This article contains promotional content .(June 2022) |
Company type | Public utility |
---|---|
Industry | Electricity, Water |
Founded | 1911 |
Headquarters | Eugene, Oregon, United States |
Number of employees | 500+ |
Website | www.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]
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]
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 |
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.
The British Columbia Hydro and Power Authority, operating as BC Hydro, is a Canadian electric utility in the province of British Columbia. It is the main electricity distributor, serving more than 4 million customers in most areas, with the exception of the City of New Westminster, where the city runs its own electrical department and portions of the West Kootenay, Okanagan, the Boundary Country and Similkameen regions, where FortisBC, a subsidiary of Fortis Inc. directly provides electric service to 213,000 customers and supplies municipally owned utilities in the same area. As a provincial Crown corporation, BC Hydro reports to the BC Ministry of Energy, Mines and Low Carbon Innovation, and is regulated by the British Columbia Utilities Commission (BCUC). Its mandate is to generate, purchase, distribute and sell electricity.
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