![]() ![]() I’m Derek Miller with the Salt Lake Chamber, Speaking on Business. PacifiCorp is Rocky Mountain’s parent company, and together with its sister company Pacific Power, they serve over two million customers, creating an energy future that is affordable, reliable, and sustainable. This monumental work will maintain Rocky Mountain Power’s strong reliability in delivering power to customers, uphold our position as one of the lowest-cost energy providers in the nation, reduce emissions and modernize the grid. Our plan also includes an additional 5,600 megawatts of new solar resources. We are currently negotiating contracts for 1,200 megawatts of solar, along with 680 megawatts of installed battery capacity, which will be built in rural Utah. Using 2005 as a baseline, our latest long-range plan will achieve a 74 percent reduction of greenhouse gas emissions by 2030 and a 98 percent reduction by 2050. We recently announced the completion of a sweeping initiative that more than doubled our wind production, making PacifiCorp the largest regulated utility owner of wind power in the West. It’s an exciting time at Rocky Mountain Power as we continue to increase renewable energy generation and move to a more sustainable electrical grid. In the past much of Utah’s power came from traditional sources, but times are changing and Gary Hoogeveen, President and CEO of Rocky Mountain Power, tells us about the developments now underway. Consistent, reliable, and affordable electricity is essential in today’s wired economy. This is Derek Miller Speaking on Business. Speaking on Business: Rocky Mountain Power.WORKFORCE RESILIENCE THROUGH MENTAL FITNESS.SUICIDE PREVENTION IN THE WORKFORCE EMPLOYER TOOLKIT.BEST PRACTICES GUIDE FOR CLOSING THE GENDER WAGE GAP.A BUSINESS VISION FOR UTAH’S ENERGY FUTURE.UTAH COMPACT ON RACIAL EQUITY, DIVERSITY, AND INCLUSION.DIVERSITY & INCLUSION LEADERSHIP TRAINING SERIES.WOMEN & BUSINESS CONFERENCE AND ATHENA AWARDS LUNCHEON.Residents reported seeing a flash of light and hearing a booming noise in Draper near the Traverse Mountains shortly after 1 a.m. UTAH ECONOMIC OUTLOOK & PUBLIC POLICY SUMMIT A mysterious boom heard emanating from a Utah mountain has authorities puzzled and turning to the public for answers.Martha Harris contributed to this article. The new rates are subject to change, as they still need approval from the state Public Service Commission. The average residential customer can expect to see their bill increase by 1.6%, about $1.40 Eskelsen said. “Sales are credited to customers and purchases are, of course, a cost to customers.”Īccording to Eskelsen, costs fluctuate up and down and have decreased in the past. “Any money that we make by selling power to other utilities is credited against the wholesale power that we buy,” he said. Aptly named as a nod to Rocky Mountain Power's Salt Lake City Headquarters and as a powerful catalyst of progress and innovation in a community, the Power District sits as both the literal gateway to the capital city, and a promise for the energy it will inspire in the gateway of tomorrow. Eskelsen said that sales are credited to the benefit of customers. ![]() As part of our commitment to providing safe, reliable and efficient energy to our customers, Rocky Mountain Power is undertaking a transmission line reconstruction project to mitigate wildfire risk along the wildland-urban interface (WUI) areas in the foothills of Salt Lake City. Rocky Mountain Power also buys and sells power to and from other utilities every day. Salt Lake City Foothills Wildfire Mitigation Project. “They review our cost of providing service and make sure that our prices are fair and reasonable.” In Utah, that’s the Public Service Commission of Utah,” Eskelsen said. “Public utilities, like Rocky Mountain Power are regulated by the state in which we operate. ![]() Rocky Mountain Power must get approval from the state of Utah before adjusting its prices. Rocky Mountain Power has a collection of small hydroelectric facilities along the Wasatch Front, on Bear River, and a sister facility in the Pacific Northwest.
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