EPA Challenges Fortune 500 to Double
Use of Green Power
Dec 4, 2006 GreenBiz.com
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is asking
Fortune 500 companies double their current level
of green power purchasing. The goal of the green
power challenge is to exceed 5 billion kilowatt
hours (kWh) of green power purchases among participating
companies. Five billion kilowatt hours could power
more than 400,000 average American homes or avoid
the equivalent CO2 emissions associated with more
than 680,000 passenger cars each year.
"Through the Fortune 500 Green Power Challenge,
we are encouraging the largest companies in the
country to purchase more green power," said Bill
Wehrum, EPA's acting assistant administrator for
Air and Radiation. "Purchasing green power is good
for the environment, good for the economy and good
for our energy independence."
There are more than 40 Fortune 500 companies participating
in the Green Power Partnership; their annual green
power purchases currently total 2.5 billion kWh.
EPA's current top five Fortune 500 Green Power Partners
are Wells Fargo Company, Whole Foods Markets, Johnson
& Johnson, Starbucks and DuPont Company.
This 13-month effort will raise awareness of green
power options and help stimulate the development
of new green power resources nationwide. Green power
is a subset of renewable electricity, which includes
resources such as solar, wind, geothermal, biogas,
biomass and low-impact hydro. Electricity generation
from non-hydro renewable sources currently account
for just over two percent of America's electricity
supply.
Corporations who are significantly increasing their
green power purchase levels include Cisco Systems
Inc., Hewlett Packard (HP), Staples, Starbucks and
Wells Fargo & Company. The Green Power Partnership
encourages organizations to purchase green power
as a way to reduce the environmental impacts associated
with conventional electricity use. The Green Power
Partnership is comprised of Fortune 500 companies,
local, state, and federal governments, trade associations,
and colleges and universities. Green Power Partnership
members purchase more than 7 billion kilowatt hours
of green power on an annual basis.