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New Education Initiative to Promote Hydrogen-Fueled Transportation
Lehigh Valley, Pa. (Oct. 7, 2008) - The Da Vinci Science Center recently introduced
its hydrogen-fueled vehicle education initiative. The $2.4-million research and
education project will demonstrate hydrogen's capacity as a safe, clean, and effective
transportation fuel - one that can provide for American energy independence and
reduced emissions. It also will promote the benefits of a hydrogen economy and
advancements made toward its development.
The Da Vinci Science Center will
manage the initiative, which is funded largely by the Federal Transit
Administration (FTA). The FTA will use project data to inform its future
efforts throughout the United
States.
The Da Vinci Science Center will
create a state-of-the-art spherical projection exhibit and informative public
programming about hydrogen. The new exhibit sphere is scheduled to open in
December.
The Center also has teamed with Air
Products and Lehigh
Valley Hospital
- Cedar Crest to place hydrogen-powered demonstration buses on their campuses and
a hydrogen fueling station at Air Products. The team members commissioned the
buses and the fueling station today in a two-part news event that began outside
the Da Vinci Science Center and included bus rides to the Air Products fueling
station.
The demonstration buses will serve as
high-profile examples of hydrogen-fueled vehicles operating cleanly and safely
in the greater Lehigh
Valley. Along with their
one-year engagements at Air Products and Lehigh Valley
Hospital - Cedar Crest,
the buses will appear frequently at community events.
"There is a clear need to
develop economic, safe, and environmentally-friendly transportation fuels and
to promote their use," said Robert A. Fox, associate director and director
of education for the Da Vinci Science Center. "The Da Vinci Science Center
is proud to assume a leading role in this vital national dialogue."
The National Research Council and the
National Academy of Engineering has recommended that the federal government
develop and introduce safe and clean fueling systems that use hydrogen as a way
to reduce American dependence on traditional energy sources and combat global
climate change. An FTA objective is to identify potential barriers to adoption
of such technologies - including a lack of public awareness about them.
U.S. Rep. Charles W. Dent presented a
ceremonial bus key to Dr. Frank K. Schweighardt, interim executive director and
chief executive officer of the Da Vinci Science Center, and the vehicles roared
to life when eighth grade students from The Swain School, Allentown, exclaimed "Start the Hydrogen
Buses!"
John McGlade, chairman, president,
and chief executive officer of Air Products, accepted a bus for use on the
company's Trexlertown campus and said, "We greatly appreciate the work of
the Da Vinci Science Center in seeking the funding for the fueling station and
the two hydrogen-powered buses as integral parts of this research and education
program. The opportunity to get hydrogen-powered transportation vehicles out
into any community will go a long way in educating the public about hydrogen
and its capabilities."
Dr. Elliot J. Sussman, president and
chief executive officer, Lehigh
Valley Hospital
and Health Network, said the hydrogen-powered bus is another step in the health
network's continuing efforts to protect the environment.
"We take the footprint we leave
on the Earth very seriously," Sussman said. "That's why we're taking
steps to tread lightly on the environment; steps which include the construction
at Lehigh Valley Hospital - Cedar Crest becoming the first hospital in the
northeast region of the country to achieve LEED certification for 'green'
buildings, and a new recycling initiative at all three of our hospital
campuses. The hydrogen-powered bus is yet another way for us to do our part in
protecting our environment while educating thousands of people each day about
the benefits of hydrogen, a fuel of the future."
ABOUT DA VINCI
SCIENCE CENTER
The Da Vinci Science Center is an independent non-profit
organization that promotes hands-on science learning through inquiry, highlights
vibrant and important career opportunities in science available to every young
person, and encourages all people to be curious and creative. The Center
delivers these opportunities through its dynamic exhibit floor - which features
more than 200 hands-on exhibits - its professional development programs for teachers
- including its signature Da Vinci Teacher Leader Institute program for
elementary teachers - its public programming, and its outreach programs -
including its Visiting Scientist Laboratory (VSL) programs, After-School Laboratory
Programs (ASL), Visiting Classroom programs, and its new Motorola After-School
Program. The Da Vinci Science Center stresses the inquiry method. Utilized by
scientists and recognized as the most effective way to learn, the inquiry
method encourages questioning, experimenting actively, observing, communicating
results, and connecting all knowledge. For more information, click
www.davinci-center.org.
ABOUT AIR PRODUCTS
Air Products (NYSE:APD) serves customers in industrial,
energy, technology and healthcare markets worldwide with a unique portfolio of
atmospheric gases, process and specialty gases, performance materials, and
equipment and services. Founded in 1940, Air Products has built leading
positions in key growth markets such as semiconductor materials, refinery
hydrogen, home healthcare services, natural gas liquefaction, and advanced
coatings and adhesives. The company is recognized for its innovative culture,
operational excellence and commitment to safety and the environment. Air
Products has annual revenues of $10 billion, operations in over 40 countries,
and 22,000 employees around the globe. For more information, visit www.airproducts.com.
ABOUT LEHIGH
VALLEY HOSPITAL
AND HEALTH NETWORK
A premier academic community hospital, Lehigh
Valley Hospital
and Health Network includes three hospital facilities - two in Allentown
and one in Bethlehem, Pa. - and Lehigh Valley Health Services,
providing home health, hospice, pharmaceutical and health management services.
These three hospitals have nearly 1,000 beds, 1,100 physicians on staff, 2,300 registered
nurses, and are the area's largest employer with a workforce of more than
9,500. LVHHN's advanced regional resources include a Level I Trauma Center with
added pediatric qualifications; a regional referral Burn Center for critical
care burn patients; national certification as a Primary Stroke Center; the
largest cancer program in the region and fourth largest in Pennsylvania; the
Regional Heart Center - the second largest heart program in Pennsylvania based
on volume; and an Advanced ICU with tele-intensivists to provide an extra level
of care for critical care patients. One of Pennsylvania's
largest teaching hospitals and a major teaching campus of Penn
State's College of Medicine,
LVHHN is also a regional resource for kidney and pancreas transplants,
perinatal/neonatal care and neurology and complex neurosurgery. All three LVHHN
hospitals are designated national Magnet hospitals for excellence in nursing.
Additional information is available at www.lvh.org.
A "Leapfrog Top Hospital"
This is the first time LVH has made the list, which includes just 41 hospitals nationwide out of 1,285 that responded to the Leapfrog Hospital Quality and Safety Survey.