A road map for the Great Plains Region's long-term energy future, which was formulated with input from leaders of industry, agriculture, state and provincial governments and environmental groups in Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota and Manitoba, is being released June 6 by the non-profit Great Plains Institute's Powering the Plains (PTP) program.
The road map offers three key messages:
"We are thankful for the opportunity to have participated with the various stakeholders in discussing these important issues facing our industry, customers and the environment," said Brian Zelenak, manager of regulatory administration for Xcel Energy. "Consistent with the principles of the road map, Xcel Energy is committed to voluntarily reducing our impact on the environment. We are the nation's No. 1 wind power provider, are strongly committed to reducing energy use through conservation programs, are at the midpoint of one of the nation's most aggressive voluntary emissions reduction projects and are researching new technologies including clean coal technology with carbon sequestration – all components of this road map."
The road map lays out objectives, milestones and strategies for preparing this region to flourish in a world increasingly worried about global warming. It provides a menu of policy options and shows the benefits that can be achieved through significant new investment in energy efficiency, wind, advanced coal with carbon capture and storage, biomass, hydro power, and hydrogen technologies.
"During a series of town hall meetings across the region on this road map, some people expressed concern about including coal as part of our energy future. But with China building the equivalent of a coal-fired power plant per week and with coal playing a huge part in our current energy system, we need a low-CO2 path forward for coal and we need it soon," said Bill Grant, Midwest director of the national conservation organization, Izaak Walton League of America. "The size and urgency of the global warming challenge has persuaded some of us in the environmental community that encouraging more responsible use of coal is just as critical as stopping conventional coal plants."
"This road map could not be timelier," said State of
The Great Plains Institute is a regional non-profit organization based in