Wind Energy Corp. responds to Energy Dept.

Published: May 15, 2008 at 12:34 PM
Order reprints
ELIZABETHTOWN, Ky., May 15 (UPI) -- The U.S. wind industry sees wind as being more locally based.

Responding to Monday's release of a U.S. Department of Energy report, "20 Percent Wind Energy by 2030," James Fugitte, chief executive officer of Kentucky-based Wind Energy Corp., asked the federal government to re-examine its proposed solutions to meet that goal.

The report identifies the possibility of wind energy accounting for 20 percent of the U.S. energy supply by 2030, but Fugitte said it focuses on large-scale wind farms, new transmission lines and an overall major expansion of the electricity grid system.

"Utility-scale electricity is not the sole answer to what ails us," Fugitte said. "The best way to mitigate rising fuel costs is to invest in on-site renewable energy generation assets."

Wind Energy Corp. is one of the pioneers of distributive energy where power is provided directly to consumers and businesses under their control. Fugitte said Wind Energy Corp.'s low-wind solution will make distributive wind solutions feasible in urban areas and other settings where wind power is just not an alternative today.


© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.


Swim club president downplays camp comment (4 min)
Goosen in first at the Scottish Open (6 min)
Walking on sand safer than playing in sand (9 min)
Vickers wins latest Sprint pole position (10 min)
Brown: Britain's nuke stockpile may be cut (13 min)
DNA said to implicate mobster in '77 death (15 min)
1 in 3 Greeks could fall ill with H1N1 flu (32 min)
fark
You're worried about losing your job. Do you a) improve your performance, b) look for something...
Teenage hit-and-runner uses Self-Arrest lane to be booked and released in twenty minutes. Would...
Woman's laugh sounds like a car horn
AAA warns motorists to expect 1 of every 100 highway miles to be under construction this summer....
Sign for small Canadian town is hilariously vandalized to advertise certain illicit activity. City...
German zoo admits that, in hindsight, it may have been a mistake to name one of its monkeys "Obama"...