About: Great River Energy   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Great River Energy is an electric transmission and generation cooperative in the U.S. state of Minnesota; it is the state's second largest electric utility, behind Xcel Energy. GRE started out as two separate, smaller G&T cooperatives - Cooperative Power Association and United Power Association; the merger that created GRE likely was not long after Coal Creek came online. In October, 2008, the headquarters building became the first building in Minnesota to attain LEED Platinum status.

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  • Great River Energy
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  • Great River Energy is an electric transmission and generation cooperative in the U.S. state of Minnesota; it is the state's second largest electric utility, behind Xcel Energy. GRE started out as two separate, smaller G&T cooperatives - Cooperative Power Association and United Power Association; the merger that created GRE likely was not long after Coal Creek came online. In October, 2008, the headquarters building became the first building in Minnesota to attain LEED Platinum status.
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  • Great River Energy is an electric transmission and generation cooperative in the U.S. state of Minnesota; it is the state's second largest electric utility, behind Xcel Energy. GRE started out as two separate, smaller G&T cooperatives - Cooperative Power Association and United Power Association; the merger that created GRE likely was not long after Coal Creek came online. Located in Maple Grove, Minnesota, Great River Energy provides electricity to 28 Member Co-ops, throughout Minnesota. The company moved to its new headquarters in April 2008. The new headquarters include a 160-foot tall, 200 kilowatt NEG Micon M700 wind turbine (visible from Interstate 94), and a 72-kilowatt solar array at ground level and on the rooftop. The building uses approximately half the energy of similar-sized buildings constructed using standard construction techniques, 40 percent less electricity for lighting and 90 percent less water than standard corporate campuses. In October, 2008, the headquarters building became the first building in Minnesota to attain LEED Platinum status.
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