General Motors’ Ohio and Indiana Plants to Meet
Electricity Needs with Wind
Decision will include electricity from
Hilltopper Wind Farm in rural Mount Pulaski
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[September 21, 2017]
DETROIT
All of GM’s Ohio and Indiana
manufacturing facilities – including those that build
the Chevrolet Cruze and Silverado and GMC Sierra
light-duty pickup trucks – will meet their electricity
needs through 100 percent renewable energy. GM is buying
a total of 200 megawatts of wind energy from Ohio and
Illinois wind farms. Once the turbines come online by
the end of 2018, renewable energy will power 20 percent
of GM’s global electricity use.
“Congratulations to GM on this huge progress leap – a
fantastic show of commitment at Climate Week NYC, and
all achieved in just a year since the company joined
RE100,” said
Helen Clarkson, CEO, The Climate Group. “GM vocally
champions the compelling business case for renewables
and shares learnings with other companies. It shows
other companies what’s possible.”
The new wind deals are enough to meet the electricity
needs of Fort Wayne Assembly, Marion Metal Center and
Bedford Casting plants in Indiana and Lordstown
Assembly, Defiance Casting Operations, Parma Metal
Center and Toledo Transmission plants in Ohio.
“Technology is driving solutions for mobility and safety
in our vehicles, as well as the new energy solutions
that build them,” said Gerald Johnson, GMNA vice
president of Manufacturing and Labor. “This is the way
we do business: offering vehicles that serve our
customers’ lifestyle needs while providing sustainable
solutions that improve our communities.”
GM is leveraging energy efficiency and a mix of onsite
and offsite renewable energy solutions to reach its 100
percent renewable energy goal. The company’s four-part
strategy acknowledges how its energy and product
strategies intersect.
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As GM works toward advancing zero emissions vehicles, it makes
business sense to create a cleaner grid on which to drive them. The company uses
EV batteries in tandem with a solar array to power an office building at its
Milford Proving Ground in Michigan and is researching the use of fuel cells as
energy storage in the future.
“We’re helping provide solutions to green the grid through these
new renewable energy deals and sharing best practices with other companies so
they too can reduce risk and energy costs,” said Rob Threlkeld, GM global
manager of renewable energy. “With a pragmatic strategy, companies can turn
ambitious renewable energy goals into action and scale quickly.”
Altenex, an Edison Energy Company and independent renewable energy advisor,
supported GM in the negotiation of the power purchase contracts. GM will be the
sole user of the Northwest Ohio Wind farm, a 100 MW project owned by Starwood
Energy Group. Swift Current Energy will provide 100 MW from its HillTopper
Wind Project in Logan County, Illinois.
GM has used renewable energy for decades, saving about $5 million annually as a
result. Renewable energy use supports a resilient grid while offering more
stable energy pricing. GM made its first wind purchase in 2014 for several of
its Mexico operations, followed by deals supporting Texas wind farms for 30 and
50 megawatts of energy. The company uses solar power at 26 facilities and
generates electricity from landfill gas at two assembly plants.
For more information, visit GM’s sustainability report or environmental blog.
General Motors Co. (NYSE: GM, TSX: GMM), its subsidiaries and joint
venture entities produce and sell vehicles under the Chevrolet, Cadillac, Baojun,
Buick, GMC, Holden, Jiefang and Wuling brands. GM has leadership positions in
several of the world's most significant automotive markets and is committed to
lead the future of personal mobility.
[Colleen Oberc
GM Sustainability Communications] |