A weekly newsletter from the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) 
<http://www.eere.energy.gov/>Office of Energy Efficiency and 
Renewable Energy (EERE).

March 10, 2004

<#news>News and Events

<#6718>Fifty-Seven Energy Efficiency Leaders Win Energy Star Awards
<#6720>New Mexico Passes Laws to Promote Clean Energy and Hybrid Cars
<#6721>Massachusetts to Build a 500-Kilowatt Solar Power Plant
<#6722>Large Wind Power Plants Planned for Maine and Pennsylvania
<#6723>Indian Tribes and Cities Teaming Up to Deploy Renewable Energy
<#6724>Texas and Iowa Utilities Top NREL's List of Green Power Programs

<#site>Site News

DOE's Distributed Energy Program Generates a New Web Site

<#energy>Energy Connections

EIA Expects Record-High Gasoline Prices in Spring and Summer
Correction on Last Week's Alternative-Fuel Statistics



News and Events

Fifty-Seven Energy Efficiency Leaders Win Energy Star Awards

On March 2nd, DOE and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) 
recognized 57 businesses and organizations as winners of the Energy 
Star Partner of the Year Awards. DOE and EPA sponsor these awards 
each year to recognize energy efficiency investments made by Energy 
Star partners. These investments save energy while also saving 
consumers money and avoiding greenhouse gas emissions. The award 
winners are businesses and organizations that have achieved energy 
efficiency in new homes and consumer products, as well as firms that 
have achieved excellence in energy management and in energy 
efficiency and environmental education.

 
Sylvania's line of compact fluorescent lamps helped the company earn 
an Energy Star Partner of the Year Award.
Credit: Osram Sylvania

Companies that earned special mention from DOE include General 
Electric Consumer Products, a leading manufacturer of Energy Star 
products; Whirlpool Corporation, which manufactured the largest 
number of Energy Star appliances; Osram Sylvania, for producing an 
innovative line of compact fluorescent lamps, 65 percent of which 
qualify for the Energy Star label; Gorell Enterprises, Inc., for 
manufacturing and marketing Energy Star windows; Maytag Corporation, 
for a national campaign to promote its Energy Star appliances; and 
Sears, Roebuck and Company, for boosting its retail sales of Energy 
Star appliances by 30 percent in 2003. See the 
<http://www.energy.gov/engine/content.do?PUBLIC_ID=15142&BT_CODE=PR_PR 
ESSRELEASES&TT_CODE=PRESSRELEASE>DOE and 
<http://yosemite.epa.gov/opa/admpress.nsf/b1ab9f485b098972852562e7004d 
c686/93894b3acdb563c785256e4b00772e28?OpenDocument>EPA press 
releases, and see the Energy Star Web site for a 
<http://www.energystar.gov/index.cfm?c=pt_awards.pt_es_awards_2004>com 
plete list of winners as well as 
<http://www.energystar.gov/index.cfm?c=pt_awards.pt_es_awards>profiles 
of the award winners.

Last year alone, the DOE/EPA Energy Star program helped Americans 
save enough energy to power 20 million homes, while reducing 
greenhouse gas emissions equivalent to that of 18 million cars and 
saving consumers $9 billion. More than 200,000 new homes have earned 
the Energy Star distinction. And on March 1st, the Energy Star 
program set its sights on a new target: county courthouses and office 
buildings. In cooperation with the National Association of Counties, 
the new Energy Star County Courthouse Campaign sets standards by 
which counties can rate the energy performance of their courthouses 
and office buildings and win recognition by EPA for superior energy 
performance. See the 
<http://www.energystar.gov/index.cfm?c=home.index>Energy Star Web 
site.

New Mexico Passes Laws to Promote Clean Energy and Hybrid Cars

New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson signed three energy bills into 
law last week, including a "Renewable Energy Act" that sets minimum 
requirements for renewable energy use by the state's public 
utilities. Governor Richardson also signed a bill for the state to 
invest in hydrogen and other cutting-edge energy sources, and to 
provide "clean energy grants" to state agencies and local 
governments; public schools and other educational institutions; and 
tribal entities. The third bill exempts from excise taxes any 
purchase of a new hybrid-electric car that achieves a fuel economy 
rating of at least 27.5 miles per gallon. See the governor's press 
release 
(<http://www.governor.state.nm.us/2004/news/march/030404_2.pdf>PDF 
131 KB). 
<http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/alternate.html>Download 
Acrobat Reader.

The state's new "Renewable Energy Act" requires public utilities to 
draw on renewable energy resources for 5 percent of the electricity 
they sell starting in 2006, increasing by 1 percent each year until 
2011, when the renewable requirement will hold steady at 10 percent 
of retail sales. The utilities can meet their renewable energy 
requirement using solar, wind, hydropower, geothermal, and select 
biomass energy resources, as well as by using fuel cells powered with 
something other than fossil fuels. However, the law allows the New 
Mexico Public Service Commission to set a "reasonable cost threshold" 
for renewable energy, and allows utilities to fall short of their 
requirements if meeting them would result in exceeding the cost 
threshold. The law also allows the Commission to give utilities extra 
credit for using some types of renewable energy, and allows the 
Commission to reduce the renewable energy requirement for commercial 
and industrial customers. The law codifies rules established by the 
Commission in late 2002. See the New Mexico Legislature Web site for 
the full text of 
<http://legis.state.nm.us/Sessions/04%20Regular/bills/senate/SB0043.ht 
ml>Senate Bill 43, 
<http://legis.state.nm.us/Sessions/04%20Regular/bills/house/HB0251.htm 
l>House Bill 251, and 
<http://legis.state.nm.us/Sessions/04%20Regular/bills/senate/SB0086.ht 
ml>Senate Bill 86, and for background on the Commission's 2002 rules, 
see the 
<http://www.eere.energy.gov/news/news_detail.cfm/news_id=6208>article 
from the January 8th, 2003, edition of this newsletter.

Massachusetts to Build a 500-Kilowatt Solar Power Plant

The largest solar power plant in the northeastern United States is 
slated to be built in Brockton, Massachusetts, with construction 
starting this fall. The Massachusetts Technology Collaborative (MTC) 
announced last week that it will provide $1.04 million to help fund 
the 500-kilowatt solar power installation, with additional funding 
provided by the City of Brockton. The MTC has also pledged to spend 
nearly $650,000 to buy renewable energy certificates from the project 
once it is producing power. The project will be built on a 
"brownfield"-a blighted former industrial site-and will help to 
revitalize downtown Brockton. See the 
<http://www.mtpc.org/NewsandReports/press/pr_03_01_04_brownfields.htm> 
MTC press release.

The MTC has been busy in recent months, providing $2 million for four 
demonstration projects in October 2003 and $32 million for five 
commercial renewable energy projects in November 2003. The 
demonstration projects include a new hydroelectric turbine, a biomass 
gasifier, a biomass pyrolysis project, and an ocean wave energy 
device. The five commercial projects will generate about 100 
megawatts of electricity from wind power, hydroelectric power, and 
power systems fueled with biomass and landfill gas. See the MTC press 
releases from 
<http://www.mtpc.org/NewsandReports/press/pr_10_1_03_energy.htm>Octobe 
r 1st and 
<http://www.mtpc.org/NewsandReports/press/pr_11_13_03_MGPP.htm>Novembe 
r 13th.

Large Wind Power Plants Planned for Maine and Pennsylvania

Three new wind power projects aim to boost wind energy production in 
the eastern United States, including the first large commercial wind 
power facility in the state of Maine. Evergreen Wind Power, LLC and 
the Town of Mars Hill have applied to the Maine Department of 
Environmental Protection to build a 40- to 50-megawatt wind power 
plant in Mars Hill, located near Presque Isle in northern Maine. 
Meanwhile, Generation Resources Holding Company LLC (GRHC) is 
planning to build a 30-megawatt and a 45-megawatt wind power project, 
both in Somerset County, Pennsylvania, about 70 miles southeast of 
Pittsburgh. The larger of the two projects gained momentum on 
February 5th, as FirstEnergy Corporation agreed to buy 20 years of 
power output from the facility, called StonyCreek WindPower. GRHC 
expects StonyCreek to be complete late this year, and the smaller 
facility to be complete by early 2005. See the 
<http://www.evergreenwindpower.com/projects.htm>Evergreen Wind Power 
and <http://www.grhc.biz/pages/901273/index.htm>GRHC Web sites.

Note that the StonyCreek facility will have enough wind turbines to 
generate 64.8 megawatts of power, but GRHC is only building a 
45-megawatt connection to the power grid, since it's rare that all 
the turbines would be generating full power at the same time. For 
this reason, FirstEnergy refers to the facility as a 65-megawatt wind 
plant, but GRHC refers to it as a 45-megawatt wind plant. See the 
<http://www.firstenergycorp.com/engine;jsessionid=EVGXFYPUWK12LSJDUKE4 
3XY?s=com.firstenergycorp.www.Home&o=118528&q=1&p=%2FFirstEnergy+in+th 
e+News%2FIndex%2F02%2F05%2F2004+FirstEnergy+Signs+Long-Term+Renewable+ 
Energy+Agreement>FirstEnergy press release.

Indian Tribes and Cities Teaming Up to Deploy Renewable Energy

 
This 750-kilowatt wind turbine on the Rosebud Sioux Indian 
Reservation may be a sign of things to come.
Credit: NativeEnergy

Organizations representing Indian tribes and U.S. cities announced 
last week that they will team up to promote tribal-owned renewable 
energy projects. More than 150 U.S. cities are working with the 
International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives (ICLEI) to 
reduce their carbon dioxide emissions, and renewable energy projects 
on tribal lands could help those cities meet their pledges. The new 
"Energy Independence Day Campaign" brings together the ICLEI with the 
Intertribal Council on Utility Policies, which represents federally 
recognized Indian tribes in the Dakotas and Nebraska and other tribes 
throughout the West. The Intertribal Council on Utility Policy has 
proposed a collaborative intertribal project for some 3,000 megawatts 
of tribally owned wind power, built on 24 Indian reservations across 
the Great Plains by 2010. The Energy Independence Day Campaign is 
open to any tribe, city or local government willing to commit to 
producing or promoting the purchase of utility-scale renewable 
energy. See the <http://www.nativeenergy.com/news.EIDC.htm>press 
release on the NativeEnergy, LLC Web site.

Interested city and tribal representatives plan to convene during the 
Denver March Pow-Wow in Colorado on March 19th. The 30th Annual 
Denver March Pow-Wow is an intertribal gathering that runs from March 
19th through the 21st. For more information, see the 
<http://www.honorearth.org/ejik/energy/independence.html>Energy 
Independence Day Campaign Web site and the 
<http://www.denvermarchpowwow.org/>Denver March Pow-Wow Web site.

DOE's Tribal Energy Program provides technical and financial 
assistance to tribes to help implement renewable energy installations 
on tribal lands. See the 
<http://www.eere.energy.gov/tribalenergy/>Tribal Energy Program Web 
site.

Texas and Iowa Utilities Top NREL's List of Green Power Programs

Texas' Austin Energy sold the most renewable energy of any utility 
green power program in 2003, according to the latest ranking from 
DOE's National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL). According to 
NREL's "Top 10" list of utility green power programs-also called 
"green pricing" programs-Austin Energy is currently selling 289 
million kilowatt-hours of green power per year, about 50 percent more 
than the second-place finisher, Oregon's Portland General Electric. 
Austin Energy also weighs in with the lowest price premium for its 
green power, which might explain its success.

In terms of the percentage of customers who buy green power, however, 
a small municipal utility in Iowa takes first place. Iowa's Lenox 
Municipal Utilities started its green power program in 2003, but 11.1 
percent of its customers have already signed up. And Xcel Energy, 
which runs a green power program that spans several states, is the 
current leader for total number of customers, with more than 43,000 
participants. Altogether, more than 1.2 billion kilowatt-hours of 
renewable energy were sold through green pricing programs in 2003, a 
30 percent increase from 2002. See the 
<http://www.nrel.gov/news/press/2004/1404_green_pwr_programs.html>NREL 
press release.

Both NREL and DOE's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) have 
been churning out green power reports in recent months. NREL produced 
the sixth edition of its status report on U.S. green power marketing 
in October 2003, and last month, both NREL and LBNL issued reports on 
the effectiveness of utility green pricing programs. See the reports 
under the "Reports & Articles" heading on the 
<http://www.eere.energy.gov/greenpower/home.shtml>Green Power Network 
Web site.



Site News

<http://www.eere.energy.gov/de/>DOE's Distributed Energy Program 
Generates a New Web Site

The Distributed Energy Program, one of 11 energy programs in the DOE 
Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE), has 
generated a new Web site that provides simple, intuitive access to 
information about the program. The Distributed Energy Program 
advances decentralized energy technologies that offer a solution to 
many of the nation's most pressing energy issues, including 
blackouts. The program focuses on a range of distributed energy 
technologies, such as microturbines, as well as integrating the 
technologies into systems for a variety of users. The program's new 
Web site has an updated look and feel to reflect the look of the EERE 
Web site, and provides the latest news from the program. See the 
<http://www.eere.energy.gov/de/>Distributed Energy Program Web site.



Energy Connections

EIA Expects Record-High Gasoline Prices in Spring and Summer

With gasoline prices now near record highs, DOE's Energy Information 
Administration (EIA) anticipates "a high likelihood" of additional 
price increases this spring, peaking at $1.83 per gallon for regular 
gasoline. The EIA's "Short Term Energy Outlook," released yesterday, 
projects that summer gasoline prices will average $1.74 per gallon, 
which will be a record in nominal (non-inflation-adjusted) prices and 
the highest inflation-adjusted prices since 1985. A combination of 
low gasoline inventories, high crude oil prices, and rising demand is 
pushing gasoline prices higher. U.S. petroleum demand grew an 
estimated 1.6 percent in 2003, and is projected to increase another 
1.1 percent in 2004. See the EIA's 
"<http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/steo/pub/contents.html>Short Term 
Energy Outlook."

Correction on Last Week's Alternative-Fuel Statistics

Editor's Note: Last week's newsletter included incorrect information 
about alternative-fuel use in the United States. According to the 
latest compilation of statistics from DOE's Energy Information 
Administration (EIA), the alternative fuels used in 2002 were 
equivalent to more than 378 million gallons of gasoline, and the 
estimated alternative-fuel use for this year will be equal to more 
than 447 million gallons of gasoline. Meanwhile, the use of ethanol 
as a gasoline additive was equivalent to 1.4 billion gallons of 
gasoline in 2002, and is projected to increase to the equivalent of 
more than 2 billion gallons of gasoline this year. The EIA figures 
show a surge in the use of biodiesel, increasing from the equivalent 
of 6.8 million gallons of gasoline in 2000 to the equivalent of 
nearly 17 million gallons of gasoline in 2002, and projected to reach 
the equivalent of about 36.6 million gallons of gasoline this year. 
Total fuel consumption of all types was equivalent to nearly 170 
billion gallons of gasoline in 2002, and is projected to increase to 
more than 177 billion gallons this year. See the EIA's statistics on 
the 
<http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/alternate/page/datatables/afvtable10_03. 
xls>estimated consumption of vehicle fuels in the United States.



This newsletter is funded by DOE's 
<http://www.eere.energy.gov/>Office of Energy Efficiency and 
Renewable Energy (EERE) and is also available on the 
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If you have questions or comments about this newsletter, please 
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>contact the editor, Kevin Eber, at 
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