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Eugene Water & Electric Board

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Eugene Water & Electric Board
Company typePublic utility
IndustryElectricity, Water
Founded1911
HeadquartersEugene, Oregon, United States
Number of employees
500+
Websitewww.eweb.org

The Eugene Water & Electric Board (EWEB) is Oregon's largest customer-owned utility. Founded in 1911, it provides electricity and water to more than 86,000 customers in or around Eugene, Oregon.

Chartered by the City of Eugene, a five-member Board of Commissioners is elected by the citizens of Eugene and governs the utility.[1] Four commissioners are elected by their respective geographic wards; a fifth commissioner is at-large and elected by all of Eugene's voters. This board retains full control and sets policies for the water and electric utilities.[1]

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Transcription

Electric resource portfolio

More than 95 percent of the electricity EWEB serves its customers comes from hydropower, wind and other sources that do not generate carbon-based emissions that are linked to global warming.[2]

Most of this electricity comes from the federal Bonneville Power Administration and from EWEB's own hydroelectric projects.[3] EWEB was the first public utility in Oregon to own a wind farm, and the utility has contracts to purchase a substantial amount of wind and geothermal power generated in the Northwest.[2]

Power projects

Hydro Wind Steam Co-generation
Carmen-Smith Hydroelectric Project Foote Creek Rim Wind Project EWEB/International Paper Steam Co-generation Plant
Smith Creek Hydroelectric Project Harvest Wind Wauna Steam Co-Generation Project
Leaburg-Walterville Hydroelectric Project
Stone Creek Hydroelectric Project

Electric resource plan

EWEB’s Integrated Electric Resource Plan guides future resource decisions.[4] Developed with the help of citizens, it prioritizes a continually aggressive energy conservation effort and the acquisition of renewable power to meet increased demand that such effort cannot offset.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Eugene Water & Electric Board Bylaws".
  2. ^ a b "EWEB: Power Supply". Archived from the original on 2009-10-22. Retrieved 2009-11-02.
  3. ^ "EWEB: Where Your Power Comes From".
  4. ^ "EWEB Integrated Electric Resource Strategy 2006 Implementation Plan" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-06-16. Retrieved 2009-11-02.
This page was last edited on 7 April 2024, at 06:46
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