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Prompted by students from KyotoNOW!, Cornell is studying the possibility of producing wind-generated electricity for its campus and has opened discussions with its neighbors. “Our investigation into using renewable wind energy is still in the study phase, and there still are a lot of issues to explore,” said Harold Craft, Cornell vice president for administration and chief financial officer, “but, so far, the possibility looks promising.” In 2004 Cornell’s Department of Utilities and Energy Management completed an investigation into whether locally produced wind-generated electricity would be cost effective for the Ithaca campus. This work was prompted by a request in the fall of 2003 by students from KyotoNOW!, an environmental advocacy organization on campus.
Cornell’s utilities and energy management department completed a wind inventory study for a 15-mile radius around Ithaca, and Mt. Pleasant, on university-owned property in the town of Dryden, has been identified as a possible wind resource site. The next step for exploring the feasibility of wind energy generation on the Mt. Pleasant site is to install a temporary (24-month) meteorological station to better assess the wind resource, Joyce said. Cornell’s energy and other sustainability initiatives are described online at http://www.sustainablecampus.cornell.edu and http://www.utilities.cornell.edu. —Cornell News Service |