
Electric supply chain is getting cheaper
Northwoods Electric Supply Chain is Getting Cheaper Than You Think.
By Ryan McCall, Bloomberg Businessweek article The electric supply chain for Northwoods Energy is getting much cheaper than you think.
Northwoods is getting $6.6 billion from the government in a $1.9 billion deal for power, a deal that could reduce the company’s cost per kilowatt hour from $3.90 to $2.30, Bloomberg reports.
Northwood, based in St. Louis, Missouri, was one of the few big suppliers of renewable energy that had to compete with cheaper rivals in the industry.
That meant Northwoods had to keep its workforce in place.
That didn’t stop it from becoming one of Northwoods biggest players.
North Woods was founded in 1871 and became the largest producer of electricity in the world.
The company was bought by Koch Industries in 2001 for $4.8 billion.
The deal raised the company from a company that made a few small solar panels to a company with more than $7 billion in annual revenue.
The move to cut costs didn’t hurt the company, as it is now one of America’s biggest energy suppliers.
“Our goal is to be as competitive as possible,” Northwood CEO Tim DeSouza told Bloomberg.
North America’s largest producer, in fact, is one of those energy companies that have gotten cheaper as more customers switch from fossil fuels to renewable energy sources.
The problem is, renewable energy has also gotten cheaper.
“The cost of renewable electricity has gone down significantly over the last few years,” DeSounas said.
“Now, it’s more cost-competitive than it was two years ago.”
Northwoods has already cut its prices on power.
Since it purchased power from the federal government in 2016, the company has cut its electricity bills by more than 60 percent.
That’s despite the fact that the company is still trying to find ways to keep costs down.
In fact, the price of electricity for a home has dropped by an average of 11 percent every year since 2015.
North Hills power plants can be seen in the foreground, on the left, and the power station in the middle.
The power is produced from a combination of coal and natural gas, and is transported to customers using diesel-powered trucks.

‘Wake me up when it gets cold’ to help ‘winterize’ the Northwest
A former high school football coach who has taught middle school students how to make ice cream says the region is a “winter wonderland.”
Kurt Schulte, who is now a high school coach, spoke at a panel at the Northwest Conference of Teachers this week, telling the group of educators that “we’re going to wake up and the ice cream will be fresh and it will be ice cream.”
Schulte is the author of the book, “The Winter Wonderland: How to Get Winter to Taste Like Winter.”
Schuette has worked in the sports industry for more than 25 years, and the book is a guide for those interested in learning how to prepare ice cream.
The story focuses on the importance of being prepared to deal with the cold.
Schultecher said he learned a lot about preparing ice cream when he was a youth.
He said he would take ice cream out of the freezer and take it to a restaurant, where it would freeze.
He’d get the toppings, put it on the plate and take the plate out of there.
He also would take a glass of milk to cool it off and he would just put it in the freezer, just as if he was just going out for ice cream, he said.
He went to a bar, and he went out for a drink.
It was like, “Oh my God, what’s going on here?
It’s really cold.”
Schubethe said that his son has grown up with a lot of kids, and many of them, like his own son, are in high school and in the same classrooms as him.
He was very, very aware that he had to make sure that their bodies were prepared to handle the cold and the heat.
Schuetes book, he added, is about a place where there is a lot more of an understanding of what winter is and what winter has been, and that’s why he thinks it is such a wonderful place to be in the Northwest.
Schunethe said he wants to continue teaching middle school and high school students and they can have fun making ice cream as well.
He said he is proud to teach the Northwest, and as a teacher, it is a great opportunity for me to help others get prepared for the winter and the harsh cold.