 THE BENEFITS OF GAS TURBINES AND ORC FOR DISTRIBUTED POWER GENERATIONMichael Welch, Industry Mktg Mgr, Siemens Industrial; Jeremy Zamzow, Opero Energy
D7.5 REAL TIME MONITORING OF NATURAL GAS COMPOSITION FOR POWER GENERATIONRoberto Bosco, Senior Product Marketing Manager, MKS Instruments, Inc.
D7.6 REDUCE OR ELIMINATE DRY-ICE CLEANING WITH INFRASOUND TECHNOLOGYMichael Ware, President, SCR Solutions, LLC
D8. ENERGY EFFICIENCY & SUSTAINABILITYD8.1 NYS REV - OUR CLEAN ENERGY FUTURELori Lybolt, Utility of Future Team, Consolidated Edison
D8.2 RESILIENCY ANALYSIS OF ENERGY SYSTEMS ADDRESSING ADAPTIVE MANAGEMENTPatricia Gomez, PhD Student, University of Miami
D8.3 STATISTICAL REVIEW OF FOSSIL FUELS CONSUMPTION FOR DIFFERENT SECTORSMahsa Farzaneh, PhD Student, University of North Texas, Arash Shadlaghani, Russell Reid
D8.4 GROWTH BY DESIGN: HOW TO SPARK DIGITAL TRANSFORMATIONPete Sena, CEO & Co-Founder, Digital Surgeons
D8.5 OLD SMOKEY POWER - TRANSFORMING AGING POWER PLANTSPeter Belmonte, Vice President, TRC; Ed Malley, Michael Keller
POSTER - ELECTRICAL ENERGY MANAGEMENT IN HOUSEHOLD REFRIGERATORS AND FREEZERSSeyed Mojtaba Sadrameli, Professor, Tarbiat Modares University; L. Abdolmaleki, A. Pirvaram
Tuesday | 3:30PM- 5:30PM
Wednesday | 7:30AM - 9:30AM
Wednesday | 10AM - 12PM
2019TRACK | E |SOLID WASTE, LANDFILL GAS, BIOFUELS
E1. WASTE TO ENERGY - CASE STUDIESE1.1 GASIFICATION FOR WASTE WATER FACILITIES - PART 1: PROCESS BENEFITSJeffrey Snyder, Sr VP Business Development, Aries Clean Energy; Sara Head, Yorke Eng.
E1.2 GASIFICATION FOR WASTE WATER FACILITIES - PART 2: PERMITTING CASE STUDYSara Head, Principal Scientist, Yorke Engineering, LLC; Jeffrey Snyder, Aries Clean Energy
E1.3 PLASMA GASIFICATION OF WASTE IN THE U.S.: A CASE STUDY ON LARGE-SCALERichard Fish, President and CEO, AlterNRG Corp.
E1.4 FOOD WASTE TO RENEWABLE NATURAL GAS: TECHNICAL AND ECONOMIC OPTIONSMark McDannel, Mgr, Energy Recovery Section, Los Angeles County Sanitation Districts
E1.5 SIOUX FALLS LANDFILL GAS TO POET ETHANOLRachel Kloos, Plant Manager, Poet; Dustin Hansen, Landfi ll Superintendent, City of Sioux Falls, SD
E1.6 RENEWABLE DIESEL - RISK FREE CARBON FOOTPRINT REDUCTIONMatt Leuck, Technical Manager, North America, Neste
E2. BIOGAS, BIOFUELS, BIODIESEL, ALGAEE2.1 CATAWBA COUNTY ECOCOMPLEX, A STUDY OF INDUSTRIAL SYMBIOSIS EMPLOYINGBarry Edwards, Director of Utilities & Engineering, Catawba County
E2.2 BIOMASS TO DIESEL, A NEW WAVE IN RENEWABLE FUELSRoberta (Bobbie) Hurley, Associate Vice President, AECOM
E2.3 ENGINEERED BIOMASS PROJECTS: FINALLY TIME FOR THEIR DAY IN THE SUN?Una Nowling, Technology Leader, Black & Veatch
E2.4 OXYGEN REFORMING OF TAR AND METHANE IN BIOMASS-DERIVED SYNGASDr. Bradley Damstedt, Development Specialist, Praxair; Larry Bool
E2.5 ALGAE - CONVERSATION ABOUT WHAT TO DO NEXTAaron Morrison, President & CEO, Chaoticwaters, Inc.
E2.6 CFD STUDY ON GASIFICATION CHARACTERISTICS OF BIO-OILHang Seok Choi, Professor, Yonsei University; MyungKyu Choi, Jae Gyu Hwang, HoonChae Park
E3. LMOP - LANDFILLS & LANDFILL GASE3.1 CONVERSION OF BIOGAS RENEWABLE TO POWER TO RNG - A VALUE PROPOSITIONJeffrey Pierce, Senior Project Director, SCS Energy / SCS Engineers
E3.2 BANKING 101: FINANCING INNOVATIVE BIOENERGYMax Vernier, Business Unit Leader - Bioenergy Lending, Live Oak Bank
E3.3 COVAP: COGENERATION FOR INDUSTRIAL WASTE WATER EVAPORATIONBen Laurent, Senior Process Engineer, Heartland Water Technology, Inc.
E3.4 ENCAPSULATOR TECHNOLOGY USEFUL FOR ODOR MITIGATION IN LANDFILLSMatthew Frank, Marketing Communications Manager, Hazard Control Technologies, Inc.; Jeff Bonkoski, Ron Lowrey
E3.5 SIOUX FALLS PIPELINE PROJECT - DELIVERING SUCCESSDustin Hansen, Landfi ll Manager, City of Sioux Falls
TRACK E ADVISORY BOARD & DESCRIPTION
Tuesday | 7:30AM - 9:30AM
Monday | 3:30PM - 5:30PM
This track has been changed to Solid Waste & Landfi ll gas including LMOP – Landfi ll gas, Waste to Energy, Biofuels, Remediation, Cement, CNG/LNG, Pipelines
Monday | 1PM - 3PM
21 22 © 2019
TRACK | E |SOLID WASTE, LANDFILL GAS, BIOFUELS
E4. LFG/CNG/LNG, PIPELINES, E4.1 HOW TO MEET RULE 30 AND RUL 21 REQUIREMENTS FOR RENEWABLE NATURAL GASDave Church, VP Operations, Guild Associates, Inc.
E4.2 RNG/CNG IN THE TRANSPORTATION SECTORAxel Schaefer, Managing Director, Greentech Avenue Environmental Services, Inc.
E4.3 RENEWABLE GAS PIPELINES: WHAT REGULATIONS APPLY AND HOW TO OPERATERyan Estabrook, President, Douglas Pipeline Company
E4.4 BIFURCATING A CENTRAL PLANT FOR REDUNDANCY AND RELIABILITYJay Ehrfurth, Director - Power / Industrial, The Boldt Company; Mark Osten
E5. REMEDIATION, RECYCLING & SPECIAL WASTESE5.1 NEW PETROGEL SUPERABSORBENT TECHNOLOGY FOR OIL SPILL RECOVERYT.C. Mike Chung, Professor, Penn State University
E5.2 SELF-PERPETUATING ENVIRONMENTAL CLEANUP SYSTEMPeter Schubert, Director, Indiana University - Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)
E5.3 DEVELOPMENT PROSPECTS OF BUILDING MATERIALS INDUSTRY IN AL QASSIMHadeel Al Fawzan, Teaching Assistant, Qassim University
E5.4 ADAPTING TRADITIONAL NAJDAH ARCHITECTURE TO THE NATURAL ENVIRONMENTNasser Alhemiddi, Professor, King Saud University
E6. LANDFILL MANAGEMENT & COMPLIANCEE6.1 RFS AND LCFS COMPLIANCE CONSIDERATIONS FOR LANDFILL GAS PROJECTSAshley Player, Senior Manager, Weaver
E6.2 AIR PERMITTING PROJECTS AT HIGH SULFUR LANDFILLSWes Younger, Managing Consultant, Trinity Consultants
E6.3 VERIFICATION TESTS WITH EMISSION MEASUREMENTS OF AIR POLLUTANTSDr. Ha-Na Jang, Research Professor, Yonsei University; Yong-Chil Seo, Eun-Song Lee
E6.4 INNOVATION IN LFG GENERATION MODELINGJohn Carlton, Solid Waste Program Lead, HDR
Tuesday | 10AM - 12PM
Tuesday | 3:30PM - 5:30PM
Tuesday | 1PM - 3PM
TRACk | f | RENEWABLE ENERgY
F1. RENEWABLE ENERGYF1.1 ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL ASPECTS OF OPERATING A COMMERCIAL WIND FARMHal Falls, Commercial Manager, Miaoli Wind Company
F1.2 LIFECYCLE OF A RENEWABLE ENERGY PROJECTS DEVELOPMENTRob Bates, Senior Project Scientist, NTH Consultants, Ltd.
F1.3 CON EDISON CASE STUDY: HOW FUEL CELLS SOLVE DEMAND GROWTH CHALLENGESAsim Hussain, VP, Customer Experience, Bloom Energy
F1.4 THE RENEWABLE ENERGY BUSINESS CASE FOR NERC COMPLIANCEMark Rabuano, Dir. of Regulatory Compliance, Grid Subject Matter Experts (GridSME)
F1.5 NEAR-TOTAL DECARBONIZATION:GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE INCLUDE H2, NH3 FUELBill Leighty, Director, The Leighty Foundation
F1.6 FIELD TEST OF A POISON RESISTANT SOUR WATER GAS SHIFT CATALYSTGirish Srinivas, Vice President, TDA Research, Inc.; S. Schwab, S. Gebhard, B. Gebhard
F2. RENEWABLE ENERGY PROJECT DEVELOPMENTF2.1 PREPARING FOR OFFSHORE WIND DEVELOPMENT IN THE U.S.William Stark, Vice President - Environmental Services, leidos
F2.2 DIRECT RENEWABLES OFFERINGS - COMMUNITY AND SOLARDrew Robinson, Manager, Renewables, Evergy (KCP&L / Westar Energy)
F2.3 REGULATIONS SUPPORTING FUEL CELL DEPLOYMENT IN CALIFORNIAClark Crawford, Director, Business Development, FuelCell Energy
F2.4 PROSPECTS OF BIODIESEL USAGE AS AN ALTERNATIVE FUEL WITH LOW EMISSIONHesham Ibrahim, Facutly of Marine Resources, Al-Asmarya Islamic University; Mohamed Abobboud, El-Merghib University
F2.5 SITING SOLAR - ZONING AND ORDINANCE CONSIDERATIONSNikki Payne, Principal Consultant - Impact Assessment & Planning, ERM
Miaoli Wind Company
TRACK F ADVISORY BOARD & DESCRIPTION
Monday | 1PM - 3PM
Monday | 3:30PM - 5:30PM
This Track provides presentations on Renewable Energy technologies and strategies, including, solar, PV, wind, Nuclear, waste-to-energy, biogas, biomass, biodiesel, fi nancing, and development case studies for peak shaving and FIT programs.
23 24 © 2019
2019TRACk | f | RENEWABLE ENERgY
F3. RE SMARTGRID & MICROGRIDF3.1 MICROGRIDS USING ONSITE RENWABLES - RESILIENT SUSTAINABILITYAlden Hathaway, SVP Business Development, Sterling Energy Assets
F3.2 UTILITY-SCALE MICRO-GRIDDarr Hashempour, President / CEO, DH Green Energy, Inc.
F3.3 FLOW BATTERY TECHNOLOGY REVIEWJason Barmann, Electrical Engineer, Burns & McDonnell
F3.4 BEST PRACTICES AT UC SAN DIEGO’S MICROGRID W/ 150 ADVANCED EVCHARGERSByron Washom, Director, Strategic Energy Initiatives, UC San Diego
F3.5 SIZING A SOLAR MICROGRID FOR AN INDIAN VILLAGE USING OPTIMIZATIONLalitha Mahalingam, Analyst, Reconnect Energy; Jaideep Prabhu, University of Cambridge
F3.6 WHAT ROLE WILL DIESEL GENERATOR SETS PLAY IN FUTURE ENERGY SYSTEMS?Iain Meager, Technology Analyst, IDTEchEx
F4. GHG & GREEN PROJECTSF4.1 GAS TURBINE/SOLAR ENERGY HYBRIDS FOR REDUCED CO2 ENERGY PRODUCTIONMichael Welch, Industry Marketing Manager, Siemens Industrial Turbomachinery Ltd.
F4.2 RENEWABLE NATURAL GAS COMMODITY TRACKINGBenjamin Gerber, Executive Director, Midwest Renewable nergy Tracking System (M-RETS)
F4.3 LOW-COST FINANCING & TECHNOLOGY MATCHMAKING FOR GHG REDUCTIONSDerrick Tang, Manager, Bay Area Air Quality Management District
F4.4 GHG AND ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICEMark Hauenstein, Partner, UC Won
F4.5 GROW MARKET SHARE WITH A PROVEN SUSTAINABILITY MESSAGING STRATEGYCarolyn Parrs, CEO, Mind Over Markets
F4.6 ZERO WASTE WEEK AND REDUCING CARBON FOOTPRINT AT NYUDr. Bapanaiah Penugonda, Associate Professor / Group Practice Director, New York University, College of Dentistry; Megha Rao, Yunah Caroline Chun
F5. FUEL CELL MICROGRID & ENERGY STORAGEF5.1 FUEL CELL MICROGRID CASE STUDY: HOW THE CITY OF HARTFORD CREATED AN ELECTRIC POWER SAFE HAVENAsim Hussain, Vice President, Customer Experience, Bloom Energy
F5.2 ENERGY STORAGE AS PART OF DER GROWTH: REGULATORY SNAPSHOTWalker Wright, VP of Policy, ENGIE Storage
F5.3 INCREASING SYSTEM FLEXIBILITY WITH CHP AND ENERGY STORAGEMeegan Kelly, Senior Associate, ICF
F5.4 PERCS: POWERED EMERGENCY RESPONSE CENTERSTed Flanigan, President, EcoMotion
F5.5 GAS TURBINES DRIVING FLEXIBLE MICROGRIDSVivek Khanna, Manager Product Engineering, Solar Turbines
F5.6 THE ELECTRIC GRID AND THE BENEFITS OF MODULAR AND MICROGRID SYSTEMSNathan Goodman, Chief Executive Offi cer, Hamer Environmental
Tuesday | 10AM - 12PM
Tuesday | 1PM - 3PM
Tuesday | 7:30AM - 9:30AMTRACk | f | RENEWABLE ENERgY
F6. PV, SOLAR F6.1 GROUND MOUNT RACK: GREEN IN/GREEN OUT WITH LIFT & SHIFT CAPABILITIESGregg Klang, Vice President of Business Devlpmnt & Strategy, Nuance Energy Group
F6.2 ELECTRIC RATE STRUCTURE REFORM; THE KEY TO UNLOCKING SOLAR POTENTIALSteve Giles, Vice President, Hull & Associates, Inc.
F6.3 SOLAR PV FEASIBILITY STUDY COMP: CLOSED ASH POND VS GREENFIELD SITENeal Kochis, Senior Project Manager, Haley & Aldrich; Steven Putrich, Lee Saunders
F6.4 SOLAR ENERGY ASSESSMENT OF PENN STATE CAMPUSES USING ARCGIS AND ATSVMesude Bayrakci-Boz, Assistant Teaching Professor of Engineering, Penn State Hazleton; Paulo Henrique Soares, Simon Miller
F6.5 PREPARATION OF TIO2 ELECTRON TRANSPORT LAYERS FOR PEROVSKITE SCH. Paul Wang, Professor, National Cheng Kung University; W.A. Chou, J. Wang, P.J. Mo
F6.6 SUSTAINABLE FUEL PRODUCTION BY SUNLIGHTYiou Wang, Postdoctoral Research Assoc., University College London; Junwang Tang
F7. HYDRO, GEOTHERMAL, & RENEWABLESF7.1 MAXIMUM GEOTHERMAL HEAT HARVESTING VIA DOWNHOLE LOOP CIRCULATIONRobert Pilko, Director, Blade Energy Partners
F7.2 THE END OF BIG IRON: HOW WIND AND SOLAR BECAME CHEAPER THAN HYDRORobert McCullough, Principal, McCullough Research; Zachary Campbell, Louis Bengtson, Eric Shierman
F7.3 OPPORTUNITIES FOR GEOTHERMAL RESOURCES IN THE INTEGRATED RESOURCE PLANNING PROCEEDINGJohn Lormon, Partner, Procopio, Cory, Hargreaves & Savitch
F7.4 RAMPING PERFORMANCE OF A GIGAWATT HYDRO COMPLEXRoger Clarke-Johnson, Western Region Manager, American Governor Company
F7.5 DESIGN OF A SUSTAINABLE MICRO HYDRO PLANT IN A CALI, COLOMBIADr. Jose Luis Ramirez, Pontifi cia Universidad Javeriana; Laura Moreno, David Meza, Sebastian Juri
F8. RE, SUSTAINABILITY & GREENF8.1 PROMOTING SUSTAINABLE ENERGY INFRASTRUCTURE ON AN ACADEMIC INST.Jin Jo, Associate Professor, Illinois State University; Matt Aldeman
F8.2 RENEWABLE ENERGY IN THE UTILITY AND TRANSPORT SPACERob Threlkeld, Global Manager-Renewable Energy, GM
F8.3 ARTILITY: AN ARTISTIC ILLUSTRATION OF RENEWABLE ENERGY AND UTILITYNick Hartrich, Outreach Manager, Puget Sound Energy
F8.4 KEY CONSIDERATIONS FOR VOLUNTARY RENEWABLE ENERGY PURCHASING IN THE U.S.Michelle McGinty, Manager, Program Outreach, Center for Resource Solutions / Green-e
F8.5 RENEWABLE ENERGY IS RENEWABLE EFFICIENCYShreepal Dangol, President, Grace Business Solutions
F8.6 ARCHITECTURAL SUSTAINABILITY IN TRADITIONAL HERITAGE VILLAGE BUILDINGSAbdulaziz Alhemiddi, Architect, Saudi Commission for Tourism and National Heritage
F8.7 UNIFORM VERSUS PARTIAL CARBON TAX POLICY IN A SMALL OPEN ECONOMYPresley Wesseh, Jr., Associate Professor, Xiamen University; Juliet Wilson, Southern Medical University, Zazay Dorbor, Tianjin University
Wednesday | 7:30AM - 9:30AM
Wednesday | 10AM - 12PM
Tuesday | 3:30PM - 5:30PM
25 26 © 2019
2019TRACk | g |O&m, DDD & EHs
G1. DECOMMISSIONING OF POWER PLANTSG1.1 HOW TO TRANSFER ENVIRONMENTAL LIABILITIES DURING POWER PLANT CLOSURESRandall Jostes, CEO, Environmental Liability Transfer, Inc.
G1.2 PLANNING DECOMM & DEMOLITION & IN-PLACE RETIREMENT OF POWER PLANTSJeffrey Pope, Manager, Facility Decommissioning & Demolition Svcs, Burns & McDonnell
G1.3 SOLVING NON-LIQUID PCB IMPEDIMENTS TO DECOMMISSIONINGStephen Mitchell, Senior V.P., Weston Solutions, Inc.; Robert Appelt, J.D. Groesbeck
G1.4 FUNDAMENTALS OF DEMOLITION PROJECT MANAGEMENT OF POWER PLANTSTim Barker, D4 Program Director, AECOM
G1.5 DECOMMISSIONING AND THE CHALLENGES WITH SYSTEM AND UTILITY RELOCATIONAndrew Schaaf, Project Manager, APTIM, Inc.; Gene Scott
G1.6 ESTIMATING YOUR D&D PROJECTJoe Vendetti, VP of D&D, Remedial Construction Services LP (RECON)
G2. POWER PLANT O&MG2.1 IMPLEMENTING MOTOR CIRCUIT ANALYSIS DE-ENERGIZED TESTINGWilliam Kruger, Technical & Training Manager, ALL-TEST Pro, LLC
G2.2 OWNER’S ENGINEER, A VALUE ADDED PROPOSITIONRob Shepard, Vice President, IEM Energy Consultants, LLC.
G2.3 MAXIMIZING SITE VALUE AND ULTIMATE FUTURE USE FOR POWER PLANT D&D SITEJeffrey Pope, Manager, Facility Decommissioning & Demolition Svcs, Burns & McDonnell
G2.4 REGAINING LOST MW THROUGH HIGH PRESSURE TURBINE FOAM CLEANINGRobert Betz, Career Engineer, Ameren; Chris Taylor
TRACK G ADVISORY BOARD & DESCRIPTION
Monday | 1PM - 3PM
Monday | 3:30PM - 5:30PM
This Track provides presentations on current technologies and strategies, for decommissioning of power plants, boiler optimization, project fi nance, risk management, EMIS, EHS, Health & Safety, operation and maintenance in the energy industry.
TRACk | g |O&m, DDD & EHs
G3. O&M, OUTAGE MANAGEMENTG3.1 INTEGRATED WATER MANAGEMENT - RETHINKING YOUR PLANT WATER STRATEGYColleen Scholl, Pofessional Services Director Engineering, HDR; Christine Harris
G3.2 DATA ANALYTICS IN PRODUCTION AND HVAC CONTROLDr. Steven Driver, Global Energy Program Manager, Sanofi
G3.3 IMPROVING LOW LOAD OPERATION AND FLEXABILITY WITH IGNITION STABILITYDennis Barlow, Senior Product Manager, General Electric
G3.4 BEST PRACTICES IN OUTAGE MANAGEMENTRob Shepard, Vice President, IEM Energy Consultants, LLC; Jeff Fassett
G3.5 EVALUATION OF AN ALT. TREATMENT FOR BOILER CHEMICAL CLEANING WASTETodd Whiting, VP Operations, Purestream Services; Brad Burns, EPRI
G4. EHS, EMIS & SAFETYG4.1 EHS 3.0: THE NEXT GENERATION OF STANDARDIZED CLOUD-BASED SOLUTIONSJohn Niemoller, President, Perillon Software, Inc.
G4.2 A TECHNOLOGY-DRIVEN, SYSTEMS APPROACH TO MANAGING EHS PROGRAMSNick Steinke, Principal, Compliance Services Manager, Tellevate
G4.3 KEY COMPONENTS FOR A ROBUST REFRIGERANT MANAGEMENT PROGRAMMark Harbin, Senior Consultant, Sphera
G4.4 APPLICATION OF SAFETY INTEGRITY LEVEL (SIL) ANALYSIS IN POWER PLANTSDaniel Azukas, Project Associate, Sargent & Lundy; Ryan Krone, Jason Gerol
G4.5 ENABLING DISTRIBUTED ENVIRONMENTAL COMPLIANCE MANAGEMENTBrent Allred, Program Manager, Northrop Grumman Technology Services
G5. OPERATIONS & OPTIMIZATIONG5.1 A DATA-DRIVEN APPROACH FOR OPERATIONAL EXCELLENCESloane Whiteley, Expert Practioner, North Highland
G5.2 ENERGY SAVINGS AND POWER FACTOR IMPROVEMENT WITH MEDIUM VOLTAGE VFD’SManish Verma, Senior Sales Application Engineer, TMEIC
G5.3 IMPROVING MAINTENANCE, SAFETY AND ROI USING FUEL ADDITIVESDr. Adam Campen, Combustion Engineer, Imerys Performance Minerals; Co-Presenter - Joseph Harris, Business Development Eng., Imerys Performance Materials
G5.4 CREATING VALUE: MANAGED CORPORATE ENVIRONMENTAL COMPLIANCE SERVICESDavid Shotts, Partner, ERM
G5.5 STANDARDIZING RISK-BASED PROJECT MANAGEMENT - RISK ASSESSMENT PROFILERCarlos Mendizabal, President, ARETE Consulting Services, Inc.
Tuersday | 10AM - 12PM
Tuesday | 1PM - 3PM
Tuesday | 7:30AM - 9:30AM
27 28 © 2019
2019TRACk | g |O&m, DDD & EHs
G6. HEALTH & SAFETY G6.1 MANAGING CHANGE - FROM VISION TO REALITYAngela Johnson, Manager, DTE Energy
G6.2 PFAS 101: WHAT ARE THEY? HOW DID THEY GET HERE? WHAT ELSE IS COMING?Ward Swanson, Vice President, Senior Environmental Scientist, Barr Engineering Co.
G6.3 A NEW SEASON - COPING WITH SMOKE FROM WILD FIRE IMPACTS ON OPEATIONSBrian Berndt, Environmental Health and Safety Manager, Calpine
G6.4 SAFETY CONSIDERATIONS WHEN PLANNING FOR PLANT DECOMMISSIONING & DEMJeffrey Pope, Manager, Facility Decommissioning & Demolition Svcs, Burns & McDonnell
G6.5 INDUSTRY 4.0 & EHS: HOW IT AFFECTS UTILITIES & HOW TO PREPAREJames Jensen, Director of Customer Service, Enablon
G6.6 INSULATED BUILDING TECHNOLOGY FOR RE-BUILDING FIRE-RAVAGED HOUSINGRoderick Robinson, Director of Operations, Super Insulated Green Building Technologies, LLC
G7. BUILDING TECHNOLOGIESG7.1 ENERGY RESILIENCE IN THE BROADER BUSINESS ENVIRONMENTBill Kenworthy, Headof Product Strategy, Centrica Business Solutions
G7.2 ESTIMATING BUILDING ENERGY USESteven French, Professor, Georgia Institute of Technology; William Drummond
G7.3 OPTIMIZE ENGINE CHP WITH WASTE HEATRob Emrich, Director, ElectraTherm
G7.4 DIGITAL SOLUTIONS FOR MUNICIPAL SERVICES, VIA AUGMENTED REALITYDimitris Agouridis, CEO, INTUS Group
G7.5 MAKING DUMB BUILDINGS SMARTDavid Roberts, VP of Marketing, Cypress Envirosystems; Harry Sim
G7.6 THE GRID IS GETTING CLEANER-HOW DO CARBON EMISSIONS FOR CHP COMPARE?Shawn Jones, Assistant Director, U.S. Department of Energy CHP Technical Assistance Partnership
G7.7 THERMAL STORAGE & NON-COMBUSTION HEAT ENGINE CHP TRUE SUSTAINABILITYVirgil Perryman, Group CEO, SolChil Trading FZE, UAE, dba Perryman Technologies; Randy Taylor
G7. CHP & ENERGY MANAGEMENT
Wednesday | 7:30AM - 9:30AM
Tuesday | 3:30PM - 5:30PM TRACk | H |ELg, CCR, CCs & fgD
H1. CCR & ELG COMPLIANCE MGMT.H1.1 “LIGHT AT THE END OF THE TUNNEL” - SOUND STRATEGIES FOR CM/CACo-Chair - Steven Putrich, VP - CCR & Industrial Waste Segment Lead, Haley & Aldrich
H1.2 WATER AND ASH COMPLIANCE: WHAT ELSE IS NEW?Jason Eichenberger, CCR Business Unit Manager, Burns & McDonnell
H1.3 CASE STUDY FOR CCR AND ELG COMPLIANCE AT A 4 UNIT 1370 MW STATIONKelly Aita, Sales Engineer, United Conveyor Corporation; Gerald Long
H1.4 CREATIVE SOLUTION FOR PROCESS AND CONTACT WATER STORAGESteve Kiser, Vice President, Wood Environment & Infrastructure Solutions, Inc.
H1.5 ASSESSING CCR DATA QUALITY FROM PLANNING THROUGH USERock Vitale, Technical Dir. - Chemistry/Principal, Environmental Standards; Jennifer Gable
H1.6 RECLAIMING AND RECYCLING COAL FLY ASH FOR BENEFICIAL USEBill Fedorka, Vice President, Engineering & Projects, The SEFA Group
H2. COAL ASH, CCR & FGDH2.1 REGULATORY & POLICY DRIVERS CONTINUE TO IMPACT CCR RESOURCE MARKETSDanny Gray, ExecutiveVP - Government & Environmental Affairs, Charah Solutions, Inc.
H2.2 FROM ASH TO GRASS: DECOMMISSIONING TWO CCR SURFACE IMPOUNDMENTSCedric Ruhl, Associate Engineer, Wood
H2.3 PULSATION DAMPENING OF DENSE SLURRY AND PASTE SYSTEMSTobias Lutz, Product Manager, Putzmeister Solid Pumps GmbH; Uli Freitag
H2.4 THE EFFECTS OF FLY ASH QUALITY ON BRINE ENCAPSULATIONClark Harrison, Director - Business Development, Purestream
H2.5 DEMONSTRATING “NO MIGRATION” ALTERNATIVE PERFORMANCE STANDARD FOR CCRJames Aiken, Vice President, Barr Engineering; Katy Lindstrom, Justin Soberaski
TRACK H ADVISORY BOARD & DESCRIPTION
Monday | 1PM - 3PM
Monday | 3:30PM - 5:30PM
This Track provides presentations on current technologies and strategies concerning CCS, CCR, ELG and coal ash in the energy industry.
29 30 © 2019
2019TRACk | H |ELg, CCR, CCs & fgD
H3. CCR RULEH3.1 COAL COMBUSTIONS RESIDUALS RULE - WHERE DOES A FACILITY GO FROM HERE?Christine Harris, Power Generation Regulatory Compliance Practice Leader, HDR
H3.2 CONCEPTUAL SITE MODEL AND ITS BENEFITS FOR CLOSURE OF CCR UNITSMartin Reif, Waste Facility Containment Practice Leader, Jacobs
H3.3 DEWATERING AND CONTAINMENT OF COAL ASH USING GEOTEXTILE TUBESBryan Hamilton, Market Manager, TenCate Geosynthetics; Tom Stephens, Chris Timpson
H3.4 CASE STUDY - CCR RULE UNSTABLE AREA DEMONSTRATIONSGary Pendergrass, Principal, GeoEngineers, Inc.
H3.5 IMPACTS TO OPERATIONS AND CLOSURES DUE TO CCR RULE REGULATORY CHANGESJason Pokorny, Senior Project Manager, Haley & Aldrich
H3.6 BENCHMARKING THE CCR INDUSTRY - AN UPDATE FOR TOMORROWMark Rokoff, Vice President, AECOM; David Cox, FirmoGraphs
H4. COAL ASH, CCRH4.1 DESIGN CONSIDERATIONS FOR COAL ASH BASIN WATER TREATMENTCharles McCloskey, Market Manager-Power Industry, Evoqua Water Technologies
H4.2 ENVIRONMENTALLY FRIENDLY ASH BENEFICIATION TECHNOLOGYMichael Varner, Director - Business Development, SCB International; Chris Poling
H4.3 GROWING GEOSTRUCTURAL AND STABILIZATION NEEDS FOR ASH POND CLOSUREPaul Schmall, Chief Engineer, Moretrench
H4.4 THE ROLE OF WORK AREA QUANTIFICATION FOR CCR CONSTRUCTION PROGRAMSDale Evans, Senior Director of Technology & Strategy, Remedial Construction Services
H4.5 LEACHING REE FROM COAL FLY ASH USING ORGANIC ACIDSDavid Reed, Senior Scientist, Idaho National Laboratory; Yoshiko Fujita, INL; Jacob Fisher, BYU-Idaho, Dan Park, Yongqin Jiao; Livermore National Laboratory; Margaret Lencka, Andrew Anderko, OLI Systems; Lili Wu, Alexandra Navrotsky, University California-Davis
H4.6 FINDING BALANCE: HOW FUTURE USE GUIDES ASH POND CLOSURE STRATEGIESEric Nelson, Vice President, SCS Engineers
H5. CCS & RARE EARTH ELEMENTSH5.1 POLICY PARITY FOR CARBON CAPTUREHeather Greenley, Program Coordinator, USEA
H5.2 CCUS - UTILIZINE FTIR MEASUREMENT TECHNOLOGY TO CONTROL THE PROCESSESJim Cornish, Sales & Support Manager, Gasmet Technologies
H5.3 REGIONAL ECONOMIC IMPACTS OF CCUSJoshua Stanislowski, Principal Process Engineer, Energy Systems Development, Energy & Environmental Research Center, University of North Dakota; Steven Schlasner, Bruce Folkedahl, Michael Swanson, Melanie Jensen
H5.4 DETERMINATION AND RECOVERY OF RARE EARTHS FROM COALEvan Granite, Research Chemical Engineer, Task Leader, USDOE; Ken Ladwig, Elliot Roth
H5.5 USING AGRICULTURAL WASTES TO RECOVER REE FROM URBAN WASTESDavid Reed, Senior Scientist, Idaho National Laboratory; Vicki Thompson, Yoshiko Fujita, INL; Yongqin Jiao, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory; Jacob Fisher, BYU; Michael Crain-Zamora, University of Iowa, Katherine Scalzone, Montana State University
Tuesday | 10AM - 12PM
Tuesday | 1PM - 3PM
Tuesday | 7:30AM - 9:30AMTRACk | H |ELg, CCR, CCs & fgD
H6. FGD, ELG, CCR & CCSH6.1 NEW MEMBRANE CONFIGURATION SAVES COSTS IN FGD TREATMENT FOR ELG/ZLDJon Liberzon, Vice President, BKT; Jonathan Chen
H6.2 REGULATIONS AND WATER USE: NAVIGATING THE BALANCING ACTKatie Bland, Process Section Manager, Burns and McDonnell; Dan Elliott
H6.3 CONSIDERATIONS FOR CCR MANAGEMENT USING GEOTEXTILE CONTAINERSRandy Wilcox, Technical Sales and Engineering Manager, WaterSolve, LLC; Gregg Lebster, WaterSolve; Bryan Hamilton, Tom Stephens, TenCate Geosynthetics Americas
H6.4 HOW TO MINIMIZE CCR LANDFILL LEACHATE AND CONTACT WATER MANAGEMENTPhil Gearing, Project Manager, SCS Engineers
H6.5 MEETING ZERO LIQUID DISCHARGE THROUGH REUSE AND CONCENTRATE MANAGEMENTKatie McIntyre, Chemical Engineer, EES
H7. COAL ASH , CCR, & CCSWednesday | 7:30AM - 9:30AM
Wednesday | 10AM - 12PM
Tuesday | 3:30PM - 5:30PM
31 32 © 2019
2019TRACk | I |WATER & 316(b)
I1. WASTEWATER, GROUND WATER, REMEDIATION, ELG, FGDI1.1 ULTRAFILTRATION OF FGD WASTEWATER FOR ELG COMPLIANCEKeith Ambrose, Chemical Engineer, Duke Energy
I1.2 COMPLIANCE UNDER THE NEW(ER) ELG RULEPatricia Scroggin, Regional Practice Manager - Energy, Burns & McDonnell
I1.3 GROUNDWATER MANAGEMENT AND REMEDIATION USING SLURRY WALL SYSTEMSDale Evans, Senior Director of Technology & Strategy, Remedial Construction Services; Karin Stewart Harmon
I1.4 MONITORING, PREDICTING, PREVENTING AND CONTROLLING ALGAL BLOOMSLisa Brand, CTO, LG Sonic
I1.5 PROGRESSES AND PERFORMANCES IN DISTILLERY STILLAGE TREATMENTGetachew Gebreeyessus, Lecturer, Kotebe Metropolitan University
I2. 316(b), ELG, FGD, WASTEWATERI2.1 316(B) COMPLIANCE: PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTING ENGINEERING SOLUTIONSDallen Kroger, Engineer, Burns & McDonnell; Christopher Wiggins
I2.2 FGD WASTE WATER TREATMENT - PRETREATMENT + BRINE CONCENTRATIONLanny Weimer, Product Management, Suez Water Technologies and Solutions
I2.3 LESSONS LEARNED IN EXECUTIION OF POWER PLANT WASTEWATER TREATMENT PROJECTSDennis Fink, Water for Power Lead, Jacobs (formerly CH2M); Thomas Higgins, Laura Reid
I2.4 HG, AS AND SE DETERMINATION BY PHOTOCHEMICAL VAPOUR GENERATION - AFSDr. Warren Corns, Research and Technical Suppoprt Manager, PS Analytical, Shaun Lancaster, Eva Krupp, Joerg Feldmann
I2.5 THE WATER-ENERGY NEXUS: PARTNERING WITH DOE/NETLThomas Feeley, Strategic Partnership Manager, National Energy Technology Laboratory
I2.6 REDUCING CORRECTIVE ACTIONS THROUGH MODELINGErnie Stine, Scientist V, APTIM; Vikas Tandon, James Teo
This Track provides presentations on current technologies and strategies, concerning water and wastewater management, including 316 (b), cooling towers, FGD, ZLD, coal ash, and remediation in the energy industry.
TRACK I ADVISORY BOARD & DESCRIPTIONROOm 9
Monday | 1PM - 3PM
Monday | 3:30PM - 5:30PM
TRACk | I |WATER & 316(b)
I3. 316(b), COOLING TOWERI3.1 COOLING TOWER RETROFIT FOR 316(B): CHALLENGES THAT AFFECT COSTAndrew Cerra, Mechanical Engineer, Burns & McDonnell; Christopher Wiggins
I3.2 A STUDY OF 316(B) IMPLEMENTATION AT ALABAMA POWER PLANT BARRYMark Hussey, National Account Manager, Intralox
I3.3 EPA 316(B) IMPACT ON CIRCULATING WATER PUMPS AND MOTORSKurt Schumann, President, ProPump Services, LLC.
I3.4 IMPINGEMENT TECHNOLOGY PERFORMANCE OPTIMIZATION STUDY UNDER BTAKurtis Schlicht, Technical Director, ERM; Bill Stephens
I3.5 THERMAL VARIANCE DEMONSTRATION STUDY ON THE MISSISSIPPI RIVERBrian O’Neill, Senior Aquatic Ecologist, Burns & McDonnell
I4. WATER SUPPLY & SECURITYI4.1 HOW TO ENSURE WATER SUPPLY SECURITYAaron Morrison, President and CEO, Chaoticwaters, Inc.
I4.2 A SUSTAINABLE APPROACH TO IMPLEMENTING DESALINATION FACILITIESTed Schilling, Operations Manager, WHPacifi c
I4.3 SUSTAINABLE ALTERNATIVES TO POWER PLANT MAKE-UP WATER: USING TREATED MUNICIPAL WATERBridget Finnegan, Process Specialist, Veolia
I4.4 WATER RISK MANAGEMENT - FROM RISK TO OPPORTUNITYKrystal Perez, Global Technology Lead - Water for Power, Jacobs; Joe Rozza, Jameson Morrell, Dennis Fink
I4.5 ABQAIQ PLANTS WATER CONSERVATION JOURNEYMohammed Almugahwi, Process Engineer, Saudi Aramco
I5. WASTEWATER & WATER TREATMENT I5.1 PLANT BOWEN LONG-TERM MEMBRANE PERFORMANCE USING UV FOR DECHLORINATIONDennis Bitter, Sales Director, Atlantium Technologies
I5.2 ESTIMATED BIOLOGICAL EFFICACY OF SCREENING TECHNOLOGIES AND SURVIVALChristopher Wiggins, Certifi ed Ecologist, Burns & McDonnell
I5.3 NEW PINCH VALVE TECHNOLOGYJohn Chapman, Nuclear Engineering Director, Continuous Engineering Solutions
ROOm 9
Tuesday | 10AM - 12PM
Tuesday | 1PM - 3PM
Tuesday | 7:30AM - 9:30AM
33 34 © 2019
2019TRACk | I |WATER & 316(b) COOLINg TOWER
I6. 316(b), ELG & WASTEWATERI6.1 UPDATE OF WATER-RELATED ANALYSIS WORK AT NETLEric Grol, Energy Analyst, USDOE/NETL; Marc Turner, Leidos; Eric Lewis, Deloitte
I6.2 316(B) DO’S AND DON’T’SGreg Seegert, Chief Ichthyologist, EA Engineering, Science & Technology
I6.3 PARTNERING WITH BIG INDUSTRY TO REDUCE NUTRIENT POLLUTIONSarah Gilstrap, Senior Environmental Scientist, Burns and McDonnell
I6.4 DETERMINATION OF SELENIUM IN FGD WASTEWATER BY TRIPLE QUAD ICP-MSChaoyang Huang, Senior Chemist, Southern Research Institute; Young Chul Choi
I7. WASTEWATER MANAGEMENT & COMPLIANCEWednesday | 7:30AM - 9:30AM
Tuesday | 3:30PM - 5:30PMTRACk | J | UTILITY FLEET & TRANSPORTATION ELECTRIFICATION
J1. SB350 TRANSPORTATION ELECTRIFICATION J1.1 UPCOMING CALIFORNIA ZEV REGULATIONS FOR HEAVY-DUTY VEHICLESPaul Arneja, Air Resources Engineer, California Air Resources Board (CARB)
J1.2 CLEAN ENERGY PATHWAY EFFORTS IN THE PORT OF LONG BEACHDamon Hannaman, Sr. Advisor, Key Accounts, Southern California Edison
J1.3 ELECTRIC COMPANIES ACCELERATING TRANSPORTATION ELECTRIFICATIONKellen Schefter, Sr. Manager, Sustainable Technology, Edison Electric Institute
J1.4 SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA EDISON: DRIVING TOWARDS CLEANER AIR IN CALIFORNIALaura Renger, Principal Manager, Air & Climate Policy, Southern California Edison
J1.5 BENCHMARKING ELECTRIC UTILITY RESILIENCY AND EXTREME WEATHERMartin Kurtovich, Senior Utilities Commission, California Public Utilities Commission
J2. ADVANCE CLEAN TRUCKS - AFV & ZEV & FLEETSJ2.1 TROPOS ABLE - HOW DOWNSIZING TO AN ECUV CAN SAVE THOUSANDSJeff Esfeld, Director National Fleet Sales & Business Devlpmnt, Tropos Technologies, Inc.
J2.2 VIABILITY OF ELECTRIC VEHICLES IN THE LOGISTIC/TRANSPORTATION INDUSTRYHeidi Rous, Director, ESA; Jeff Caton
J2.3 THE ELECTRIFICATION OF COMMERCIAL TRANSPORTATIONJim Castelaz, Founder and CEO, Motiv Power Systems
J2.4 IN-WHEEL ELECTRIFIED HUBS FOR TRAILERS AND TRUCKSCaleb Lander, Product Manager - Electrifi cation, ConMet
J2.5 MANAGING WITH ELECTRICITYKenneth Williams, Fleet Asset Superintendent, City of Kansas City / Aviation Department
J1.3 CLEAN AND ELECTRIC VEHICLES FOR BAY AREA DISADVANTAGED COMMUNITIESRanyee Chiang, Technology Implementation Offi cer, BAAQMD; Tin Le
vvvvv
The draft program lists papers accepted for presentation in Track J: Transportation Electrifi cation, It includes . Advance Clean Trucks - AFV & ZEV & Fleets, Electric Trucks, Buses, Off-road & Fleet, Advanced Transportation Tech, Fuel Cell, H2, Ultra Clean LD/MD/HD, FLEET, Battery, Storage & Fast Charging Systems, CARB Regs, Incentives & Funding, AB739, FLEET Law, VW Funding, Battery Storage, Net Metering, Grid Management, Residential & Commercial Charging Station Infrastructure,
TRACK J ADVISORY BOARD & DESCRIPTION
Monday | 3:30PM - 5:30PM
Monday | 1PM - 3PM
35 36 © 2019
2019TRACk | J | UTILITY FLEET & TRANSPORTATION ELECTRIFICATION
J3. EV, PHEV, HYBRID, FLEET SUSTAINABILITYJ3.1 PRELIMINARY ROUTING FOR A NATIONAL LABORATORY COMMUTING PROGRAMAmy Moore, Transportation Planning Engineer, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
J3.2 LOCAL GOVERNMENT’S ROLE IN INCREASING EV ADOPTION IN SAN FRANCISCO BAYRebecca Fisher, Staff Specialist, Bay Area Air Quality Management District
J3.3 THE ELECTRIC VEHICLE DISCOVERY CENTRE - EV MARKET TRANSFORMATIONCara Clairman, President and CEO, Plug ‘n Drive; Davorka Cvilkovic
J4. ADVANCED CLEAN TRUCKS & BUSESJ4.1 BRIDGING THE GAP: A RADICAL NEW VISION FOR ELECTRIC TRUCKINGSteve Tice, CTO, Proensis LLC; Tom Bartley
J4.2 CNG HYBRID ELECTRIC SUPER TRUCK DESIGNJames Burns, CSO, Transportation Power, Inc.; Dr. Paul Scott
J5. FLEET O&M SOFTWARE & OFF-ROAD EQUIPJ5.1 PRACTICAL BENEFITS AND LIMITATIONS OF ENERGY STORAGECarl Salas, Founding Principal, Salas O’Brien
J5.2 FUTURE OF ELECTRIC & HYBRID-DRIVE SYSTEMS IN COMMERCIAL & OFF ROAD EQUIP.Marilyn Tarbet, Driector, New Business Development, Power Systems Research
J5.3 FIVE LESSONS FROM A DECADE OF EV FLEET MANAGEMENTMatt Stevens, VP, Electric Vehicles, Geotab
Proensis LLC
J6. ULTRA CLEAN LD/MD/HDJ6.1 A MACROECONOMIC ASSESSMENT OF TRANSPORTATION ELECTRIFICATIONEdward Carr, Senior Research Analyst, Energy and Environmental Research Associates; James Winebrake, Erin Green
J6.2 DATA INSIGHTS: STAYING COMPETITIVE IN A CONNECTED VEHICLE WORLDGary Schmidt, Vice President of Business Solutions, Zonar
J6.3 HIGH EFFICIENCY, LOW EMISSIONS DRIVE MARKET ADOPTION OF THE OP ENGINEJerome Payne , Chief Operating Offi cer, Achates Power
J6.4 RETROFITTING CLASS 2 HYBRID VEHICLES WITH ELECTROCHEMICAL CAPACITORToshihiko Furukawa, Senior Manager / Global Engineering, United Chemi-Con, Inc.
J6.5 NEAR-ZERO ADN ZERO-EMISSION TRUCKS AT THE PORT OF LOS ANGELESTim DeMoss, Air Quality Supervisor, Port of Los Angeles; Jacob Goldberg
J7. UTILITY FLEETJ7.1 CHARGE THE NORTH: CHARACTERIZING ELECTRIC VEHICLE CHARGING PROFILESEric Mallia, General Manager, FleetCarma
J7.2 ELECTRIC FLEETS: MOVING BEYOND PILOTS FOR THE REAL BENEFITSPaul Stith, Director of Strategy & Innovation, Black & Veatch
J7.3 GOVERNMENT VEHICLES - HOW TO AFFORD “GOING GREEN”Bob Crowe, Vice President Sales, Acme Auto Leasing; Joanne Cornier
J7.4 THE ELECTRIFICATION CHECKLIST: MAKING THE RIGHT XEV DECISIONSNatalie Weimer, Marketing Manager, XL - The Fleet Electrifi cation
J7.5 LARGE FLEET ADOPTION OF ELECTRIC PROPULSIONMichael McDonald, Sr. Director of Sustainability & Gov’t Affairs, United Parcel Service (UPS)
J8. CARB REGS, AB739, FLEET LAW, VW FUNDINGJ8.1 VW FUNDING OPPORTUNITIESEric Brown, Air Pollution Specialist, California Air Resources Board (CARB); Patrick Chen
J8.2 DIVIDEND - ACCOUNT PARKING: FEASIBLE & ENFORCEABLE MITIGATIONMichael Bullock, Transportation Committee Chair, Sierra Club, Evolved Wireless, Inc.
J8.3 LEVERAGING LOCAL SUPPORT WITHIN A GLOBAL SUPPLY CHAINWesley Brandon, President, CTEMS, Engineering and Manufacturing Services
J8.4 HYBRID AND ZERO-EMISSION TRUCK AND BUS VOUCHER INCENTIVE PROJECT - HVIPPatrick Chen, Air Pollution Specialist, California Air Resources Board
Tuesday | 7:30AM - 9:30AM
Tuesday | 10AM - 12PM
Tuesday | 1PM - 3PM
TRACk | J | UTILITY FLEET & TRANSPORTATION ELECTRIFICATION
J6. ULTRA CLEAN LD/MD/HDJ6.1 A MACROECONOMIC ASSESSMENT OF TRANSPORTATION ELECTRIFICATIONEdward Carr, Senior Research Analyst, Energy and Environmental Research Associates; James Winebrake, Erin Green
J6.2 DATA INSIGHTS: STAYING COMPETITIVE IN A CONNECTED VEHICLE WORLDGary Schmidt, Vice President of Business Solutions, Zonar
J6.3 HIGH EFFICIENCY, LOW EMISSIONS DRIVE MARKET ADOPTION OF THE OP ENGINEJerome Payne , Chief Operating Offi cer, Achates Power
J6.4 RETROFITTING CLASS 2 HYBRID VEHICLES WITH ELECTROCHEMICAL CAPACITORToshihiko Furukawa, Senior Manager / Global Engineering, United Chemi-Con, Inc.
J6.5 NEAR-ZERO ADN ZERO-EMISSION TRUCKS AT THE PORT OF LOS ANGELESTim DeMoss, Air Quality Supervisor, Port of Los Angeles; Jacob Goldberg
J7. UTILITY FLEETJ7.1 CHARGE THE NORTH: CHARACTERIZING ELECTRIC VEHICLE CHARGING PROFILESEric Mallia, General Manager, FleetCarma
J7.2 ELECTRIC FLEETS: MOVING BEYOND PILOTS FOR THE REAL BENEFITSPaul Stith, Director of Strategy & Innovation, Black & Veatch
J7.3 GOVERNMENT VEHICLES - HOW TO AFFORD “GOING GREEN”Bob Crowe, Vice President Sales, Acme Auto Leasing; Joanne Cornier
J7.4 THE ELECTRIFICATION CHECKLIST: MAKING THE RIGHT XEV DECISIONSNatalie Weimer, Marketing Manager, XL - The Fleet Electrifi cation
J7.5 LARGE FLEET ADOPTION OF ELECTRIC PROPULSIONMichael McDonald, Sr. Director of Sustainability & Gov’t Affairs, United Parcel Service (UPS)
J8. CARB REGS, AB739, FLEET LAW, VW FUNDINGJ8.1 VW FUNDING OPPORTUNITIESEric Brown, Air Pollution Specialist, California Air Resources Board (CARB); Patrick Chen
J8.2 DIVIDEND - ACCOUNT PARKING: FEASIBLE & ENFORCEABLE MITIGATIONMichael Bullock, Transportation Committee Chair, Sierra Club, Evolved Wireless, Inc.
J8.3 LEVERAGING LOCAL SUPPORT WITHIN A GLOBAL SUPPLY CHAINWesley Brandon, President, CTEMS, Engineering and Manufacturing Services
J8.4 HYBRID AND ZERO-EMISSION TRUCK AND BUS VOUCHER INCENTIVE PROJECT - HVIPPatrick Chen, Air Pollution Specialist, California Air Resources Board
Tuesday | 3:30PM - 5:30PM
Wednesday | 7:30AM - 9:30AM
Wednesday | 10AM - 12PM
37 38 © 2019
2019TRACk | k | BATTERY, STORAGE & CHARGING
K1. BATTERY, ENERGY STORAGE SYSTEMSK1.1 BATTERY SELECTION BASED UPON CURRENT CAPACITY RATINGS IS OUTDATEDJeremy Cordray, Director, Original Equipment, NorthStar Battery
K1.2 METHODS TO MEASURE AND IMPROVE BATTERY STORAGE SYSTEMS PERFORMANCEKhalid Rahman, Electrical Engineer, Commonwealth Associates, Inc.
K2. EV CHARGING K2.1 NEW CUSTOMER EXPERIENCE IMPACTS UTILITY EV CHARGING PROGRAM SUCCESSApril Bolduc, President, S Curve Strategies
K2.2 HOW TO STREAMLINE YOUR UTILITY EV CHARGING INSTALLATION PROCESSLuis Alarcon, Co-Founder & Chief Strategy Offi cer, C2 Group
K2.3 FAST DC CHARGING WITH MINIMUM GRID UPGRADEHeesoo Lee, General Manager, Energy Systems, AVM
K2.4 INTEGRATING ELECTRIC VEHICLE CHARGING INTO MICROGRID OPERATIONAzhar Ul Haq, Assistant Professor, National University of Sciences & Technology; Saifullah Awan, Aqib Perwaiz
K2.5 CCS AS THE GLOBAL STANDARD FOR CHARGING BATTERY POWERED EVSOleg Logvinov, Spokesperson, CharlN e.V. NA
K2.6 SAFE CABLE MANAGEMENTPhil Ramos, Jr., Founder and CEO, Philatron Wire and Cable
K3. RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL CHARGING K3.1 PG&E’S PATH TO A UTILITY OWNED CHARGING NETWORKDean Siegrist, Associate Vice President, Black & Veatch; Ben Chung, PG&E, Maryline Daviaud Lewett, Black & Veatch
K3.2 A NEW FUELING NETWORK - CHALLENGES, OPPORTUNITIES AND APPS (INV)Michael Jones, Vice President Sales, NA West, ChargePoint
K3.3 ELECTRIC FLEETS: UNDERSTANDING INFRASTRUCTURE OPTIONS Kim Okafor, Trillium EV Business Line Leader, Trillium
K3.4 A SCALABLE APPROACH TO DEPLOYMENT OF THE EV CHARGING INFRASTRUCTUREOleg Logvinov, CEO, IoTecha
K4. BATTERY, STORAGE & CHARGING SYSTEMSK4.1 THE SLOW FAST CHARGE: WHAT YOU GET IS ALL YOU NEEDScott McCalmont, Principal Engineer, Paired Power, Inc.
K4.2 EV CHARGING AND THE VEHICLE PURCHASE PROCESS: LESSONS LEARNEDBrett Williams, Senior Principal Advisor, EV Programs, Center for Sustainable Energy (CSE)
CharlN e.V. NA
Tuesday | 7:30AM - 9:30AM
Monday | 1PM - 3PM
Monday | 3:30PM - 5:30PM
Tuesday | 10AM - 12PM
TRACk | k | BATTERY, STORAGE & CHARGING
K5. FUEL CELLS, LI-ION, H2, BATTERIES K5.1 ENERGY DIVERSIFICATION & HOW TECHNOLOGY IS CHANGING THE WORLDJulie Furber, Executive Director - Electrifi ed Power, Cummins, Inc.
K5.2 THE CALIFORNIA FUEL CELL REVOLUTIONBill Elrick, Executive Director, California Fuel Cell Partnership
K5.3 FUEL CELL & HYDROGEN - A COMPELLING VALUE PROPOSITION FOR ZERO EMISSIONAlan Mace, Product Development/Market Specialist, Ballard Power Systems, Inc.
K5.4 CARBON NEUTRAL LIQUID FUELS FOR TRANSPORTATION / ENERGY STORAGEMadhav Acharya, T2M Advisor, ARPA-E
K5.5 HYDROGEN FREIGHT IN CALIFORNIA: FUEL CELL TRUCKS IN SAN PEDRO PORTSCory Shumaker, Development Specialist, California Hydrogen Business Council
K6. EV BATTERY, STORAGE & CHARGING K6.1 ENCAPSULATOR TECHNOLOGY FOR BATTERY AND STORAGE SYSTEM PROTECTIONMatthew Frank, Marketing Communications Manager, Hazard Control Technologies; Jeff Bonkoski, Ron Lowrey
K6.2 GETTING AHEAD OF THE EV BOOM WITH INCENTIVIZED SMART-CHARGINGKaren Hsu, Senior Director, Business Development, Utilities, eMotorWerks
K7. EV, BATTERY, MANUFACTURER & SUPPLY CHAINK7.1 REDUCING YOUR CHALLENGES FOR EV INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTPatty DiNapoli, Marketing Director, Cyber Switching
K7.2 ALIGNING INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY STRATEGIES WITH R&D AND COMMERCIAL GOALDaniel Abraham, Vice President, MPEG LA
K7.3 A FAIL-SAFE SOLUTION FOR THE SAFETY OF BATTERIESXiaoXiong Luo, Research Lead, Pyrophobic Systems, Ltd.
K7.4 A CHALLENGE OF RELIABLE CIRCUIT PROTECTION IN AUTOMOTIVE APPLICATIONSLiwu Wang, Director of Business Development, AEM Components (USA), Inc.
K8. CLEAN CITIES EV FLEET CHARGING PROJECTSK8.1 EV CHARGING AND THE VEHICLE PURCHASE PROCESS: LESSONS LEARNED (INV)Kevin Wood, Clean Transportation Specialist, Center for Sustainable Energy (CSE)
K8.2 INNOVATION AND INSIGHT: EXPLORING ROAD CHARGE IN CALIFORNIABrady Tacdol, Project Manager, California Department of Transportation
Monday | 1PM - 3PM Tuesday | 1PM - 3PM
Tuesday | 3:30PM - 5:30PM
Wednesday | 8:00AM - 10:00AM
Wednesday | 10:00AM - 12:00PM
$1,000Your one page company advertisement in the EUEC
Program Guide distributed to 2,000 delegates.
Send your ad to [email protected] by
Your Ad Here
Specifications: 6” x 9.5” (1/4” Bleed) CMYK Color PDF39 40 © 2019
2019USA’s LargestUSA’s Largest
Energy, Utility & Environment ConferenceFebruary 25-27 | San Diego, CA
WARNING TO Exhibitors: Do NOT accept any phone or email sol ici tat ions for Hotels
AM Breaks 9:30 am to 10 amLunches 12 pm to 1 pmPM Breaks 3 pm to 3:30 pmReceptions 5 pm to 7 pm
NETWORk RECEPTIONs
Sun. Setup 12 pm to 6 pmMon. Feb 25 12 pm to 7 pmTues. Feb 26 9 am to 7 pmWed. Feb 27 8 am Tear Down
2-DAY EXHIBIT sHOW HOURs
Exhibitor Prospectus
2-DaY Exhibit Schedule
NetWorKing receptions in Exhibit Aisles
1. 10’ x 8’ exhibit booth, 6’ table, 2 chairs, with carpet
2. Free speaker & exhibitor pass3. Network with 2,000 delegates at
9 receptions held in exhibit hall4. Marketing to mailing list of 100k 5. Pre and post attendee list6. Exhibitor Advertisement in pro-
gram, web, and newsletter7. Ten “VIP” 50% discount passes
EXHIBIT BOOTH PACkAgEWho Attended
EUEC2018 1,345EUEC2017 1,747EUEC2016 1,675EUEC2015 1,937EUEC2014 1,605EUEC2013 1,705EUEC2012 1,830
DelegatesYear 19%Consulting 30%
Energy & Electric Utilities
22%Emissions
Monitoring 14%Renewable
Energy6%
Government & Regulatory
6%Climate Policy
3%Finance /
Legal
1
41 42 © 2019
TE UTILITY FLEET EV LD/MD/HD
WATER, 316(b)Cooling Water, FGD, ELG
ELG, CCR & CCS, FGDCOAL ASH,
O&M, DDDPlant Perfor-
SOLAR, WINDRENEWABLE ENERGY
SOLID WASTE LFG, BIO FUELS
POWER GEN T&D, CHP, CYBER SECURITY
SO2, NOx Hg CONTROL& OPTIMIZATION
CEMS - EMISSION TESTING, MONITORING & MODELING
11BROOM 11ATRACK K 10TRACK J 9TRACK I 8TRACK H 7BTRACK G
REGULATORY UPDATE
7AROOM
1ABTRACK A2TRACK B3TRACK C4TRACK D5ATRACK E 5BTRACK F
EV, CHARGING BATTERY STORAGE
MRUThermo PermaPure
autoliv
558
383381355 367 373 377359357353 387
482480454 466 468 472 476458456440 452 486
363
462
483481455453 467 469 473 477459457441 463
583581553 567 573 577559557541 549547 591 593 595563
687657 659647
582580552 566 568 572 576556540 586562
680 682652 654 668 670 672 676
375
474
475
575
574
674658656642 648640 686 690 692 694662
587
341
356 360 372 376 382 386374
369
358
693
389
488
487 489
588
589
688
554
651 661 671 685683 695645
601
699697
362
677675
385
484
485
585
584
684
673
388
555
558
CoffeeService
Bar
Food Service
CoffeeService
Food Service
FirmoGraphs
AirHygiene
SoftInWay
MKS
M&C
PSA
Clayborn Power
Trace Env
UMD
Missis.Lime
CleanHarbors
TetraTech
BurnsMc
Donnell
Durag
SuperBuildTech
TeledyneAPI
AECOM
ECTAICare
Trinity Consult
-antsHydrolox
HamerEnviro
EurofinsFrontierGlobal
United Conveyor
Albemarle
Carbonxt
ADA-CS ADA-ES
AMP Cherokee
SUPERLOKMontrose Universal
Analyzers
CISCO
UnitedChemi
Con
TMEIC
CEMService
Calgon
AQS
TRC
Black & Veatch
ATERentals
MorseWatchman
Polystar Evoqua
SemiBulk
Regi
stra
tion
Airgas
EnvSupply
CoCementex
ElectroIndust.
Ipet-ronik
Emerson
WunderlichMalec
NAESERMSpheraSoultions
Nexus
enablon
LG Sonic
BVSTMEco-
Systems
WatersolveCharah
NETLFagen
CaliforniaAnalytic
TeledyneML DR DAS Fremont
MercuryReliantCems
Gasmet
APTIM
TechHeaters
RPM
RedBallHoriba
Atlantium
VIM
AlliedPowers
RangerAnalytic
BARREngr
ChaoticWaters
Krishnan
ReNOx
KLEINSCHMIDT
.AirFlow Sc
APEX Inst
ESC Spectrum
STICEMsDekronHorizon
Systems(Logos)
Arete
BoyerTrucks
SolarTurbines Trachte
CMC
GHGSAT
Wood
JCT
LeidosPraxair
HaywardBaker
MoretrenchEES
Perillon EcoPhysics
BowenEngring
AxetrisAG
SNEIBiological
US DOE
OTEK
GreenTech
WellnessConsultantsRECONNuance
AirProF&BCEMs
ExpertsDrones
Networking Food Tables
Networking Food Tables
SCSEngineerQlik
CEMs & Instrumentation
CEMs & Instrumentation
EUEC Meeting Room
WS WS
EXIT
WS
WS
EXIT
WS WS
Entry
WSWS
WSWS
Entry
358 ADA Carbon Solutions360 ADA ES353 Advanced Test Equipment441 AECOM, Inc.462 AI Care555 Air Hygiene693 Air Quality Services376 Airfl ow Sciences587 Airgas687 AirPro Fan & Blower640 Albemarle677 Allied Powers567 AMP Cherokee388 Apex Instruments552 APTIM475 Arete562 Atlantium472 Autoliv459 Axetris AG585 Barr Engineering541 Black & Veatch
574 Bowen Engineering668 Boyer Trucks481 Burns & McDonnell440 Calgon Carbon651 California Analytical Inst.540 Carbonxt, Inc.654 CEM Service Group, Inc.369 Cementex601 CEMS Experts589 Chaoticwaters359 Charah, Inc.568 CiSCO382 Clayborn Lab588 Clean Harbors694 CMC Solutions686 Dekron695 DR DAS LTD576 Durag, Inc.682 Eco Physics466 ECT356 Electro Industries/GaugeTech573 Emerson
553 Enablon563 Environ. Energy Svcs. (EES)363 Environmental Supply Co.474 Environmental Systems (ESC)484 ERM480 Eurofi ns Frontier Global583 Evoqua575 Fagen453 FirmoGraphs697 Fremont Mercury Services645 Gasmet558 GHGSat387 Green Tech467 Hamer Environmental595 Hayward Baker & Moretrench657 Horiba674 Horizon Systems/ LLC LOGOSGRUP566 Hydrolox684 Ipetronik549 JCT468 Kleinschmidt
TE UTILITY FLEET EV LD/MD/HD
WATER, 316(b)Cooling Water, FGD, ELG
ELG, CCR & CCS, FGDCOAL ASH,
O&M, DDDPlant Perfor-
SOLAR, WINDRENEWABLE ENERGY
SOLID WASTE LFG, BIO FUELS
POWER GEN T&D, CHP, CYBER SECURITY
SO2, NOx Hg CONTROL& OPTIMIZATION
CEMS - EMISSION TESTING, MONITORING & MODELING
11BROOM 11ATRACK K 10TRACK J 9TRACK I 8TRACK H 7BTRACK G
REGULATORY UPDATE
7AROOM
1ABTRACK A2TRACK B3TRACK C4TRACK D5ATRACK E 5BTRACK F
EV, CHARGING BATTERY STORAGE
MRUThermo PermaPure
autoliv
558
383381355 367 373 377359357353 387
482480454 466 468 472 476458456440 452 486
363
462
483481455453 467 469 473 477459457441 463
583581553 567 573 577559557541 549547 591 593 595563
687657 659647
582580552 566 568 572 576556540 586562
680 682652 654 668 670 672 676
375
474
475
575
574
674658656642 648640 686 690 692 694662
587
341
356 360 372 376 382 386374
369
358
693
389
488
487 489
588
589
688
554
651 661 671 685683 695645
601
699697
362
677675
385
484
485
585
584
684
673
388
555
558
CoffeeService
Bar
Food Service
CoffeeService
Food Service
FirmoGraphs
AirHygiene
SoftInWay
MKS
M&C
PSA
Clayborn Power
Trace Env
UMD
Missis.Lime
CleanHarbors
TetraTech
BurnsMc
Donnell
Durag
SuperBuildTech
TeledyneAPI
AECOM
ECTAICare
Trinity Consult
-antsHydrolox
HamerEnviro
EurofinsFrontierGlobal
United Conveyor
Albemarle
Carbonxt
ADA-CS ADA-ES
AMP Cherokee
SUPERLOKMontrose Universal
Analyzers
CISCO
UnitedChemi
Con
TMEIC
CEMService
Calgon
AQS
TRC
Black & Veatch
ATERentals
MorseWatchman
Polystar Evoqua
SemiBulk
Regi
stra
tion
Airgas
EnvSupply
CoCementex
ElectroIndust.
Ipet-ronik
Emerson
WunderlichMalec
NAESERMSpheraSoultions
Nexus
enablon
LG Sonic
BVSTMEco-
Systems
WatersolveCharah
NETLFagen
CaliforniaAnalytic
TeledyneML DR DAS Fremont
MercuryReliantCems
Gasmet
APTIM
TechHeaters
RPM
RedBallHoriba
Atlantium
VIM
AlliedPowers
RangerAnalytic
BARREngr
ChaoticWaters
Krishnan
ReNOx
KLEINSCHMIDT
.AirFlow Sc
APEX Inst
ESC Spectrum
STICEMsDekronHorizon
Systems(Logos)
Arete
BoyerTrucks
SolarTurbines Trachte
CMC
GHGSAT
Wood
JCT
LeidosPraxair
HaywardBaker
MoretrenchEES
Perillon EcoPhysics
BowenEngring
AxetrisAG
SNEIBiological
US DOE
OTEK
GreenTech
WellnessConsultantsRECONNuance
AirProF&BCEMs
ExpertsDrones
Networking Food Tables
Networking Food Tables
SCSEngineerQlik
CEMs & Instrumentation
CEMs & Instrumentation
EUEC Meeting Room
WS WS
EXIT
WS
WS
EXIT
WS WS
Entry
WSWS
WSWS
Entry
= SOLD = AVAILABLE = HOLD
553 Enablon563 Environ. Energy Svcs. (EES)363 Environmental Supply Co.474 Environmental Systems (ESC)484 ERM480 Eurofi ns Frontier Global583 Evoqua575 Fagen453 FirmoGraphs697 Fremont Mercury Services645 Gasmet558 GHGSat387 Green Tech467 Hamer Environmental595 Hayward Baker & Moretrench657 Horiba674 Horizon Systems/ LLC LOGOSGRUP566 Hydrolox684 Ipetronik549 JCT468 Kleinschmidt
374 Krishnan & Associates584 Leidos690 M & C Tech Group NA469 Mississippi Lime Co559 MKS Instruments642 Montrose Environmental582 Morse Watchman670 MRU Instruments486 NAES577 NETL477 Nexus373 Nuance675 OTEK482 P S Analytical676 Perillon672 Perma Pure581 Polystar Containment386 Power580 Praxair455 Qlik659 Ranger Analytic375 Recon
661 Red Ball Technical Gas685 Reliant CEM Svcs556 ReNOx487 RPM Solutions483 SCS Engineers456 Semi-Bulk488 SNEI Biological673 Softinway355 Solar Turbines476 Spectrum458 Sphera Solutions688 STI CEMS457 STM Ecosystems372 Suoer Build Tech652 SUPERLOK671 Technical Heaters, Inc.658 Teledyne API683 Teledyne Monitor Labs557 Tetra Tech, Inc.662 Thermo554 TMEIC647 Trace Environmental
357 Trachte LLC452 TRC Companies, Inc.572 Trinity Consultants341 U.S. DOE362 United Chemi-Con591 United Conveyor Corp.648 Universal Analyzers593 University of Maryland656 VIM383 WaterSolve389 Wellness Consultants485 Wood463 Wunderlich-Malec
43 44 © 2019WARNING TO Exhibitors: Do NOT accept any phone or email sol ici tat ions for Hotels
2
RULES:
Application implies that exhibitor will abide by Conference show rules. Please copy this contract for your fi les. Exhibitor hereby assumes entire responsibility and hereby agrees to protect, defend, indemnify and save the San Diego Convention Center, its owners, its operator, EUEC, and each of their respective parents, subsidiaries, affi liates, employees, offi cers, directors, and agents harmless against all claims, losses or damages to persons or property, governmental charges or fi nes and attorney’s fees arising out of or caused by its installation, removal, maintenance, occupancy or use of the exhibition premises or a part thereof, excluding any such liability caused by the sole gross negligence of the Convention Center and its employees and agents. Exhibitor shall obtain and keep in force during the term of the installation and use of the exhibit premises, policies of Comprehensive General Liability Insurance and Contractual Liability Insurance, insuring and specifi cally referring to the Contractual liability set forth in this Exhibit Agreement in an amount not less than $1,000,000 Combined Single Limit for personal injury and property damage. The group agrees to provide a Certifi cate of Insurance evidencing the coverage described above. This Agreement is governed by the laws of the State of Arizona, with exclusive jurisdiction in the courts in Tucson, Pima County, Arizona
CANCELLATION POLICY: Please see www.euec.com for full cancellation and refund policy.
1st choiceSTEP 2. BOOTH CHOICE NUMBER:
STEP 3. CONTACT INFORMATION:
COMPANY NAME: ______________________________________________________________________________________________________
Address: ______________________________________________________________________________________________
City: ______________________________________ State: ________________________ Zip: __________________________
Email: _____________________________________ Phone: _______________________ Fax: __________________________
COMMENT: ___________________________________________________________________________________________
Name: _______________________________________________________________________________________________
Authorized Signature (required): _____________________________________________________ Date: _______________________
EUEC, P. O. Box 66076, Tucson, AZ 85728 | [email protected] | p : 520-615-3535 | f : 602-296-0199| EUEC.COM
STEP 1. SELECT EUEC EXHIBIT BOOTH IN BALLROOM 6
COST
(10’ x 8’) Furnished Exhibit Booth in EUEC $5,000
(20’ x 8’) Double Exhibit & Speak Package $10,000
(20’ x 8’) Silver Booth Package $15,000
EXHIBIT RESERVATION FORM
2019USA’s LargestUSA’s Largest
Energy, Utility & Environment ConferenceFebruary 25-27 | San Diego, CA
[email protected] WWW.EUEC.COME-MAIL TO ONLINE1-602-296-0199FAX TO
STEP 1. SELECT TE-EXPO EXHIBIT BOOTH IN SAILS PAVILION
COST
(10’ x 10’) Furnished Exhibit Booth in TE-EXPO $2,500
(10’ x 20’) Exhibit & Speak + Double Booth in TE-EXPO $5,000
(20’ x 20’) Exhbibit Package in TE-EXPO $10,000
2nd Choice 3rd Choice
EV CHARGING, BATTERY & ELECTRIC FLEETEV CHARGING, BATTERY & ELECTRIC FLEET
TE-EXPO.comTE-EXPO.comTRANSPORTATION ELECTRIFICATION
FEBRUARY 25-26, 2019| SAN DIEGO, CA
RESERVE ON LINE AT:www.euec.com/online-booth-reservation/
Exhibit ReserVation Form
358 ADA Carbon Solutions360 ADA ES353 Advanced Test Equipment441 AECOM, Inc.462 AI Care555 Air Hygiene693 Air Quality Services376 Airflow Sciences587 Airgas687 AirPro Fan & Blower640 Albemarle677 Allied Powers567 AMP Cherokee388 Apex Instruments552 APTIM475 Arete562 Atlantium472 Autoliv459 Axetris AG585 Barr Engineering541 Black & Veatch574 Bowen Engineering668 Boyer Trucks481 Burns & McDonnell440 Calgon Carbon651 California Analytical Inst.540 Carbonxt, Inc.654 CEM Service Group, Inc.369 Cementex601 CEMS Experts589 Chaoticwaters359 Charah, Inc.568 CiSCO382 Clayborn Lab588 Clean Harbors694 CMC Solutions686 Dekron695 DR DAS LTD576 Durag, Inc.682 Eco Physics466 ECT356 Electro Industries/GaugeTech573 Emerson553 Enablon563 Environ. Energy Svcs. (EES)363 Environmental Supply Co.474 Environmental Systems (ESC)484 ERM480 Eurofins Frontier Global583 Evoqua575 Fagen453 FirmoGraphs697 Fremont Mercury Services645 Gasmet558 GHGSat387 Green Tech467 Hamer Environmental595 Hayward Baker & Moretrench657 Horiba674 Horizon Systems/ LLC LOGOSGRUP566 Hydrolox
684 Ipetronik549 JCT468 Kleinschmidt374 Krishnan & Associates584 Leidos690 M & C Tech Group NA469 Mississippi Lime Co559 MKS Instruments642 Montrose Environmental582 Morse Watchman670 MRU Instruments486 NAES577 NETL477 Nexus373 Nuance675 OTEK482 P S Analytical676 Perillon672 Perma Pure581 Polystar Containment386 Power580 Praxair455 Qlik659 Ranger Analytic375 Recon661 Red Ball Technical Gas685 Reliant CEM Svcs556 ReNOx487 RPM Solutions483 SCS Engineers456 Semi-Bulk488 SNEI Biological673 Softinway355 Solar Turbines476 Spectrum458 Sphera Solutions688 STI CEMS457 STM Ecosystems372 Suoer Build Tech652 SUPERLOK671 Technical Heaters, Inc.658 Teledyne API683 Teledyne Monitor Labs557 Tetra Tech, Inc.662 Thermo554 TMEIC647 Trace Environmental357 Trachte LLC452 TRC Companies, Inc.572 Trinity Consultants341 U.S. DOE362 United Chemi-Con591 United Conveyor Corp.648 Universal Analyzers593 University of Maryland656 VIM383 WaterSolve389 Wellness Consultants485 Wood463 Wunderlich-Malec
Exhibiting Companies At Euec 2019
45 46 © 2019
TE-EXPO: Provides Speaking and Exhibit opportunities for suppliers to utility fleets, electric & alternate fuel vehicle manufacturers, battery & charging companies to showcase advanced technologies and strategies for compliance and implementation of SB350.
TE-EXPO is held in the 100,000 sq.ft. Sails Pavilion of the San Diego ConventionCenter, San Diego, California on February 25 and 26, 2019.
TE-EXPO HELD CONCURRENTLY WITH EUEC 2019
WHAT Is sB350: TRANsPORTATION ELECTRIfICATION
WHO sPEAk & EXHIBITs AT TE EXPO?
• SB350: DIRECTS CALIFORNIA REGULATORS (CPUC, ARB, CEC, AQMD) • TO ELECTRIFY BUSES, TRUCKS, FLEET AND OFF-ROAD EQUIPMENT • $1B FUNDED BY INVESTOR OWNED UTILITIES SDG&E, SCE AND PG&E
• utiLitY FLeet suPPLiers• LD/mD/HD FLeet • FLeet DeLiVerY serViCes• eV & aFV manuFaCturers• aFV, CnG, H2 FueL CeLL• eLeCtriC truCk & Buses
• FAST CHARGING & INFRASTRUCTURE• BATTERY, STORAGE & CHARGING• SOLAR & RESIDENTIAL CHARGING• TRANSPORTATION SOFTWARE • METERING & DATALOGGERS• OFF-ROAD EQUIPMENT, FORK-LIFT
EV CHARGING, BATTERY & ELECTRIC FLEETEV CHARGING, BATTERY & ELECTRIC FLEET
TE-EXPO.comTE-EXPO.comTRANSPORTATION ELECTRIFICATION
FEBRUARY 25-26, 2019| SAN DIEGO, CA
TE-EXPO EXHIBITORs & sPEAkERs
Sails Pavilion, San Diego Convention Center
Electric Truck Manufacturers Invited to TE-Expo
Mitsubishi Orange EV Workhorse XL Hybrid Zenith Motors Phoenix Motors
1509 Achates Power1813 Acme Auto Leasing1619 Advanced Battery1615 AEM1610 AI Care 1809 Arnold Fastening1719 ATS Automation1420 Baknor1515 Ballard Power Systems1720 Bender1525 Bonfiglioli USA, Inc.1214 BTC Power1714 C2 Group1321 Cabot Corporation1319 Caliente1320 CA Fuel Cell Partnership1809 CA Hydrogen Business Council1410 CARB - CA Air Resources Board1531 Car-Caonnect NA1708 Cementex1407 Center for Sustainability1409 Clean Cities1307 CleanCar1322 Coulometrics1807 C-TEMS1613 Cummins, Inc.1519 Cyber Switching1220 Dark Field Technologies1520 DH Green Energy1421 Direct Wire & Cable, Inc.1419 Ecotec1521 Elantas PDG, Inc.1422 Eldec1532 Electric Vehicle Infrastructure1226 Element1325 ELKEM Silicones1607 eMotorWerks1609 EV Connect1602 FleetCarma1616 FuelCell Energy1107 GM1432 GPS Insight1815 Hazard Control Technologies1328 HBM, Inc.1326 HeatTek1427 Hesse Mechatronics1425 Howland Technology1428 Huber + Suhner1143 Hula Motors1426 IES1827 JAE Electronics1728 K.S. Terminals, Inc.1726 K2 Energy Solutions, Inc.1727 Keysight Technologies1725 KUBT1526 Lester Electrical
1528 LORD Corporation1627 MAHLE Electric Drives1625 MC Electronics1628 Miltec UV International, LLC1514 Momentive Performance MATs1626 NH Research1113 Nissan1715 NorthStar Battery Company, LLC1315 Nuvation Energy1513 Paired Power, Inc.1125 Perkins Solar1516 Philatron1302 Phoenix Motor1621 Port of Los Angeles1331 Power & Signal Group1527 PRETTL Electric Corp1408 Proensis, LLC1313 Protean Electric1614 Quick Charge Power1402 SDGE1707 SemaConnect1701 Solar Box1332 Spal Automotive1433 STAFL Systems1228 Sundial Energy1431 Tech-Sonic1709 Terzo Power Systems, LLC1102 Tesla Rental1802 Trams International1608 Trans Power1508 Trillium CNG1533 Tritium1308 Tropos1434 TUV SUD1416 United Parcel Service (UPS)1821 United Radio1819 UQM Technologies1825 Valeo1633 Webasto Charging Systems, Inc.1631 Wieland1710 Wildcat Discovery Technologies1502 XL Hybrids1634 Yunsheng USA, Inc.1713 ZERO1632 ZES1507 Zonar Systems
47 48 © 2019
TE-EXPOSAILS PAVILION, SAN DIEGO CONVENTION CENTER
FEBRUARY 25 -26. 2019= Open
ENTRYENTRYENTRY1102
1107
1113
1119
1125
1131
1202
1208 1307
1210 1309
1313
1319
1325
1302
1308
1314
1316
1320
1322
1326
1328
1402
1407
1409
1413
1419
1425
1421
1427
1408
1414
1416
1410
1420
1422
1426
1428
1507
1513
1515
1509
1519
1521
1525
1527
1502 1602
1508
1514
1516
1520
1522
1526
1528
1607
1613
1609
1615
1619
1621
1625
1627
1608
1614
1610
1616
1620
1622
1626
1628
1701
1707
1709
1713
1715
1708
1710
1714
1716
1719
1721
1725
1727
1802
1807
1809
1813
1815
1819
1825
1827
1532
1534
1631
1633
1632
1634
1731
1733
1831
1833
1232
1234
1331
1333
1332
1334
1431
1433
1432
1434
1531
1533
1902
1907
1913
1919
1925
1931
1821
1315
1321
1327
1214
1220
1222
1226
1228
1720
1722
1726
1728
1732
1734
Battery & Charging StationsZEV/HD/MD Trucks & Buses & Fleet
EV Charging Stations & Solar
Alternate Fuel Vehicles, EV and Clean Cars
Micro-grid - Battery Storage
Fuel Cells - Advanced Technologies
FleetCarmaTesla
TransPower
AICare
Solar
Momentive
H2 FuelCell
ArnoldFastening
Trillium
CyberSwitch
QuickCharge Power
HULAMotors
CleanCities
ZONAR
C2
PronesisCSE
XL Hybrid
eMotorWorks
EVConnect
Elantas
NorthStarBattery
ZERO
TroposMotorsClean
CarWellness
Consultants
GM
PhoenixMotorCars
Nuvation Energy
California Fuel Cell
PartnershipEcotec
DirectWire
Howland
Hesse
Tech-Sonic
STAFL Systems
TUV SUD
Tritium
CarConnect
GPSInsight
Huber Lord
Webasto Yun-sheng
ZES
Miltek Keysight Tech
KST JAE
Valeo
UnitedRadio
UQM
C-Tems
Trams
H2 Council
K2
Bender
KUBT
ATS
NHResearch
Weiland
Mahle
MCLester
EVI
IES Bonfiglioli USA, Inc.
PRETTL Electric
Eldec
Baknor
Coulometrics
HeatTek
HBM
Spal Auto
Dark Field Tech
Element
AcmeAuto Leasing
CARB WildCat
Sundial Energy
Power & Signal Group
ELKEM Silicones
Cabot
Caliente
PerkinsSolar
AEMPhilatron
Cummins
AdvancedBattery
Port of Los Angeles
Paired Power
UPS Ballard HazardControlTech
DHGreenEnergy
Achates Power
SemaConnect
Cementex
TerzoPower
ProteanElectric
BTCPower
49 50 © 2019
CONTACTPhone: (520) 615-3535email: [email protected]
1. One Page Advertisement of New Product or Company Announcement In Show Guide – $1,000IA one page PdF color advertisement in the EUEC Program Guide.Email a 6″ x 9.5″ (1/4″ bleed) CMYK color pdf file to [email protected]
The Show Guide is the official, up-to-date information on the EUEC event. One page color Advertisement distributed to 2,000 delegates, is continuously referenced multiple times a day by all attendees. An excellent location for introducing new product or company announcements.
2. Session Sponsor/Cochair - Receive Full Attendee list $500 per session As a Session Sponsor you receive the full contact information of all attendees to your session. The cost is $500. You may also Co-chair the session you are speaking, with your company logo prominently advertised among the leading experts in the industry.
3. Track Sponsor/Advisor - Receive Full Attendee list $1,000 per track As a Track Sponsor you receive the full contact information of all attendees to track. You may aslo serve in the Advisory Board of the Track with your company logo prominently advertised among the leading experts in the industry.
4. Advertisement in ENERGYNews – $500 per issue Leverage the EUEC network to reach 50,000 professionals in the energy utility and environment sector in North America. Place your logo and advertisement on ENERGYNews (linked to your website) announcing your new product, service or just your exhibit and speaking topics!
5. Attendee Lanyard, with Company Logo and information – $3,000 An excellent opportunity to market to every one of the attendees at the sign-in table with logo placement on lanyards of the attendee name badge holders, with your information.
6. Back Packs with Company Brochure & Information Stuffed – $3,000An excellent opportunity to market with your company brochure, and other material, stuffed in EUEC Backpack provided to every one of the 1,500 attendees at the sign-in table. Mail to receive by Feb 23rd.
7. Hotel Key Cards – $5,000Effectively place your business card in every attendee’s pocket. Four-color custom design imprinted on Hotel Key Cards distributed to all attendees staying at official show hotels.
8. Your Cpmany Ad in Flash Drive Conference Proceedings – $5,000 (What’s more important to the conference delegates after the event than the complete conference proceedings? This package allows maximum take-home exposure with your logo on the top of every credit-card type fl ash drive. A full electronic brochure advertisement of your company is included in the fl ash drive.
9. Lunch / Reception Sponsorship – $5,000 each event As a Network Reception sponsor you will have your name and logo in front of 1,500 conference attendees, and on each meal ticket.
10. COFFEE Break Sponsorship – $3,000 each event – As a Network Reception sponsor you will have your name and logo in front of 1,500 conference attendees, and on each meal ticket.
Sponsorship
WarningBeware of unauthorized phone solicitation. EUEC does not make phone calls for hotels.
HOTELS • Walking distance to the Convention Center
• Contact the EUEC Hotels listed below directly, or• Reserve online at
• http://www.euec.com/hotels-info/