Wind Energy Farm in Colorado
31 May, 2013 
GP04NO9 
★★★★ (E) 
Wind Energy Farm in Colorado
31 May, 2013 
GP04NO8 
★★★★ (E) 
Wind Energy Farm in Colorado
31 May, 2013 
GP04NO7 
★★★★ (E) 
Wind Energy Farm in Colorado
31 May, 2013 
GP04NO6 
★★★★★★ (B) 
Wind Energy Farm in Colorado
31 May, 2013 
GP04NO5 
★★★★ (E) 
Wind Energy Farm in Colorado
31 May, 2013 
GP04NO4 
★★★★ (E) 
Wind Energy Farm in Colorado
31 May, 2013 
GP04NO3 
★★★★ (E) 
Wind Energy Farm in Colorado
31 May, 2013 
GP04NO2 
★★★★ (E) 
Wind Energy Farm in Colorado
31 May, 2013 
GP04NO1 
★★★★ (E) 
Wind Energy Farm in Colorado
31 May, 2013 
GP04NO0 
★★★★ (E) 
Wind Energy Farm in Colorado
31 May, 2013 
GP04NNZ 
★★★★ (E) 
Wind Energy Farm in Colorado
31 May, 2013 
GP04NNY 
★★★★ (E) 
Wind Energy Farm in Colorado
31 May, 2013 
GP04NNX 
★★★★ (E) 
Wind Energy Farm in Colorado
31 May, 2013 
GP04NNW 
★★★★ (E) 
Wind Energy Farm in Colorado
31 May, 2013 
GP04NNV 
★★★★ (E) 
Wind Energy Farm in Colorado
31 May, 2013 
GP04NNU 
★★★★ (E) 
Wind Energy Farm in Colorado
31 May, 2013 
GP04NNT 
★★★★ (E) 
Wind Energy Farm in Colorado
31 May, 2013 
GP04NNS 
★★★★ (E) 
Wind Energy Farm in Colorado
31 May, 2013 
GP04NNR 
★★★★ (E) 
Wind Energy Farm in Colorado
31 May, 2013 
GP04NNQ 
★★★★ (E) 
Wind Energy Farm in Colorado
31 May, 2013 
GP04NNP 
★★★★ (E) 
Wind Energy Farm in Colorado
31 May, 2013 
GP04NNL 
★★★★ (E) 
Wind Energy Farm in Colorado
31 May, 2013 
GP04NNO 
★★★★ (E) 
Wind Energy Farm in Colorado
31 May, 2013 
GP04NNN 
★★★★ (E) 
Wind Energy Farm in Colorado
31 May, 2013 
GP04NNM 
★★★★ (E) 
of 4 
of 4 

Wind Energy Farms in Colorado 

Wind Energy Farms in Colorado 

Shoot 
GP0STO3MJ 
05/29/2013 
Wind energy is part of the growth of renewable energy in Colorado which became the first U.S. state to create a renewable portfolio standard (RPS) by ballot initiative when voters approved Amendment 37 in November 2004. The original version of Colorado's RPS required utilities serving 40,000 or more customers to generate or purchase enough renewable energy to supply 10% of their retail electric sales. In March 2007, HB 1281 increased the RPS and extended a separate renewable-energy requirement to electric cooperatives, among other changes. HB 1001 of 2010 further expanded the RPS. Eligible renewable-energy resources include solar-electric energy, wind energy, geothermal-electric energy, biomass facilities that burn nontoxic plants, landfill gas, animal waste, hydropower, recycled energy, and fuel cells using hydrogen derived from eligible renewables. The PUC has issued rules to implement the RPS. The rules were amended as required by HB 1001 in August 2010. The PUC's rules generally apply to investor-owned utilities (IOUs). Electric cooperatives and municipal utilities serving more than 40,000 customers are still bound to the separate requirement approved by the legislature. 
Standard Filters