WH board provides input to state energy commissioner
Posted on March 25, 2011
Rockford, Minn. (March 25, 2011) — Bill Grant, deputy commissioner of
commerce for Gov. Mark Dayton, spoke on behalf of the Minnesota Office of
Energy Security at the Wright-Hennepin Cooperative Electric Association (WH)
Board of Directors meeting on March 15.
The
Office of Energy Security is a division of the Minnesota Department of Commerce
and has been providing energy information to the state for more than 30 years.
The office oversees the state’s energy conservation mandates as spelled out in
the Next Generation Energy Act (NGEA) of 2007.
Grant
spoke to the board about the challenges and opportunities associated with
energy conservation, and how best to achieve the state’s conservation goals. As
a part of the NGEA, the state of Minnesota
is requiring that all electric utilities provide consumer programs that will
ultimately reduce energy consumption by 1.5 percent per year. The mandate also
requires utilities to spend 1.5 percent of gross revenues on energy
conservation activities.
WH reduced
its total energy usage by more than 6 million kilowatt hours in 2010 – the
equivalent annual energy usage of 500 homes. In addition to this reduction, WH
has also invested in renewable energy alternatives and provides incentives for
customers to purchase energy-efficient appliances. However, WH was required to
spend almost $1 million in 2010 alone to achieve the state’s goals. During the
meeting, WH gave six specific recommendations to Grant to make the program more
affordable while promoting better environmental results.
“It
was a pleasure to have Commissioner Grant speak at our board meeting,” said
Wright-Hennepin (WH) President and CEO Mark Vogt. “There are approximately 200
electric utilities in Minnesota,
and we were gratified that he chose WH as a place to seek input.”
WH is a member-owned
non-profit electric utility that provides electric power to Wright
County and the western part of Hennepin County. The cooperative has been a
corporate citizen in this area since 1937 and currently serves more than 46,000
electric accounts. The utility started its security division in 1989 that provides local home
security solutions as well as monitors alarm systems for more than 50,000
customers in 32 states and three Canadian provinces.