Send Scott Foushee and Rusty Pendergraft, members of the board of directors at Today’s Power Inc. in North Little Rock
Scott Foushee of Newport and Rusty Pendergraft of Texarkana have joined the board of directors Today’s Power Inc. of North Little Rock, a renewable energy company specializing in small utility scale solar power plants.
Today’s Power, a wholly owned subsidiary of Arkansas Electric Cooperatives Inc. of Little Rock, has built solar arrays for most of the state’s 17 electric distribution cooperatives. The additions to its 10-member board followed the retirement of Wayne Whitaker from Southwest Arkansas Electric Cooperative and the completion of a term by Wayne Beadles, a director at Woodruff Electric. He had been on the board since 2015, the year
Xcel Energy Warns More Outages Likely highplainsobserver.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from highplainsobserver.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
KETR
updated, 9:50 p.m.
Thousands of people in Northeast Texas remain without electrical service as of Monday afternoon, as a night of record low temperatures approaches, with readings forecast to fall below zero across most of the region.
The outage-tracking website poweroutage.us reports amost one in three Oncor customers being without power as of late afternoon Monday. There are two major issues affecting many customers right now: winter storm outages & controlled power outages directed by the Electric Reliability Council of Texas, Oncor said in a late-afternoon release Monday.
Most of Texas is served by the state’s own electrical grid, which is managed by the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT). Oncor is one of many private electricity providers that deliver power through ERCOT’s systems. Other power providers in Northeast Texas include Greenville Electric Utility System, Farmers Electric Cooperative, Texas-New Mexico Power Company, and others.
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NextEra Energy Resourcesâ Skeleton Creek Wind began generating electricity on Dec. 16. (NextEra Energy Resources Photo)
NextEra Energy Resourcesâ Skeleton Creek Wind began generating electricity on Dec. 16. (NextEra Energy Resources Photo)
By Enid News & Eagle
The first phase of NextEra Energy Resourcesâ massive Skeleton Creek Project has become operational as the wind energy part of the project began generating electricity on Dec. 16.
The project, which will be located in Garfield, Alfalfa and Major counties, will combine wind, solar and battery storage when it is complete.
Skeleton Creek Wind will generate 250 megawatts of wind energy for Western Farmers Electric Cooperative, which will purchase all the projectâs electricity â about enough to power 150,000 homes.