An email has been sent to your address with instructions for changing your password.
There is no user registered with this email.
Sign Up
To create a free account, please fill out the form below.
Thank you for signing up!
A confirmation email has been sent to your email address. Please check your email and follow the instructions in the message to complete the registration process. If you do not receive the email, please check your spam folder or contact us for assistance.
Welcome to our platform!
Oops!
Something went wrong while trying to create your new account. Please try again and if the problem persist, Email Us to receive support.
ComEd Goats Have Last Summer Fling Before Heading to Work this Fall
Rhea-AI Impact
(Low)
Rhea-AI Sentiment
(Neutral)
Tags
Rhea-AI Summary
ComEd is promoting its sustainable vegetation management program using goats to clear brush under power lines. This initiative aims to enhance energy reliability while reducing safety risks and emissions. In a celebratory event on August 31, 2022, goats paraded on the Chicago River before heading to Matthiessen State Park. This marks their second annual visit to Chicago, with over 200 goats employed since 2019 to efficiently manage vegetation, avoiding outages and cutting costs significantly. ComEd serves over 4 million customers in northern Illinois.
Positive
Employing goats reduces costs and time for vegetation management by over 50%.
The goat program lowers safety risks for workers and reduces emissions from fuel-burning equipment.
Negative
None.
Goats will clear grass and brush under power lines to support sustainable, reliable energy
CHICAGO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--
Nearly a dozen of ComEd’s four-legged employees are celebrating their last week of summer by participating in a small boat goat parade along the Chicago River, before they head off to clear brush under hard-to-reach power lines in Matthiessen State Park in LaSalle County, Ill. Ten goats will spend today cruising the Chicago River, while increasing awareness around ComEd’s goat vegetation management program.
Nearly a dozen goats took to the Chicago RiverWednesday, Aug. 31, before heading off to clear vegetation under ComEd’s hard-to-reach power lines. The energy company employs goats whose work helps avoid outages for ComEd customers, lowers safety risks for workers and reduces air emissions from fuel-burning equipment. (Photo: Business Wire)
“ComEd is excited to bring the goats back to Chicago this year to highlight one of the innovative and sustainable ways we help ensure families and businesses throughout northern Illinois have reliable power,” said Gil Quiniones, CEO at ComEd. “This event provides our hardworking goats with a much-needed celebration and fun opportunity to engage with the customers they serve.”
The goats will cruise down the river in five boats, with an additional boat carrying members of the ComEd team, between the City Winery Chicago Dock, Michigan Avenue Bridge and Wolf Point on Wednesday, Aug. 31, from 12 to 3 p.m.
This marks the second consecutive year of ComEd’s goats visiting the Chicago River. In July 2021, goats cruised along the Chicago River as they took a break from clearing vegetation in Pekin, Ill.
Each summer since 2019, over 200 goats have supported ComEd in clearing vegetation in places that are difficult to access. The goats play a critical role in helping ComEd avoid outages and service disruptions due to overgrown vegetation near power lines. Among its benefits, the program drives maximum efficiency of this work, cutting the cost and time by more than half, while also reducing safety risks for workers and air emissions from fuel-burning equipment.
ComEd is a unit of Chicago-based Exelon Corporation (NASDAQ: EXC), a Fortune 200 energy company with approximately 10 million electricity and natural gas customers – the largest number of customers in the U.S. ComEd powers the lives of more than 4 million customers across northern Illinois, or 70 percent of the state’s population. For more information visit ComEd.com and connect with the company on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube.