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Corporate Social Responsibility
News
4.17.2006 ET
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Green Mountain Power and UVM Initiate Program to Benefit Farmers and Lake Champlain
(CSRwire) S. BURLINGTON, Vt.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--April 17, 2006--Green Mountain
Power (NYSE: GMP) and the University of Vermont announced today a
partnership to demonstrate a technology that treats manure from a farmer's
pit with an electrical charge, resulting in a reduction of phosphorus and
other nutrients and nearly eliminating odor.
Green Mountain Power is purchasing a mobile unit from ElectroCell
Technologies of Colchester, which will be tested at UVM and then made
available to farm customers in its service territory to help them comply
with stricter state and federal regulatory run-off reduction requirements
that are expected this spring.
"We're very interested in the potential of this technology to help our
farm customers and to protect the environment, particularly Lake
Champlain," said Chris Dutton, president and chief executive officer of
Green Mountain Power. "We are committed to the use of technology to
provide superior service and we think ElectroCell is a perfect match for
our environmental protection orientation."
The technology was developed in Israel and licensed in North America
to ElectroCell Technologies. The University of Vermont's Center for
Emerging Technologies served as the incubator for this manure treatment
system.
Run-off from phosphorus-filled fertilizer and manure may contribute to
toxic algae blooms in Lake Champlain. Controlling phosphorus is an
expensive, difficult proposition for farmers.
"This technology has the promise to create an effective, affordable
solution to one of the nation's primary environmental concerns for
agriculture," said Daniel Mark Fogel, president of the University of
Vermont. "Developing new environmental technologies and services that can
be commercialized to help Vermont, the nation and the world improve the
environment is a natural role for Vermont, and we're pleased that UVM's
Center for Emerging Technologies is playing a pivotal part in incubating
and launching a company in this promising business sector."
Buzz Hoerr, president and chief executive officer of ElectroCell
Technologies, said, "There is no one solution that will neatly solve all
of a farmer's phosphorus problems, but we believe that ElectroCell can
play a very important role in helping a farmer reach his or her
environmental goals and requirements."
ElectroCell Technologies has begun to manufacture units in South
Burlington, through a partnership with Peck Electric, that include
improvements on its original design developed in Israel, including
enhanced computer programming. In order to measure the effects of these
enhancements during the demonstration, the UVM Soil Sciences Lab will
measure bacterial and nutrient changes as a way to determine what
adjustments to the treatment process may be needed to refine the system.
When that process is complete, the unit will be made available to Green
Mountain Power farm customers.
For further information, please contact Dorothy Schnure, manager of
corporate communications, at 802-655-8418, Tom Rainey, president Vermont
Center for Emerging Technologies, University of Vermont, at 802-656-3880,
or Buzz Hoerr, president and chief executive officer, ElectroCell
Technologies, 802-863-2486.
Copyright Business Wire 2006
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