Business: Blowin’ in the Wind

Posted on October 2008   Page 4 of 6
Text Size: A | A | A
 
 
Penn has developed a comprehensive sustainability plan, and the people implementing it no doubt mean well. But what the university is really buying is bragging rights. When people in the power industry try to explain it, they often use the lake analogy: All the energy — clean or dirty, renewable or not — gets mixed up in one pool, and everybody draws from that when they turn on the tap. If you want to make sure the freshmen dorm is actually powered by wind energy, you’ve got one option: Put up your own turbine on campus, as a few Midwest colleges have.
 
“We know we can’t buy wind energy for our campus directly,” says Dan Garofalo, environmental sustainability coordinator at Penn. “The theory is that this money is channeled to wind-power producers and developers to bridge the gap between market rate and current costs. It’s almost like a charitable investment.”  
 
University sales helped Community Energy get established, but the company kept digging, drilling for customers who might voluntarily pay more in order to “do their part” to help the environment and nudge the U.S. toward energy independence. Community is now working with PECO and a number of other utilities around the country to market renewable energy to customers, asking consumers to sign up to voluntarily pay a premium on their electric bills — as little as $5 extra per month — to theoretically, if not literally, buy wind energy. PECO Wind is one of the more successful voluntary programs in the country, with nearly 40,000 subscribers.
 

 
THE TOP OF Locust Ridge sits nearly 2,000 feet above sea level overlooking the Ringtown Valley, in what was once coal-mining country in Schuylkill County. There’s still some coal to be had here, and with prices rising, they’re mining it again. On the way down the road toward Mahanoy City, you can catch sight of the horizontal scar of a strip mine on the opposite ridge.
 
It’s here, just over 100 miles northwest of Philadelphia, that the two new Spanish big boys in town have come together. The Locust Ridge Wind Farm, owned and operated by Iberdrola, is a snaking two-and-a-half-mile mountaintop trail along which 13 Gamesa turbines spin strongly on a beautiful warm day. At the base of a giant turbine tower, a technician wearing a bright yellow safety harness steps aside to let me into the tower, so I can peer up the nearly 300-foot ladder he’s about to climb to work in the turbine’s nacelle. I didn’t think you could get vertigo from looking up.
 
Philadelphia It List

Philadelphia magazine's Philly Cooks

Join Philadelphia magazine for a unique tasting experience as the city’s top chefs and restaurants compete for Dish of the Year, Best Appetizer, Best Entrée, and Best Dessert.
 
 

The Philadelphia Wine Festival

Join Philadelphia magazine and PA Wine & Spirits Stores at the Lincoln Financial Field and sample hundreds of wines at the most anticipated tasting event of the year.
 
 

Best of Philly 2011 iPhone App

For your iPhone: Keep the city's best restaurants, shops and services at your fingertips! Browse five years of winners including our brand-new 2011 list. Click to download now!
 
 
 
 
 

To view this page, you must be using Internet Explorer 7 or higher. Please visit microsoft.com for more information.