Highlights Leading Utility
Green Power Programs
Source:
GreenBiz.com
WASHINGTON, March 24, 2006 - The U.S.
Department of Energy's (DOE) National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)
released its
annual
ranking of leading utility green power programs.
Using information provided by utilities, NREL develops "Top 10" rankings
of utility programs in the following categories: total sales of
renewable energy to program participants, total number of customer
participants, customer participation rate, and the lowest price premium
charged for a green pricing service using new renewable resources.
Ranked by renewable energy sales, the green power program of Austin
(Texas) Energy is first in the nation, followed by Portland General
Electric, PacifiCorp, Florida Power & Light, and Sacramento (Calif.)
Municipal Utility District.
Ranked by customer participation rates, the top utilities are City of
Palo Alto (Calif.) Utilities, Lenox (Iowa) Municipal Utilities,
Montezuma (Iowa) Municipal Light & Power, Holy Cross Energy (Colo.), and
Sacramento Municipal Utility District.
"Utility green power sales continue to show strong growth across the
country," said Lori Bird, senior energy analyst at NREL. "These
utilities are the national leaders."
Customer choice programs are proving to be a powerful stimulus for
growth in renewable energy supply. In 2005, total utility green power
sales reached 2.7 billion kilowatt-hours (kWh), a 36% increase over
2004. And an estimated 430,000 customers are participating in utility
programs nationwide, up 20% from 2004.
Utility green pricing programs are one segment of a larger green power
marketing industry that counts many government agencies, colleges and
universities, and Fortune 500 companies among its customers, and helps
support more than 2,200 MW of renewable electricity generation capacity.
NREL analysts attribute the success of many programs to persistence in
marketing and creative marketing strategies, including in some cases,
utility partnerships with independent green power marketers. In
addition, the rate premium that customers pay for green power has
dropped as fossil fuel prices have increased. "Higher prices for
conventional energy sources are focusing greater consumer attention on
renewable energy options," said Blair Swezey, NREL principal policy
advisor.
NREL's Energy Analysis Office performs analyses of green power market
trends and is funded by DOE's Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable
Energy.
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