When the 40th Earth Day dawns on April 22, SCA Tissue North America (Philadelphia, Pa., USA) will have added wind power to the solar power that is generating green electricity at its Service Excellence Center (SEC) in the town of Menasha, Wis. SCA Tissue is erecting four wind turbine towers on the grounds of its offices on McMahon Drive. Footings for the 30-meter towers were placed in early December and the four 20-KWt turbines are expected to be generating electricity by this spring.
Each turbine has three 15-ft blades and together the four turbines will produce 100 to 125 MW-hours per year, enough electricity to power 10 homes, said Mike Dillon, SCA Tissue Manager, Environmental and Risk Management. The towers are being erected between the building and the recreational trail that runs parallel to Highway 10.
Once the turbines are operating, SCA Tissue will become eligible to receive a U.S. Department of Energy performance grant that could pay for up to a third of the project's $280,000 cost. Based on the projected electricity from the turbines and on SCA continuing to meet its energy conservation goals, the wind turbine project will have a payback period of seven years or less, Dillon said.
Wind turbine site assessments already have been conducted at SCA Tissue converting plant in Neenah and its paper mill in Menasha. Those assessments show both sites are good candidates for wind turbines of their own.
In recent years, the SEC building and grounds on McMahon Drive has served as a learning laboratory for SCA Tissue in exploring environmental initiatives:
Dillon noted that plans are also being developed for solar and/or wind power at other SCA Tissue sites not only in the Fox Valley but also in Arizona, upstate New York, and Alabama.
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