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Recharge published a third op-ed from CEO Jereme Kent – this time about the broken electric grid. In this piece, Jereme discusses the February 2021 outages in Texas, one of the many examples that illustrate the need for an entire redesign of the grid. If things remain the same, he claims, weather will continue to cause failures and citizens will continue to suffer.

Welcome to “the yard” at One Energy’s headquarters in Findlay, Ohio! Components can be stored here for up to 20 utility-scale wind turbines. Blades, hubs, nacelles, and generators are visible in today’s Wind View. Learn more about these turbine parts on page 4.1 of the website, “Terminology.” 

Why do we stock all these parts? For one, international logistics can be time consuming, and stocking components allows One Energy to cut down on necessary lead times. Additionally, there are economies of scale associated with larger turbine orders. As a result, One Energy purchases and stores equipment in advance. This strategy both reduces costs and helps ensure projects are completed on time.

16 turbines worth of components are captured in this picture, ready to be installed and do their part in decarbonizing our customers’ facilities!

February 24, 2021 – Climb to the Top | Laura Thoreson

With bookkeeping “in her bones,” Staff Accountant Laura is proof that your professional journey can take you many different places, and you can still end up exactly where you want to be.

In this case, that destination is the accounting department at the North Findlay Wind Campus! Hear Laura’s story of how she went from earning a degree in English Literature to keeping One Energy’s vendors happy – and some of the stops along the way. Learn why she describes her current role as challenging (in a good way) and why she chose the word “kismet” to describe her climb to the top.

Watch below and subscribe to our YouTube channel to keep up with the climbs!

This series can also be found on LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter.

February 22, 2021 – Wind Study | Question 8

As a company dealing in power and energy, economic inflation plays a role in our projects. The savings we’re able to offer Wind for Industry® customers are determined by considering the estimated energy production of the turbine(s), the rate the customer is currently paying their utility, and something called Net Present Value, or NPV.

In this week’s Wind Study, you’ll learn about the ways One Energy prices projects, and what NPV means for the value of a project over the course of its 20+ year life.

🔗Download the homework questions here and come back Friday to check your math!

Be sure to share this educational series on Facebook and Twitter.

February 19, 2021 – Wind Study | Answer 7

Think you’ve got the hang of how net metering works? Let’s find out.

In this week’s Wind Study homework questions, we discussed how wind turbines can be installed “behind the meter” to directly power facilities. These projects can utilize a policy called net metering, which impacts how One Energy customers are billed for electricity. We then asked for your help with math problems to determine net energy purchased from a utility, as well as some cost calculations.

To download the homework questions, click here.

To check your work against this week’s homework answers, click here.

And be sure to share this educational series on Facebook and Twitter!

February 19, 2021 – Science Shorts | LiDAR Units

As you know by now, One Energy has various ways of capturing weather and wind data. In the last few Science Shorts, we explained our weather station, MET pole, and the instrumentation used to measure wind. Today, follow along as Erica explains another tool we use: the LiDAR unit!

LiDAR stands for Light Detection and Ranging. LiDARs are relatively small, portable instruments, which come in handy when we need to measure wind data at a potential customer’s site: instead of installing a tall MET pole, we can transport a smaller, more mobile LiDAR unit!

Watch as Erica explains how these units capture data using light beams and lasers along with atmospheric aerosols – and find out which instances One Energy chooses to deploy a LiDAR unit over other ways of obtaining wind data.

Subscribe to our YouTube channel and don’t miss any future Science Shorts!

And be sure to share this educational series on Facebook and Instagram!

February 18, 2021 – Technician Talk | Figure 8 Knots

What does tying knots have to do with wind energy construction? More than you might think!

The Figure 8 style knot is used by One Energy technicians for taglines when erecting wind turbines, pulling electrical cable in underground conduits, attaching rope to carabiners, and when raising and lowering tools in tower.

In this episode of Technician Talks, join Emily as she demonstrates the basic Figure 8 Knot, plus a few variations. You’ll learn how to tie a Figure 8 Knot, plus a Figure 8 on a Bight and a Figure 8 Retrace, in this short, informative video.

Technician Talks can also be found on our LinkedIn, Facebook, and Twitter feeds– and be sure to subscribe to our You Tube channel for more One Energy content!

It’s amazing how easy it is to accidentally introduce salary bias into your company. One Energy has worked very hard to identify the places where we could accidentally incorporate a bias into our hiring and compensation of team members. It’s for this reason that we do not negotiate salaries for entry-level employees.

Many companies that I have worked for identified a salary “range” for offers to entry-level employees, where hiring managers and human resources departments had flexibility to decide what each candidate is worth. These managers factor in the degree, school, performance at the school, resume, experience, and the interview to decide where in that range to price the offer. The result is often that students from high-income backgrounds and expensive schools start with higher compensations and maintain that higher compensation throughout their career.

Because I went to the University of Michigan, I was paid more as an entry-level employee than many of my counterparts. My offer from another company was increased because I scored well on their psychological profile software. Looking back, none of that made sense.

Basing the salary on the degree does not make sense. Salary should be based on the position the employer believes the candidate is qualified to fill. The prestige of the school often favors well-off students and is biased against those who started from a socially disadvantaged position. Performance at a school tells you how well a candidate did in that culture, not how much knowledge they retained or how well they will do in your company’s environment.

It is also far easier for an affluent student to pad their resume than it is for an equally smart, economically disadvantaged student to do the same. (How often do we hear of well-connected parents getting their kid an internship at their friend’s company?) 

For the student who grew up with rich parents, the interview process is more familiar as well. Hell, I went to cotillion as a kid – so you better believe I was more accustomed to a formal, professional setting than smarter students who worked their way through high school and college.

The school I attended, my well-rounded resume, and my ease with the formalities of interviewing – none of these things meant I was a better candidate. While sure, I personally believe I was a stronger-than-average applicant, there was nothing in my interview processes that gathered ample objective information for the employer to determine if that was the case.

So at One Energy, we take a different approach. Here, entry-level hiring is a yes or no decision. If it’s a yes, there is a standard offer that is not negotiable. For entry-level field engineers, for example, we use the national average salaries for civil engineers, electrical engineers, and mechanical engineers, then calculate the total average to arrive at our offer number (we update this calculation annually).

Then, we judge them like crazy.

Yes, we judge our new hires. But we only judge them on what they do in their professional capacity while they work for us. We judge them both qualitatively and quantitatively based on their work. And when they demonstrate value, we adjust their compensation rapidly.

We conduct quarterly reviews of their salary and we adjust their salary each quarter based on what we would pay them in light of all information we now have. Some new-hire salaries increase rapidly as they prove they are top performers. Some grow at a less rapid rate. And we grow salaries without artificial caps. If a field engineer gets a 30% raise the first year, that’s a great thing. They earned it, and it had nothing to do with anything other than their performance at One Energy.

The best part is that we have found that when we explain this policy to prospective new hires, the strongest candidates love it and often take a much lower initial compensation from us than what they’re being offered elsewhere. And they’re also often the ones who end up making far more after a year than any of their other competing offers.

Evidence this approach works? We are often surprised who the best performers end up being. Had we set individuals’ compensation based on our original, pre-employment view of them, we would have been wrong many times.

We’re proud to report: none of our current team members attended cotillion growing up, and we’re doing just fine.

Jereme Kent is the CEO of One Energy.

Learn more about Jereme and the One Energy team.

February 17, 2021 – Wind Views | Drone Photography

Hope you’re not afraid of heights! This photo was taken from ~320 feet in the air – all while our Corporate Communications Manager and in-house photographer Hank was standing on the ground.

One Energy’s drone equipment helps us expand our abilities for tasks like turbine blade inspections and capturing breath-taking photos of our Wind for Industry projects.   

We were able to determine the approximate height this photo was shot from by using metadata. The “raw” version of this photo (or unprocessed version) contains data stored in the file. This data includes information like the time and date the photo was taken, the drone’s altitude, and the photo’s GPS location – it’s all called metadata.

By comparing this metadata with our site survey information, One Energy was able to calculate the height of ~320 feet! Here’s how:

The altitude stored in the photograph’s metadata is measured in “feet above sea level”. Since we also know the GPS location of this photo from its metadata, we can determine the site elevation of this specific turbine’s location and compare it to photograph’s altitude. The result tells us how high in the air our drone was when it captured this photo!

February 15, 2021 – Wind Study | Question 7

One Energy’s projects are different from typical wind farms because they are installed “behind the meter,” and directly power customer facilities. Some One Energy customers take advantage of a policy called net metering, which means the customer is only billed by the utility for the net electricity consumed by their facility.

In this week’s Wind Study, learn more about how net metering works and use math (net values and percentages, specifically) to answer related homework questions. 

 🔗 Download the questions here and check back Friday for the answer.

You can also find this educational series on Facebook and Twitter.