Renewables Reality Check
July 2008 - A Special Report from RE Magazine examines often overlooked obstacles to realizing the promise of naturally replenishing fuels.
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission Delivers Bad News for Ratepayers
July 2008- Increased fuel costs and higher costs for new construction likely to push up power prices in all regions for several years.
Have Plug, Will Travel
February 2008 - Electric Cooperatives Drive Research (Literally) on Plug-in Hybrid Electric Vehicles
Coming Full Circle on Carbon
January 2008 - An RE Magazine “Special Report” looks at the status of new technology to capture carbon dioxide emissions and return the gas to where it came from—deep underground.
Reactor Renaissance
November 2007 - Concerns over how the United States can generate large amounts of baseload power without increasing carbon dioxide emissions have positioned nuclear power for a roaring comeback. And electric co-ops are interested.
Gulf Coast Co-ops Face New Challenges After Hurricane Katrina
November 2007 - The lights are long since back on. But more than two years after Hurricane Katrina, electric co-ops in Mississippi and Louisiana new, unexpected challenges.
Sowing Green Power Pastures
November 2007 - According to this special report published in RE Magazine, electric co-ops are adding renewable resources to their power supply portfolios as a way to slash carbon dioxide emissions and meet growing consumer needs.
Squeezing More Out of Coal
September 2007 - This special report published in RE Magazine examines electric co-ops' $5 billion dollar investment in new technologies aimed at burning coal more cleanly and more efficiently.
Co-ops Lead on Boosting Energy Efficiency
July 2007 - This in-depth feature published in RE Magazine offers ample evidence of the leadership role co-ops are playing to squeeze more energy from the nation's current system.
Beating the Heat on Climate Change
April 2007 - Needing to build new power plants, electric co-ops look to inject a dose of "what's possible right now" reality into the global warming debate.