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For the second year in a row, the energy footprint for Basin Electric’s 2009 annual meeting was derived from renewable energy. Highlighting the start of the annual meeting was John Doggett, senior lecturer at the McCombs School of Business, University of Texas at Austin.
Basin Electric Power Cooperative - November 5, 2009
Bismarck, N.D. – For the second year in a row, the energy footprint for Basin Electric’s 2009 annual meeting was derived from renewable energy. That’s because Basin Electric retired 100 green tags from its inventory equal to the environmental impact of the electricity and natural gas used at the hotel during the three-day meeting.
From Nov. 4-5, about 300 million British Thermal Units of energy from natural gas and about 30,000 kilowatt-hours of electricity were used throughout the Ramkota Hotel in Bismarck.
A green tag represents one megawatt-hour of electricity produced from renewable energy resources. The green tags retired for the annual meeting were produced from Basin Electric’s heat recovery resources.
Highlighting the start of the annual meeting was John Doggett, senior lecturer at the McCombs School of Business, University of Texas at Austin. He believes that a cap-and-trade system for managing carbon dioxide emissions is not feasible. “I am completely opposed to the introduction of a cap-and-trade system in the United States. It simply won’t work,” he said. “There is no way to monitor and audit emissions on a 24-hour basis without creating a police state.”
Doggett said a cap-and-trade system didn’t work in Europe. “Energy prices skyrocketed and many energy intensive businesses in Europe closed their doors,” he said. “What the Europeans somehow didn’t factor into their plan was the fact that these businesses just didn’t die, they were moved to China, India and other countries that were excited to have economic growth and jobs, regardless of the impact these industries had on the environment.”
If China doesn’t commit to reducing carbon emissions, Doggett said there’s nothing we can do in the West that will have much impact on reducing global warming. “Because if you haven’t figured it out by now, there are more Chinese than Americans and Europeans combined. And their economy is growing at a rapid rate while ours are stagnant at best.”
Doggett said that technologies can be and are being developed to capture carbon emissions. “We must develop new technologies that will allow the economies of the world to grow so that more and more people can have jobs that will raise them out of poverty while at the same time reducing the negative impact that we have on the environment,” he said.
Doggett said scientists all over the world are developing new technologies that turn pond scum (algae) into oil, ocean waves and the tides into electricity, and the temperature differential between the surface and depths of the ocean and the earth into a constant source of carbon-free energy.
“My message is simple,” Doggett said. “Politicians must not be allowed to wreck our economy just because they don’t have faith in the creative abilities of Americans,” he said. “Let me be clear. Government does have a role in this. That role is to provide tax credits and research grants that speed the process of innovation. I believe in the carrot, not the stick. I believe in America’s creative genius, not in a government-mandated cap-and-trade dictatorship.”
Three directors were re-elected to three-year terms at the annual meeting: Kermit Pearson, representing District 1 – East River Electric Power Cooperative, Madison, S.D.; Cliff Gjellstad, representing District 3 – Central Power Electric Cooperative, Minot, N.D.; and Dean McCabe, representing District 8 – Upper Missouri G&T, Sidney, Mont.
For more highlights from Basin Electric’s annual meeting – photos, videos, speech excerpts and more – visit the Web site at www.basinelectric.com.
Basin Electric is a consumer-owned, regional cooperative headquartered in Bismarck, N.D. It generates and transmits electricity to 136 member rural electric systems in nine states: Colorado, Iowa, Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wyoming. These member systems distribute electricity to about 2.8 million consumers.
Basin Electric’s generating resources include: two coal-based power plants in North Dakota – the Antelope Valley Station, Beulah, and the Leland Olds Station, Stanton; a coal-based power plant in Wyoming – the Laramie River Station, Wheatland; three peaking stations – the Spirit Mound Station, Vermillion, S.D.; the Groton Generation Station Groton, S.D., and the Wisdom Unit 2 Station, Spencer, Iowa; nine combustion-turbine generators (natural gas) in the Gillette, Wyo., area; four wind turbines – two near Minot, N.D., and two near Chamberlain, S.D.; and 80 wind turbines near Minot, N.D. (2010). Basin Electric is also the sole purchaser of electricity from sources operated by others including: six baseload waste-heat stations owned and operated by Ormat Technologies Inc. along the Northern Border Pipeline; the output of three wind farms owned and operated by NextEra Energy Resources, Juno Beach, Fla. (These wind farms are located near Wilton and Edgeley/Kulm, N.D.; the other is near Highmore, S.D.) Basin Electric has purchase power agreements of varying capacities from the Neal IV Station (coal-based), Sioux City, Iowa, operated by MidAmerican Energy; the Walter Scott Station (coal-based) units 3 and 4, Council Bluffs, Iowa, operated by MidAmerican Energy; the Wisdom Station (coal based), Spencer, Iowa, operated by Corn Belt Power Cooperative; peaking stations located in Spencer, Estherville, Pocahontas, and Webster City, Iowa; the Duane Arnold Energy Center (nuclear), Cedar Rapids, Iowa, operated by NextEra Energy Resources; the Municipal Energy Agency of Nebraska; and three Iowa wind farms – near Superior/Lakota, operated by Iowa Lakes Electric Cooperative; in Hancock County operated by NextEra Energy Resources and in Palo Alto County operated by Crosswind Energy, LLC. For more information, go to www.basinelectric.com.