02 | 03 Exelon Corporation Progress Report: Environment, Safety
Transcription
02 | 03 Exelon Corporation Progress Report: Environment, Safety
02 | 03 Exelon Corporation Progress Report: Environment, Safety, Community table of contents 2 3 4 6 12 18 22 26 34 40 42 44 Message from the Chairman Executive Message: Environment, Health and Safety Environmental Performance and Management Air Land Water Safety Community Economics Environment and Safety Policies Appendix A – Plant Data and TRI Emissions Recognition and Awards About Exelon Powered by approximately 20,000 dedicated employees, Exelon Corporation is one of the largest utilities in the United States and is headquartered in Chicago, Illinois, USA. Exelon provides service to retail electric customers in northern Illinois and southeastern Pennsylvania – and gas customers in the Philadelphia suburbs. With more than 40,000 megawatts of owned and controlled capacity, our company features one of the nation’s largest portfolios of electricity generation. In 2002 and 2003, Exelon’s revenues were, respectively, $15.0 billion and $15.8 billion. Exelon’s earnings were $1,440 million or $4.44 (diluted) per share in 2002 and $905 million or $2.75 (diluted) per share in 2003. Additional information on Exelon’s financial performance can be found at www.exeloncorp.com. Our Main Businesses Exelon Generation is responsible for energy generation and energy marketing, and is made up of the following businesses: Exelon Nuclear operates the largest nuclear fleet in the United States and the third largest commercial fleet in the world. Exelon Power manages, operates and maintains the company’s fossil (coal, oil and natural gas), landfill gas and hydroelectric fleet of generating assets. Exelon Power Team is the wholesale power marketing division of Exelon Corporation. Exelon Generation also has interests in Sithe Energies, Inc. (50 percent). Exelon Energy Delivery (EED) has the largest electric customer base in the nation, serving more than five million retail electric customer accounts, as well as approximately 460,000 natural gas customers. EED companies include Commonwealth Edison Company (ComEd) that serves northern Illinois, and PECO Energy (PECO) that serves southeastern Pennsylvania. Exelon Enterprises comprises the energy services business of Exelon Services, Inc., an infrastructure services business, a communications joint venture, and other investments. In 2003, Exelon sold, or signed agreements to sell, several Enterprise businesses, including the majority of InfraSource and Exelon Thermal. Exelon Business Services Company (BSC) is a direct, wholly owned subsidiary of Exelon Corporation. BSC provides Exelon’s businesses with information technology, supply management, legal, finance, human resources, and audiovisual services. Report scope The information contained within the Exelon Corporation Progress Report: Environment, Safety, Community covers performance, programs, and activities for the years 2002 and 2003. Discussion of programs and metrics within each section of the report identify the involved Exelon businesses and identify the relevant scope of information presented. In some cases, data and discussion of activities from years prior to 2002 are provided as context for discussion of progress in 2002–2003. Environmental and safety performance data related to Exelon Generation’s interest in Sithe Energies, Inc. (50 percent) are outside of the scope of this report. However, the location of Sithe Energies’ generating plants is contained in this report’s map of North America. 2003 Exelon Generation Output Mix [MWh – owned generation] Nuclear Coal Oil Gas Hydro 83% 6% 6% 2% 3% Exelon Distribution and Generation Exelon Distribution Territory PECO Energy Serving 1.5 million electric customers & 460,000 natural gas customers in Southeastern Pennsylvania Commonwealth Edison (ComEd) Serving 3.6 million electric customers in Northern Illinois Exelon Generating Stations (owned) Fossil / Hydro Plants Exelon / Sithe Plants Nuclear Units The Exelon Way | Our commitment to environmental and safety performance is linked solidly to our corporate strategy. Our Vision is to create exceptional value by becoming the best and most consistently profitable electricity and gas company in the United States. So, in January 2003, we initiated The Exelon Way, an aggressive and comprehensive effort to reexamine, and ultimately transform, the way Exelon does business: to energize our workforce, to centralize key functions, to optimize work processes, to emphasize our commitment to customers, employees and the communities we serve and to maximize our competitive position and cash flow. In short, the Exelon Way is about being the best at everything we do, including constantly improving our environmental and safety performance. Message from the Chairman This is the second in a series of what will become annual reports documenting Exelon’s progress toward environmental and safety excellence. Taken together, the reports will serve as an important tool in our ongoing effort to continuously improve our environmental and safety performance. Of necessity, they will highlight both our successes and our shortcomings. Over time, however, they will document our determination to excel at delivering reliable, safe and clean electric service to our customers and the communities in which they live and work. In our Corporate Vision Statement, we aspire to become the best and most consistently profitable electricity and gas company in the United States. Keeping the lights on, performing safely, and constantly improving our environmental performance are all key commitments in realizing that ambition. We are currently engaged in an aggressive and comprehensive company-wide effort, dubbed The Exelon Way, to achieve our goals by reexamining and ultimately transforming the way we do business. We are already seeing tangible results from The Exelon Way, and we are already seeing tangible improvements in our environmental and safety performance. New environmental management systems are under development, new metrics to measure quarterly environmental performance are being employed, and, under the leadership of Betsy Moler, a new Environmental Council comprised of senior executives has been initiated to integrate environmental considerations into our day-to-day business. I am pleased to report that EED successfully reduced its own energy consumption by 4 percent in 2003; we hope to realize similar reductions across the company in 2004. I am equally pleased that EED had its best safety year ever in 2003: PECO’s performance, measured in lost workdays, was well above industry standards; ComEd saw a dramatic improvement. 2 But we have more to do. Global climate change is a serious issue, one that the utility industry must address. In 2003, Exelon completed its inventory of greenhouse gases in accordance with the protocol developed by the World Resources Institute/World Business Council on Sustainable Development, and added to our carbon-offset projects. We remain active participants in the U.S. EPA Climate Leaders program. We are also working with the National Commission on Energy Policy to ensure that low-carbon alternative fuels, including natural gas, nuclear and sustainable renewables, are available to meet our future energy needs. As you read this report, keep in mind that we aspire to more than minimal environmental and safety compliance. We seek to create a culture of excellence here at Exelon, one that allows us to be the best at everything we do. We fervently believe that keeping our key commitments to the communities we serve, whether through environmental excellence or through our support for diversity, education or the arts, will enable us over time to be the recognized industry leader, delivering extraordinary service to customers, and extraordinary value to our shareholders. Very Truly Yours, John W. Rowe Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Executive Message: Environment, Health and Safety Exelon operates in, and supports, competitive electricity markets at both the wholesale and retail levels. This creates opportunities for us not only to improve the financial performance of the company, but also to improve our environmental, safety, and community performance. We are firmly committed to meeting the requirements of all environmental laws and regulations, and the exacting performance standards that our customers, employees, and shareholders deserve. At the corporate level, environmental issues command the highest levels of executive attention and involvement. We have recently formed, and jointly chair and manage, an Environmental Council that includes executives from every sector of the corporation. In the past two years, we have been laying a foundation for substantial environmental performance improvements, by investing in emission control technology, by clarifying responsibilities and procedures, and by pursuing innovation. For example, we will implement, by year-end 2004, an enterprise-wide Environmental Management System (EMS) that meets ISO 14001 standards. We are verifying our greenhouse gas inventory, and will commit to a reduction goal in 2004, in our commitment to the U.S. EPA Climate Leaders Partnership. We have invested in operational efficiency, such as nuclear and hydroelectric uprates that deliver more power and avoid significant air emissions versus fossil-based alternatives. We have invested more than $73 million in NOx emission control equipment. At one of our nuclear plants we are using recycled mine water for cooling. We continue to support voluntary biodiversity projects that improve our communities and regions. In the following pages, you will see our commitment: our support of environmental groups, our investments in carbon sequestration through planting of trees and prairie grass, and our work on biodiversity – especially in efforts to restore native river fish populations in Pennsylvania and Illinois. While we made progress in the years 2002-2003, our environmental and safety performance results were mixed. We still have a number of specific areas for improvement; for example, opacity issues need further work. Safety is a serious issue. Our goal is absolute: no one gets hurt. Period. In many ways, our record has improved. However, we had three employee fatalities in 2002, which shook us. Our reaction was both immediate and extensive. We analyzed the incidents from every angle and took actions to eliminate potentially hazardous practices and situations. No fatalities occurred in 2003, and we simply must carry this record forward. We are continually assessing safety programs for opportunities to re-invigorate employee involvement in accident prevention, to minimize risk, and to keep our focus on the value of safety in all operations. We are also taking actions to improve the quality of life for the people who live and work in our service territories. We are demonstrating that corporate giving can both serve the community and increase business value. From art exhibits that teach environmental stewardship, to innovative educational programs for inner-city youth, to ensuring the diversity of our workforce and suppliers, we are giving back, in a small way, to the communities in which we operate. Looking forward to 2004, Exelon is setting challenging goals for emissions reduction and efficiency improvements. We are developing a company-wide environmental awareness-training program. We are also looking to improve communication and reporting to our stakeholders. This report is a step in that direction. Elizabeth A. Moler Executive Vice President, Government and Environmental Affairs & Public Policy pictured top to bottom: Elizabeth A. Moler Helen A. Howes Helen A. Howes Vice President, Environment, Health and Safety 3 Environmental Performance: Accomplishments and Goals 2003 Accomplishments Improving internal energy efficiency: Exelon Energy Delivery (EED) exceeded its goal of improving energy efficiency at facilities by 3 percent, achieving a 4 percent reduction. Environmental products and services: EED met its goal of generating $1.6 million in earnings from products and services with environmental benefits – including energy management systems and heat pumps. Governance: Established a corporate Environmental Council of executives who serve as sponsors for environmental initiatives in business units and who address emerging issues. Climate change: Joined U.S. EPA Climate Leaders Partnership to work towards a voluntary commitment to reduce greenhouse gases (GHG). Environmental management: Set goal to establish a corporate-wide environmental management system by the end of 2004, and made substantial progress towards that goal. Updated Exelon’s Environment Policy; reviewed and clarified roles and responsibilities; began assessments of environmental positions and impacts. 4 Renewable energy: Gained regulatory approval to offer a retail wind product in the PECO Energy service territory starting 2004. Agreed to purchase the entire output of the 51 MW Crescent Ridge wind energy project in Illinois. Power Team added 129 MW of wind generation to its portfolio in 2002-2003. Resource management: Collected operating data across the company to set a baseline level for water usage, waste generation, and recycling; developing targets for improvement. 2004 Goals Compliance: Continue to work towards achieving 100 percent compliance with environmental regulations and eliminating preventable spills. Improving internal energy efficiency: Improve energy efficiency of EED facilities by an additional 3 percent; develop a plan to expand energy efficiency program to Exelon Generation in 2004. Environmental products and services: Measure and report revenue generated from existing products. Communications: Improve employee and stakeholder understanding and awareness of Exelon’s environmental performance. Climate change: Develop a GHG goal for EPA Climate Leaders Partnership. Environmental management: Develop a recommendation for ISO certification of environmental management system; establish system by year-end. Renewable energy: Develop a strategy to address renewable resources. Resource management: Develop a water use management plan; generate less than 1,000 kg of hazardous waste per nuclear site per month; investigate establishing more aggressive goals for recycling municipal solid waste streams at EED and Exelon Power – 20 percent and 15 percent, respectively. Stakeholders: Identify opportunities to work with key stakeholders to advance common environmental goals. Environmental Management Taking a management system corporate-wide Integrating environment across the business To improve environmental performance and to more effectively manage environmental risk, Exelon is establishing a corporate-wide environmental management system (EMS). We have designed our EMS to conform to the International Organization for Standardization specification ISO 14001 for environmental management, and plan to have it in place by the end of 2004. Our EMS will improve the efficiency and effectiveness of the environmental management functions and enable continuous performance in four ways: by clarifying environmental expectations and goals; by standardizing the way we manage environmental issues across the business; by creating clear accountability for the environment from the Chairman and CEO down through the organization; and by linking environmental programs more directly with the business planning process. Establishing the Exelon Environmental Council, under the leadership of Betsy Moler, Executive Vice President, Government and Environmental Affairs and Public Policy, is another step we took in 2003 to improve our environmental performance. Senior executives from across the company are involved in the Council and represent: Exelon Public Policy: Elizabeth A. Moler, Exelon Executive Vice President, Government and Environmental Affairs & Public Policy Exelon Power Team: Kenneth W. Cornew, Senior Vice President Exelon Energy Delivery: John T. Costello, Senior Vice President, Customer & Marketing Services Exelon Energy Delivery: Craig L. Adams, Senior Vice President, Support Services Exelon Business Services Company: Edward J. Cullen, Vice President & Deputy General Counsel, Corporate & Commercial Exelon Nuclear: Jeffrey A. Benjamin, Vice President, Licensing & Regulatory Affairs Exelon Congressional Affairs: David C. Brown, Vice President, Congressional Affairs PECO Energy: Lisa Crutchfield, Vice President, Regulatory & External Affairs Exelon Corporate Environment, Health & Safety: Helen A. Howes, Vice President, Environment Health & Safety Exelon Power: Theodore E. Jennings, Vice President, Engineering & Operations Support Exelon Public Policy: R. Scott Brown, Vice President & Director of Policy Development Exelon compliance assessment programs Operating units within Exelon have implemented various types of periodic self-assessment programs, inspections of operations, and behavioral observation programs to assure that continuous improvement is being made in Exelon’s compliance results. Since Exelon was formed in 2000, it has had a corporatewide uniform independent environmental health and safety compliance audit program to provide advice to Exelon management on the status of Exelon’s compliance in these areas throughout the corporation and to identify areas where additional focus is warranted. During the past two years the audit teams, consisting of lawyers, environmental and safety professionals from corporate Environmental Health and Safety, and a team of outside auditors certified by the Environmental Health and Safety Auditor Certification Board, have completed approximately 50 compliance audits at facilities, including nuclear, fossil, energy delivery, thermal, gas distribution, and training and technical centers. 5 6 A air Air | Delivering more clean power: 1,070 MW of nuclear uprates Through uprates and efficiency upgrades to its nuclear fleet during 2002, Exelon added approximately 540 megawatts (MW) of capacity. In fact, since 1999, we have added 1,070 MW through uprates and efficiency projects – enough to serve more than 1 million average residential customers. This added capacity annually avoids more than 9 million tons of carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions to the atmosphere compared to adding the same amount of coal-fired generation. Uprates increase the capability of a nuclear unit by increasing the reactor’s power “rating,” allowing the unit to produce more electricity, safely. All power uprates must be authorized by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), after comprehensive safety analyses and equipment modifications. The goal of our ongoing Uprate and Efficiency Program is to meet growing energy needs safely, while reducing the need to construct new plants – and without increasing air emissions. By the end of 2006, we plan to add an additional 76 MW through uprates. 7 A air Exelon accomplished a great deal in air quality improvement in 2002 and 2003, by reducing nitrogen oxide (NOx) and particulate emissions, and delivering more clean power. We also continued our focus on climate change. In initiatives throughout the company, we demonstrated our commitment to federal air quality standards and our support of federal multi-pollutant legislation for utilities. During the coming decade, we expect additional regulations to require further emission reductions of NOx, SO2, mercury, and possibly CO2. Exelon joined national organizations, like the U.S. EPA’s Climate Leaders Partnership, to develop a corporate greenhouse gas goal. We also made big investments to meet new regulatory requirements, such as $73 million in equipment to reduce NOx emissions. 8 Emissions performance that beats industry averages Generating electricity with fossil fuels produces a range of air emissions and greenhouse gases. As the charts on the right show, our air emissions per unit of energy produced are very low compared to the industry across all major emissions – as measured against the year 2000 U.S. electric utility average (EUA). These air emissions metrics represent all sources of Exelon-owned generation, including our shares of Keystone and Conemaugh, but excluding our share of Sithe Energies, Inc. Nuclear generation constitutes the most of our generating capacity and is the main driver behind Exelon’s low emission rates, as this technology relies on nuclear fission rather than combustion of fossil fuels as its primary energy source to generate electric power. Other contributions come from Exelon Power’s non-emitting Conowingo Hydroelectric Station, which set an all-time generation record in 2003, the use of advanced pollution controls at our fossil-generation plants, and additional generating capacity achieved from Exelon’s nuclear and hydro uprate and efficiency programs. Reducing nitrogen oxide (NOx) emissions During the summer months, NOx emissions from sources such as power plants and automobiles can combine with volatile organic compound (VOC) emissions from other sources to form ground-level ozone. Exelon Power’s fossil units in the northeast have operated since 1999 under the Ozone Transport Commission (OTC) NOx cap and trade program. Starting May 1, 2003, those units began operating under a tighter emission-reduction regime that covers 19 eastern states under a U.S. EPA regional NOx reduction program. In addition, our fossil units in Texas are operating under aggressive state-level NOx reduction programs. In response to such regulation, we have installed NOx controls on some units and adopted other operating practices to reduce NOx emissions. Our NOx emissions declined by 18.0 percent between 2001 and 2002, and further declined 5.8 percent between 2002 and 2003. Reductions were due primarily to new NOx controls used during the summer months. Reduced fossil generation also contributed to the reduction between 2001 and 2002, but not 2002 versus 2003. As the graph to the right reveals, our 2003 NOx emission rate was 92.6 percent lower than the U.S. EUA average. NOx Air Emissions [thousand tons] 19.1 Exelon 2002 18.0 Exelon 2003 NOx Air Emissions Compared to the (EUA) Electric Utility Average* [lbs/MWh - all source] 2.96 EUA 2000 Reducing NOx by installing new control equipment During 2002 and 2003, Exelon Power invested more than $73 million in additional NOx controls at the Eddystone Generating Station in Pennsylvania and the Handley and Mountain Creek Generating Stations in Texas. These controls will play a major continuing role in improving air quality and allowing adequate operation of the Pennsylvania and Texas fleets as our allocation of NOx emission allowances under regulatory programs declines over time. Coal-fired boiler units 1 and 2 at Eddystone were retrofitted with Selective Noncatalytic Reduction (SNCR) technology to augment the existing technology and reduce NOx emissions by an additional 30 percent. Gasfired boiler units 4 and 5 at Handley and unit 8 at Mountain Creek were retrofitted with Selective Catalytic Reduction (SCR) technology, which reduces NOx emissions more than 90 percent. Exelon 2002 0.25 Exelon 2003 0.22 Reducing sulfur dioxide emissions Sulfur dioxide (SO2) emissions contribute to acid rain, regional haze, and fine particulate formation. To reduce SO2 emissions, all three coal-fired units operated by Exelon Power utilize SO2 scrubbers capable of removing up to 90 percent of SO2 emissions. The western Pennsylvania coal-fired Conemaugh Station, operated by Reliant Energy, of which Exelon owns 20.72 percent, is also SO2-scrubbed. The majority of Exelon’s SO2 emissions are associated with its ownership interest (20.99 percent) in the coal-fired Keystone Plant, also operated by Reliant, in western Pennsylvania. Keystone accounts for roughly 60 percent of Exelon’s annual SO2 emissions. Exelon also operates a number of oil-fired units that account for a much smaller share of Exelon’s SO2 emissions. A number of these oil units operate in urban areas and are required by permit to use lower sulfur oil. Exelon’s SO2 emissions declined by 16.4 percent between 2001 and 2002, and increased by 16.7 percent between 2002 and 2003. Reductions between 2001 and 2002 were due primarily to reduced coal-fired power generation. Coal-fired generation in 2003 was more reflective of historic levels. Exelon’s 2003 SO2 emission rate is 88.4 percent lower than the U.S. EUA average. SO2 Air Emissions [thousand tons] 49.0 Exelon 2002 57.2 Exelon 2003 SO2 Air Emissions Compared to the (EUA) Electric Utility Average* [lbs/MWh - all source] 6.04 EUA 2000 Exelon 2002 0.64 Exelon 2003 0.70 CO2 Air Emissions [million tons] 13.9 Exelon 2002 18.5 Exelon 2003 CO2 Air Emissions Compared to the (EUA) Electric Utility Average* [lbs/MWh - all source] 1,392.46 EUA 2000 Exelon 2002 Exelon 2003 181.08 225.90 * National EUA derived from U.S. EPA Emission & Generation Resource Integrated Database, eGRID, version 2.0. “all source” lb/MWh emission rate equals fossil emissions divided by MWh from all sources of generation, including fossil, hydro and nuclear. 9 Exelon Power TRI Reported Total Releases and Offsite Transfers* [million pounds] 5.4 Exelon 2001 4.9 Exelon 2002 *2003 TRI emissions will be compiled and reported to the EPA after the publication date of this report. Reducing Toxic Release Inventory (TRI) Emissions 2001 and 2002 In 1998, the U.S. EPA added electric utilities to the list of industries that must report the annual release and transfer of certain substances. This reporting requirement is listed under Section 313 of the Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act authorized in 1986 by Title III of the Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act. Exelon Power is the only business unit that meets TRI reporting thresholds and is required to submit emissions data to EPA. The above chart summarizes total releases and offsite transfers during 2001 and 2002. TRI emissions declined by 9.3 percent between 2001 and 2002, due primarily to reduced fossil generation. A complete listing of Exelon Power’s TRI emissions by chemical compound, including mercury, is contained in Appendix A. Additional information on the TRI program is available on the U.S. EPA website at http://www.epa.gov. Exelon’s Toxic Release Inventory (TRI) report represents data from Exelon Power facilities required to report, including our shares of the Keystone and Conemaugh plants. 10 Managing greenhouse gas emissions Improving air quality in our vehicle fleets Fossil generation emits several types of greenhouse gases (GHGs), with CO2 representing by far the largest quantity of GHG emitted. Exelon’s CO2 emissions declined by 15.2 percent between 2001 and 2002 due primarily to reduced coal generation. Our CO2 emissions increased by 33.1 percent between 2002 and 2003 due to increased coal-fired generation, and the new Mystic and Fore River combined cycle units that became operational during 2003. Our 2003 CO2 emission rate is 83.8 percent lower than the U.S. EUA average. Since 1991, Exelon has voluntarily undertaken more than 30 projects to reduce GHG emissions. We report these projects to the U.S. Department of Energy 1605(b) program. Our most recent report, for 2002, reported 33 projects with emissions avoidance and offsets of 7.1 million tons of CO2-equivalent. Those projects include 11 renewable projects (wind, solar, and hydro, totaling 191.7 thousand tons), ten nuclear uprates (6.7 million tons), three landfill gas projects (154.7 thousand tons), four sequestration projects (8.5 thousand tons), and five other projects. In 2004, Exelon will assess the impact of recently proposed changes to the 1605(b) program on our prior reporting. In 2003, we joined the U.S. EPA’s Climate Leaders Partnership, and began development of a corporate-wide GHG inventory, climate change strategy, and goal. The ComEd Biodiesel Program Partners for Clean Air has acknowledged ComEd’s participation in the Illinois EPA’s Green Fleet Program. We voluntarily use more than 1.7 million gallons of biodiesel fuel to power about 1,600 ComEd diesel vehicles. This is more than 15 percent of the biodiesel used in the Midwest region and four percent of U.S. consumption. The quantity of biodiesel consumed by ComEd during 2003 cut particulate emissions by 290 tons. PECO Natural Gas Vehicle Program As a natural gas supplier, we are mandated by the Energy Policy Act of 1992 (EPACT) to procure light-duty vehicles capable of burning alternative fuels such as ethanol, propane, and clean-burning compressed natural gas (CNG) – our fuel of choice. We also supply CNG for privately owned vehicles and fleets, through PECO-owned CNG fueling stations and stations owned by fleet operators. In 2003, PECO and its customers’ fleets increased CNG use by more than 10 percent, displacing 250,000 gallons of gasoline and diesel fuel. As a major participant in the Greater Philadelphia Clean Cities program, PECO is often sought out for advice in support of those interested in CNG vehicle procurement and fueling. A air Exelon Notices of Violation (NOV) - Air [number of NOVs] Exelon 2001 3 5 Exelon 2002 Exelon 2003 Radiation dose to the public Improving opacity control Radiation dose to the public from the operation of our nuclear power plants is monitored under U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) regulations and is documented in each site’s Annual Radiological Effluent Release Report and Annual Radiological Environmental Operating Report. Each reactor in the Exelon Nuclear fleet is required to monitor releases through the sampling of air and water discharge points. Each nuclear site has operating procedures and process systems designed to minimize environmental releases of radioactivity to well below site and regulatory allowed quantities, with an emphasis on protecting the health and safety of the general public. To validate the measurement of radioactive releases from the station, each site acquires off-site samples of items such as milk and vegetables from the surrounding communities to analyze for radioactivity. The results of the analyses are incorporated into the annual radiological effluent reports that are public records and are incorporated into the NRC routine inspection process. In 2003, the radiation dose to the public from the operation of Exelon Nuclear power plants was well below any of the established site or regulatory limits. Control of opacity was the subject of an EPA Notice of Non-compliance at the oil-fired Delaware Generating Station units 7 and 8 in 2002. Exelon Power provided EPA with a plan for future hardware equipment installation and management controls. In March 2003, Exelon and EPA entered into a $20,000 Consent Order that accepted our plan for future controls. In 2003, under a Consent Assessment of Civil Penalty with the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection for alleged opacity exceedances at our Cromby and Eddystone Generating Stations in 2002, we paid penalties of $7,000 and $15,000 respectively. The facilities continue to improve the performance of the units to reduce instances where the opacity limitations are exceeded. 3 Measuring Compliance – Notices of Violation (NOVs) Environmental agencies issue a notice of violation (NOV) when a company is believed to have violated a permit condition or regulatory requirement. NOVs can be issued for actual events with direct environmental consequences not allowed by permit or regulation, and for administrative events without direct environmental consequences, such as late reporting. The most significant air NOV received by one of Exelon’s subsidiaries during 2002-2003 related to opacity issues at the Mystic oil-fired units 4, 5, 6, and 7 located in Everett, Ma., during the period June 1998 to March 2003. The Company that owns Mystic was acquired by Exelon in November 2002 and took a number of actions to reduce opacity before receiving an NOV, including investing millions of dollars to upgrade hardware, repair equipment, and revise operating procedures. To resolve the NOV, Exelon’s subsidiary entered into a $3.96 million settlement agreement with the U.S. EPA in December 2003. Also, apart from the agreement, Exelon voluntarily retired Mystic units 4, 5, and 6 in December 2003. Output from these old units has been replaced by new gas-fired combined-cycle generation. 11 12 L land Land | Completing cleanup of a manufactured-gas plant site With the successful completion of remedial activities at the Swedeland Road Substation property, PECO reached a significant milestone in its Manufactured-Gas Plant (MGP) site closure program. From about 1940 to 1972, a former quarry at the nine-acre site in Upper Merion Township, Pa., was used for the disposal of filter media used to remove impurities from manufactured-gas streams. The site was also reportedly used once or twice for the disposal of MGPrelated tank-bottoms and construction debris. From 1964 to the present, PECO has utilized the site as a transformer substation. Our closure of the site under Pennsylvania’s Land Recycling Program, known as Act 2, is part of a cleanup of sites related to manufactured-gas production. The process for the site began in 2001, and we submitted a Remedial Investigation Report (RIR) and Cleanup Plan for the site in June 2002. Remediation activities were completed in 2003. PADEP is currently reviewing a final report on the cleanup of the site. We are now looking at options to lease a portion of the property for a suitable non-residential use – making this Act 2 closure a complete success story. 13 L land During 2002 and 2003, Exelon continued cleanup and environmental remediation at a number of properties that we own or that were owned by predecessor companies. These include 69 former manufactured-gas plant sites used prior to the 1950s to manufacture gas from coal or oil, and a former generating plant, which was cleaned up under a unique partnership to bring new jobs to the City of Chester, Pennsylvania. We made progress in developing more efficient corporate-wide recycling and waste management programs and in reviewing the life-cycle impacts of our purchasing policies. Further, we helped promote biodiversity through projects such as carbon sequestration, in which we joined a number of public/private partnerships to plant trees and prairie grasses. 14 Cleaning up at other manufactured-gas plants Redeveloping the waterfront in Chester, Pennsylvania Exelon’s predecessors included companies that owned and operated manufactured-gas plants (MGPs), used prior to the 1950s to manufacture gas from coal or oil. We are responsible for the investigation and remediation of 69 former MGP sites in Illinois and Pennsylvania. In conjunction with federal, state, and municipal organizations, and other utilities, we are managing these responsibilities through remediation programs begun in the early 1990s. In Illinois, ComEd has completed cleanup of six of 42 sites that have been assessed and prioritized. As of 2003, 22 sites are in active investigation and remediation phases throughout Illinois. In Pennsylvania, PECO Energy has completed cleanup of seven sites of the 27 that have been identified. As of 2003, 10 of the 27 sites are undergoing investigation or remediation. Working with the Illinois EPA, the City of Chicago, and other Illinois utilities, ComEd has helped lead an Electric Power Research Institute study to evaluate polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon levels in urban surface soils. Based on this work, new industry-wide standards were developed to help supplement current regulations for safe, economical MGP site cleanups. PECO Energy is also working to complete a similar study. Exelon forged a partnership with Preferred Real Estate Investments, Inc., to redevelop approximately 90 acres of riverfront property, while creating new jobs in the City of Chester, Pa. We are donating seven acres of the riverfront land to the City of Chester for expansion of the adjacent city park. We will sell 63 acres to Preferred for their “Wharf at Rivertown” project, and we will retain the remaining 20 acres for power generation and related utility activities. This cleanup is being done through Pennsylvania’s Land Recycling Program, known as Act 2, which emphasizes site cleanup consistent with future land use. The site investigation and cleanup has involved an effort among Exelon, the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (PADEP), and the U.S. EPA to expedite site redevelopment while protecting human health and the environment. We completed all remediation requirements under the Buyer-Seller Agreement with PADEP and Preferred by the end of 2003. In addition, we installed a groundwater total interceptor trench along the shoreline on a portion of the site to mitigate any seepage to the Delaware River. Removing PCBs and mercury from the EED system Measuring the value of recycling programs Expanding safe storage for spent nuclear fuel Exelon Energy Delivery’s phase-out plan for equipment containing poly-chlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), instituted more than a decade ago, has moved the company from among the largest users of such equipment to a position of operating only a few pieces. In 2003, we accelerated the process, and removed 911 PCB capacitors from the system. We have now removed or replaced almost all PCB sources, including all known PCB transformers in commercial buildings, all known PCB distribution equipment outside of substations, 65 percent of all PCB capacitors in PECO Energy substations, and 95 percent of all PCB capacitors in ComEd substations. A limited number of PCB transformers and/or capacitors remain in service at several of Exelon’s fossil and nuclear plants. This equipment is monitored and periodically reviewed for replacement or retrofit. PECO Energy’s program to remove all known mercury-containing natural gas regulators from homes and businesses, begun in 1996, has identified and replaced approximately 7,480 mercury regulators. Old regulators are disposed of in accordance with hazardous waste regulations. In this continuing program, PECO replaced 30 more in 2003 and identified a number of other possible locations. Plans are under way to further identify and replace all remaining mercury regulators. For many years, Exelon has maintained recycling programs to collect and reuse a wide range of materials. These programs provide measurable value by reducing waste and waste disposal costs, as well as by the sale of recycled material. As one of the strategic initiatives under the environmental strategy we began to implement in 2002, we formed a team to track the current recycling programs and identify opportunities for additional cost savings through waste minimization. The team’s work led to the establishment of a corporate-level performance goal to increase the recycling of municipal waste and reduce generation of hazardous waste, thereby creating additional cost savings. By year-end 2003, Exelon’s nuclear plants had produced approximately 9,900 tons of spent nuclear fuel during their operating lives. The combined volume of this spent fuel is roughly the size of a large community swimming pool. This waste will eventually be stored in the permanent repository for the nation’s nuclear waste that Congress resolved in 2002 should be constructed at Nevada’s Yucca Mountain. The Department of Energy (DOE) expects it to begin operation in 2010. In the interim, Exelon will continue to safely and securely store high-level waste in water-filled pools and dry storage containers at its plants. We are continuing to expand our storage capacity by constructing state-of-the-art dry storage systems, which can also be used by DOE to transport spent fuel to the national repository when it becomes operational. After public consultation and NRC approval, we constructed and are now operating new dry storage facilities at our Dresden, Peach Bottom, and Oyster Creek nuclear plants. Another facility is planned for completion in 2005 at Quad Cities. Exelon Corporation 2003 Recycled Materials [tons] Recycled Materials Quantity Metals Universal waste Paper Untreated wood Used oil Ash to beneficial use MgSO3 to beneficial use 8,688 687 1,428 817 2,619 175,700 28,800 15 Reusing coal combustion byproducts Exelon is committed to reusing the byproducts of fly ash, bottom ash, basin ash, and fluegas desulfurization products from our fossilgenerating stations. We have used these materials for restoring land contours at coal mine reclamation sites, as anti-skid agents for icy roads, for the production of citrus fertilizer, and as a waste-stabilization medium. In 2001, we reused 176,000 tons of the ash we produced, up from 143,500 tons the year before. We also reused 86 percent of 47,800 tons of flue-gas desulfurization products, which was up substantially from 45 percent in 2000. In 2002, we produced 137,105 tons of ash materials and 21,621 tons of scrubber byproduct. For the first time, for all of 2002, none of these materials were sent to a landfill. During 2003 we generated approximately 175,700 tons of ash materials and 28,800 tons of scrubber byproduct, and for the second consecutive year none of these wastes were disposed of in landfills. Maintaining this progressive trend requires continuous efforts to find the lowest-cost, most environmentally beneficial destinations for these materials. It should be noted that year-to-year variability in quantities of coal combustion byproducts is related primarily to generating unit hours of operation each year. 16 Reducing LLRW and ensuring disposal options Encouraging the right tree in the right place Nuclear utilities have been generating significantly less low-level radioactive waste (LLRW) since the announcement of the closure of the Barnwell, S.C., burial facility in 1994. Current law requires that Barnwell stop accepting waste from LLRW generators outside the Atlantic Compact effective July 1, 2008, and reduces annually the maximum volume accepted. LLRW can include wastes such as used equipment and parts, cleaning materials, and protective clothing, as well as resins generated from demineralizers that remove impurities from water used to cool reactors. Exelon is working to ensure near- and longterm safe and cost-effective LLRW disposal. We established a five-year contract with Barnwell that provides disposal allocation through June 30, 2008. We continue to reduce LLRW volume by eliminating one-time-use consumables, removing packaging material before it enters the plant, and educating and challenging the workforce. As a result, we generate roughly 90 percent less LLRW than in 1985. Exelon in 2003 generated 10 percent less LLRW than in 2002. Additionally, we support legislation that will provide facilities and options for safe, cost-effective LLRW disposal, regulatory initiatives that provide LLRW management flexibility, and interaction with public- and private-sector groups. Exelon maintains about 56,000 miles of overhead electric lines on its distribution system and more than 6,000 miles of rights-of-way. Our vegetation management program uses safe, reliable, and cost-effective methods, including tree trimming, tree removal, and herbicide application. Methods are used according to the standards set by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI), the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), and the International Society of Arboriculture (ISA). PECO maintains clearance over its 12,900 miles of lines on a five-year cycle. ComEd maintains its 43,400 miles of lines on a four-year cycle. Our rights-of-way – through agricultural land, suburban and urban areas, along highways and railroad corridors, prairies, wetlands, and woods – are maintained on a five-year cycle, with comprehensive surveys of conditions every year. We encourage customers to plant “the right tree in the right place,” to help minimize contact with wires. PECO approaches this through the Municipal Tree Restoration Program (MTRP), and supports municipalities by funding the removal and replacement of weakened trees. ComEd’s programs have been recognized with awards from the Illinois Arborist Association and Tree Line USA. L land Exelon Notices of Violation (NOV) - Land* [number of NOVs] 8 Exelon 2002 Exelon 2003 Working in partnerships to restore prairie grass Capturing carbon dioxide emissions with tree plantings Exelon has restored more than 100 acres of natural prairie habitat on buffer lands and rights-of-way in Illinois, since beginning our initiative in 1994. This is helping to sequester CO2, restore wildlife habitat, prevent runoff, and improve water quality in surrounding areas. In 2002 and 2003, restoration work continued on three significant projects. In Lake County, we restored three acres along a transmission line adjacent to a county bike path. In the Village of Buffalo Grove, we organized a controlled prairie burn along transmission right-of-way as part of a maintenance plan that we have coordinated with a local grassroots stewardship group, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Illinois Department of Natural Resources, and the Army Corps of Engineers. And in Will County, we restored eight acres along a transmission right-of-way adjacent to a larger restoration project being completed by the County Forest Preserve District. Ten to 15 additional acres of Exelon’s property have been targeted for possible restoration during 2004. Looking forward, we are continuing a partnership to assist The Nature Conservancy in restoring hundreds of acres of prairie in the Nachusa Grasslands of northwestern Illinois. Approximately 150 acres were planted during 2002-2003. During 2003, Exelon committed to participate in PowerTree Carbon Company, LLC, a new initiative sponsored by 25 U.S. power generators, organized to plant trees in critical habitats in the Lower Mississippi River Valley. Member companies have committed more than $3 million for up to six projects in Louisiana, Mississippi, and Arkansas. These projects will remove from the atmosphere and store more than 2 million tons of carbon dioxide (CO2) over their projected 100-year lifetimes. Exelon will be entitled to claim approximately 3 percent of the sequestered CO2. Benefits to the environment beyond carbon sequestration will also be realized, including restoration of habitat for birds and other wildlife, reduction of fertilizer inputs to water bodies, and increased stabilization of soil. Several projects will involve the purchase of land that will be donated to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Other projects involve easements for tree planting on private land. PowerTree Carbon Company is part of a voluntary industry-wide effort to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions in response to the Bush Administration’s “Climate VISION” plan. This initiative will also help advance the knowledge base and science behind carbon sequestration as a greenhouse gas mitigation option. 2 *Land NOVs were added to Exelon’s corporate performance metrics in 2002. Measuring compliance – Notices of Violation (NOVs) Exelon is committed to operating in compliance with state and federal environmental laws and regulations and its environmental permits. NOVs are one of a number of environmental performance metrics tracked and reported to Exelon Management on a regular basis. All NOVs are assessed and corrective action is taken to prevent future incidents. “Land NOVs” were added to Exelon’s corporate performance metrics in 2002. More than half of the eight land NOVs that occurred in 2002 were related to underground storage tank (UST) management deficiencies. As a result of the increased focus and attention, Exelon received only two land NOVs in 2003, neither of which were related to UST management issues. 17 18 W water Water | Helping to restore a declining fish population Exelon Generation operates fish lifts at its Conowingo Hydroelectric Station in a continuing effort to restore American shad (Alosa sapidissima) and other migratory fish to the Susquehanna River. Conowingo’s East lift has operated since 1991; the West, since 1972. In 2003, the third largest number of American shad ever passed through the East Lift, allowing them to continue their upriver migratory swim for spawning. An additional 9,802 were lifted at the West lift for tank spawning, transportation to hatcheries, and biological study. The year-to-year variability in the number of shad passing the dam is due primarily to environmental factors such as ocean conditions, river flow and water temperature during the spring migration period. In addition to the lifts at Conowingo, fishways have now been completed at upriver dams to assist in the effort to restore the shad and other migratory fish. 19 W water Water is a critical resource at Exelon, because of our need for large volumes to cool our nuclear and fossil plants and to generate electricity at our Conowingo and Muddy Run hydroelectric facilities. In 2003, Exelon developed a company-wide water use inventory that will be used to establish a Water Use Management Plan in 2004. The majority of the more than 400 million gallons of water consumed per day is used for power plant cooling, with the remainder to support our other operations. Our daily consumption is roughly equivalent to the municipal water needs of 2.5 million people. Also during 2003, we improved the operational efficiency at one of our nuclear plants through an innovative, beneficial use of water resources. On the biodiversity front, we have been making progress on several projects to restore native fish species to rivers and tributaries in Illinois and Pennsylvania. We have also decreased our National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit noncompliances through self-assessments and enhanced tracking systems. 20 Augmenting the Schuylkill River flow with mine water Cooling water optimization team develops impact reduction plans In 2003, the Delaware River Basin Commission (DRBC) approved an innovative demonstration project by Exelon Generation to use mine-pool water to augment the flow of the Schuylkill River and increase the time that the Limerick Generating Station may consume cooling water from the river. Using more Schuylkill River water allows us to divert less from the Delaware River via the Point Pleasant Pumping Station, and provides an environmental benefit to the Schuylkill by increasing water flow during the summer months. The project is running over two pumping seasons. The first began in July 2003 and was completed in October, resulting in net cost savings (related to lower pumping costs), even after accounting for project development. A DRBC-approved operating and monitoring plan was in place to govern the demonstration and verify that no environmental harm was being caused. If the second pumping season in 2004 succeeds as anticipated, we plan to apply to the DRBC for permanent approval of the use of the Wadesville Mine pool, located in Schuylkill County, Pa., as a water source. In addition, we will work to identify additional mine-water sources, and water treatment needs, for possible use in meeting additional seasonal plant coolingwater demand. In order to better anticipate and manage summer cooling-water thermal demands, Exelon’s Thermal Performance engineers and environmental specialists from our midwestern nuclear plants and their corporate counterparts established a Cooling Water Optimization High Impact Team. The team identified short- and long-term options to optimize thermal performance of our cooling-water bodies during extreme heat conditions. Options include dredging, cleaning condensers, priming/venting water boxes, and adding or relocating remote temperature sensors. Based on studies of ultimate heat sink temperatures, cooling-lake travel times, lake temperature stratification, infrared thermography, aquatic heat tolerance, and lake and stream bathymetry, each site developed an Extreme Heat Implementation Plan (EHIP) to guide cooling-water management efforts in summer. The EHIPs include NPDES discharge permit conditions, temperature sensor locations, operating strategies, and extreme heat contingency activities. Weather conditions and weather forecasts are monitored to predict cooling-system temperature conditions. Throughout the summer, coolingsystem performance is monitored on a daily basis, and thermal modeling is used to predict future cooling-system conditions. Increasing the shad population in the Susquehanna River As the chart shows, the shad are returning in higher numbers in recent years. The 2003 catch and passage from both lifts brought to more than 1 million (1,095,298) the total number of shad that have been transported upriver since 1972. American Shad Resoration at Conowingo 204,514 Shad 2001 117,348 Shad 2002 Exceeding goals at the Quad Cities fish hatchery Notices of Violation and NPDES Permit Noncompliances With more than a quarter-million walleye fingerlings produced, 2003 was the fifth highest production year ever for the hatchery project at Exelon’s Quad Cities nuclear plant. This is a unique project – the only private fish hatchery on the Mississippi River – initiated in 1984 to reduce the impact on the fish population of the plant’s open-cycle cooling system, during which water is withdrawn from, and returned directly to, the river. The abandoned spray canal at the plant was converted for use as a hatchery, and the plant’s cooling-water discharge stream is used to maintain favorable aquatic conditions. Southern Illinois University (SIU) operates the hatchery under a research grant from Exelon to optimize its fish-breeding potential. Like raising plants, raising fingerlings is no simple matter. It takes several months for the fish to reach the proper size for release, and the important factors are natural influences often outside of human control, such as weather and algae growth. The annual goal is 175,000 walleye fingerlings – enough to stock the Mississippi, according to projections by the Illinois and Iowa natural resource agencies. The project has been a huge success, exceeding its annual target eight times since 1984, and in three of the last four years. NPDES Permit Noncompliances: The National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit program controls water pollution by regulating point sources that discharge pollutants into U.S. waters. NPDES permits typically specify an acceptable level of a pollutant in a discharge (for example, a certain level of solids). Exelon’s NPDES permit noncompliances declined from 27 in 2001 to 24 in 2002 and 15 in 2003. The decline in noncompliance is attributable to NPDES program self-assessments conducted at Exelon Generation’s plants, and increased tracking of requirements and results by the facilities. The majority of permit noncompliances in 2003 were caused by short-term equipment problems. Notices of Violation (NOVs): Exelon received two water-related NOVs during 2001, one during 2002, and two during 2003. In 2002, a subsidiary of Exelon received an administrative order and notice of civil administrative penalty assessment for an NPDES violation which resulted in the loss of several thousand fish. We are committed to operating in compliance with environmental laws and regulations and our environmental permits, so we track and assess each NOV and take corrective action to prevent future incidents. 134,937 Shad 2003 Walleye and Hybrid Striped Bass Fingerling Production at Quad Cities Station 210,677 Walleye 2001 Striped Bass 2001 6,910 47,062 Walleye 2002 Striped Bass 2002 6,374 256,567 Walleye 2003 Striped Bass 2003 10,214 Exelon Permit Noncompliances - Water [number of noncompliances] 27 Exelon 2001 24 Exelon 2002 15 Exelon 2003 Exelon Notices of Violation (NOV) - Water [number of NOVs] 2 Exelon 2001 Exelon 2002 Exelon 2003 1 2 21 22 S safety Safety | PECO Energy recognized for employee safety performance During 2002, PECO Energy accepted two prestigious awards for employee safety performance – the Governor’s Award for Safety Excellence, presented by the Pennsylvania Department of Labor and Industry, and, for the second year in a row, a Safety Achievement Award presented by the Energy Association of Pennsylvania, which represents Pennsylvania’s electric and natural gas utilities. Nationwide, PECO’s safety performance ranks in the top tenth percentile of utilities. Even so,“No One Gets Hurt” remains PECO’s safety vision and performance goal. Between 2002 and 2003, PECO Energy has reduced the number of lost workday incidents (employee injuries that result in lost workdays) by 33 percent and reduced total recordable injuries and illnesses by 20 percent. 23 S safety Despite our emphasis on employee and public safety, there were three worker fatalities during 2002. Our responses to these tragedies led to learning experiences that are shared across the company. We are pleased that no worker fatalities occurred in 2003. We are working to continually improve our safety performance. Our only goal is a perfect record – “No One Gets Hurt.” That means we set goals and measure our performance, and that, in the event of an incident, we take immediate and appropriate action to heighten safety awareness and prevent further occurrences. We are serious about training our employees and are open in sharing our experience, expertise, and facilities with other industries and our communities. Exelon Safety Performance [OSHA Recordable Incidence Rate - incidents per 100 employees] 3.59 Exelon 2001 2.72 Exelon 2002 Exelon 2003 1.76 Edison Electric Institute 2.41 2002 1st Quartile 24 Measurable improvement in OSHA Recordable Incident Rate Each Exelon business unit has implemented initiatives to improve the safety of the workplace and eliminate injuries and illnesses. The success of these efforts is reflected in a reduction in our Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) Recordable Incidence Rate – the number, per 100 employees, of workrelated injuries and illnesses that require more than first-aid treatment. As shown in the adjacent graph, Exelon’s OSHA Recordable Incidence Rate fell from 3.59 in 2001 to 1.76 in 2003, a 51 percent improvement. Exelon Services continued its trend of improved safety performance in 2003, achieving all-time-low incident and lost-time rates. Exelon Nuclear maintained 2002-2003 injury and illness rates at or below industry average. Exelon Nuclear management is now implementing a program based on the fundamentals of safety performance. We anticipate that this program, along with other strategies, will help drive continuous safety improvement. Safety performance in Exelon Power began to decline in 2003, but management was alert to it and began corrective actions in the third quarter of 2003. By revising safety programs and implementing enhanced observation programs, Exelon Power began to improve safety behaviors and restore its performance to first-quartile levels. Taking action to work safer Exelon Energy Delivery (EED) companies ComEd and PECO Energy have reduced workrelated injuries and illnesses while increasing their efforts to integrate and standardize their safety programs and expectations. Programs designed to actively involve each employee in injury and illness prevention are adding to the success. During 2003, more than 800 EED employees and managers were trained in methods to promote safety under the Behavioral Accident Prevention Process (BAPP) and the “Sponsorship to Action” program. BAPP involves employees in coaching one another to perform safely. In the process, safe work practices and behaviors are identified, communicated, and then measured. The result is more employees working safely. Employees in EED understand their responsibility for safety, yet translating responsibility to action is sometimes difficult. The “Sponsorship to Action” program is an innovative approach that helps supervisors and managers promote workplace safety by describing key steps they can take. EED also maximizes employee involvement in safety management through safety committees, councils, and corrective-action teams. Hundreds of committees and councils are held each year to communicate safety issues and best practices, and to correct programmatic deficiencies. Providing training in fire safety Sharing training to save lives In 2002 and 2003, Exelon continued the practice of fire-safety training at the PECO Fire Academy, making PECO Energy’s operations, Exelon Power’s mid-Atlantic generating stations, and the five-county Philadelphia region safer places. At the Academy, PECO trains and certifies employees in firefighting, emergency first aid, and CPR. In firefighting, the Academy uses a computer-controlled, natural-gas-fired simulator to teach “technique-based” firefighting. The simulator maintains the fire until the firefighters apply the proper techniques. Training in first aid and CPR is offered to Exelon employees at offices and facilities throughout the region. It is training that has great value in their workplaces – and in their own families and organizations. In support of community safety, the Academy offers its full range of courses to area fire companies and emergency response teams. In fact, nearly every fire company in the Philadelphia region has trained at the Academy, and most return regularly to maintain certifications. The National Association for Search and Rescue, Inc. (NASAR) states that more than 60 percent of the fatalities in confined-space operations are “rescuers.” That means training and regular drills are extremely important. The team at Exelon Power’s Eddystone generating station drills constantly, and can handle anything from fire suppression, to emergency medical services, to dealing with hazardous materials releases. Confined-space rescue drills, held on the Eddystone plant site, now include members of the Collingdale Fire Company – who often partner with Eddystone employees at the “rescue scene.” Collingdale Fire Company is the only fire company in Delaware County, Pa., certified to perform confined-space rescues. Participating in drills with Exelon Power’s Eddystone Generating Station’s Plant Protection Group, such as occurred in 2003, is the reason. As the general manager of Eddystone Station puts it, “We’re pleased to have the ability to share the vast experience and knowledge of our Plant Protection Group with the local community. If the training helps save one life, it is worth every minute.” Ensuring life-saving communication for river rescues The safest and most effective way for teams to communicate while working on a river rescue is by handheld radios – all on the same frequency. But when the teams are responding from different communities, that’s not often the case. In 2003, Exelon Power made it a reality for the three rescue organizations that respond to emergency rescues up and downstream from the Black Rock Dam, owned by our Cromby Generating Station, on the Schuylkill River. The Cromby Station donated $20,000 to the Mont Clare Fire Department in Phoenixville, Pa., to purchase a communications system that will be shared with Spring-Ford Rescue and Friendship Dive. These three volunteer organizations will now be able to coordinate more easily. The chief of the Mont Clare Fire Department noted, “During emergency responses along the river, we sometimes have numerous boats searching, from different companies. This new equipment will help tie all of the emergency personnel together to ensure we can perform quickly and safely during rescue situations.” 25 26 C community Community | Partnering to protect and promote biodiversity During 2003, Exelon established a substantial partnership with The Nature Conservancy (TNC) to fund the protection and promotion of biodiversity in Illinois and Pennsylvania. Specifically, TNC will use Exelon’s contribution to support the Emiquon Project in Illinois and the West Branch Wilderness Project in Pennsylvania. At Emiquon, Exelon’s funding will help restore a portion of the 7,775 acres of floodplain and bluffs along the Illinois River that was purchased by TNC in 2000. For the West Branch Wilderness, TNC will acquire 3,000 acres of forest in North Central Pennsylvania with Exelon’s funding. Two Exceptional Value freshwater streams cross or originate on that land, and ultimately provide freshwater to the Susquehanna River, a significant contributor to the Chesapeake Bay watershed. Our partnership with TNC will also provide multiple volunteer and educational opportunities to company employees across the PECO Energy and ComEd service territories. 27 C community Exelon’s corporate citizenship strategy is designed to Funding education programs Focusing on the environment improve the quality of life for the people who live Exelon and our employees support programs for children and adults that encourage students to stay in school, promote math and science, improve workforce skills, and encourage personal development. Each year, the “ComEd 100” program honors students in the 7th through 12th grades who proficiently apply scientific principles in their scholastic endeavors. Students apply for the award and may nominate a parent, mentor or educator who worked with them for an Illuminators Award. Also, in our partnership with the Chicago Park District to promote environmental and energy awareness, we endow the Exelon Fellow, a Chicago Public School teacher who helps connect the parks, the curriculum, and the schools. PECO has long supported the Philadelphia Academies, a non-profit organization dedicated to strengthening the skills of the city’s public school students. ComEd supports the Black Star Project motivation program for Chicago students interested in math, science or engineering careers. ComEd has also established a partnership with the Young Women’s Leadership Charter School, which focuses on math and science. Across the company, our program to match employees’ contributions to accredited schools (up to $1,000 per calendar year) provided more than $240,000 in gifts last year. With a mission to improve the quality of the environment, Exelon supports programs that promote environmental education, conservation, and preservation, as well as programs that directly help develop cleaner sources of energy, protect endangered species, and beautify neighborhoods. Here are some examples: We were the presenting sponsor of the Chicago exhibition in 2002 of Earth from Above, 120 breathtaking prints of the planet’s surface by the world-renowned aerial photographer Yann Arthus-Bertrand. A powerful environmental educational tool, the exhibit awed and delighted more than 1.5 million visitors. We are a long-term supporter of the Schuylkill Center for Environmental Education, a Philadelphia-area project that provides habitat for wildlife as well as wildlife and conservation education programs for students and the community. PECO was the lead corporate partner in the Center’s recent Discovery Center project to expand its educational facilities. and work in our service territories, while enhancing our reputation as a corporate citizen. We understand that corporate giving can simultaneously serve the community and increase business value. Our strategy is linked to our Vision and Strategic Goal of “Living up to our commitments.” We believe that our commitment to the communities in which we do business, as well as to our customers, shareholders, and employees, are hallmarks of the company. For that reason, we target our contributions, sponsorships, memberships, employee volunteerism, executive involvement, and in-kind donations on four key areas: education, environment, arts and culture, and community and neighborhood development. And we do this all while reinforcing our core values of diversity and safety. 28 Contributing to arts and culture By supporting the arts in our communities, we make experiences available that not only enrich the lives of individuals, but also enrich the communities by helping to attract new businesses, retain a talented work force, and promote tourism. Our support of both worldrenowned groups and local artists and organizations with world-class talent aims to make valuable programs available and accessible to an ever-growing and more diverse audience. For example, the “PECO Power Hour” supports the Philadelphia Orchestra’s rush ticket program, making 100 tickets available at each concert for just $10 each. Exelon and ComEd are major sponsors of the Joffrey Ballet of Chicago. We sponsored a major exhibition in 2002 at the Field Museum in Chicago, Cleopatra of Egypt: from History to Myth, which included more than 350 objects on loan from the British Museum and museums in Alexandria, Cairo, Rome, the Vatican, and more. In 2003, PECO sponsored the Marian Anderson Awards in Philadelphia, which honored Oprah Winfrey for her artistic and humanitarian accomplishments. Chairman John Rowe participated in the tribute event, which raised funds for scholarships and career development for young artists. Enhancing community and neighborhood development Reflecting the diversity of the communities we serve By helping diverse communities in our service area to develop and thrive, Exelon benefits as well. We are able to attract and maintain a rich and varied workforce that brings us innovation and dedication, and helps us anticipate the needs of our customers. Each year, we offer support to a wide range of organizations and programs. In 2003, our executives led fundraising efforts in Chicago for the Spanish Coalition for Jobs, to enhance job training and education programs for Latino youth and young adults. PECO’s support of the Greater Philadelphia Urban Affairs Coalition helps build the capacity of grassroots organizations to provide educational and economic opportunities in disadvantaged communities. ComEd, for several years, has sponsored the Anti-Defamation League’s Unity Through Diversity Conference, which gathers more than 1,000 Chicago high school students, who discuss ways to combat prejudice, bigotry, and discrimination, and return to their schools and neighborhoods with hands-on ideas to promote tolerance and respect. Exelon Corporation is among the leading supporters of United Way. The company’s corporate gift was $2 million in 2003. In addition to the corporate gift, Exelon employees raised almost $3 million for United Way. Exelon’s vision for diversity is to be recognized as one of the most admired companies because of the passion for diversity and inclusiveness we demonstrate in all our business relationships. Assisted by our Corporate Diversity Office and Diversity Council, we have been implementing strategies that focus on diversity in our workforce, among our suppliers, in our civic and social commitments, and in the area of education and support. Examples of diversity initiatives include: linking compensation of key managers and executives to diversity goals; providing domestic partnership benefits to all employees; ensuring strong support for Employee Network Groups – voluntary groups representing minority communities; and diversity education and training programs. Recent awards and recognition of the company and CEO John Rowe reveal our success. The 2002 Citizen of the Year award from the City Club of Chicago cited Exelon as one of Chicago’s most philanthropic and civically active corporations. El Valor Corporation’s 2003 Corporate Visionary Award is for a corporate leader who opens doors of opportunity for all people. Profiles in Diversity Journal, September 2003, featured John Rowe as one of corporate America’s ten most powerful diversity champions. 29 30 Building more diverse supplier relationships Funding sustainable energy development in Pennsylvania Raising more than $300,000 for charity in two golf events We believe that we will build a competitive advantage from the energy and value that diverse employees and suppliers will bring us. Supporting a diverse supplier base keeps us connected to our customers and helps us meet our social responsibility to give back to the communities from which we draw our income. Further, we need creative thought and ideas to help us drive costs out of the supply chain, and employees and suppliers with different backgrounds, experiences, and perspectives are enormously helpful. We are committed to supporting supplier diversity now and in the future. Our goal is to help Minority and Women-Owned Businesses (MWBEs) develop and grow to create opportunities for interaction between major contractors and MWBEs, with a focus on sponsorship and mentoring relationships. We also understand the challenges that emerging MWBEs face in supplying our company across our different geographic regions and in meeting challenging engineering requirements. To help ensure participation by MWBEs, we are helping many of our primary suppliers to secure diverse “second-tier” suppliers as a means to achieve our diversity goals. During 2003, more than 7 percent of Exelon’s supplier expenditures went to MWBE companies. As part of PECO Energy’s electric utility restructuring proceeding before the Pennsylvania Public Utilities Commission, a sustainable development fund (SDF) was created in 1998 to support a more sustainable energy future in the state. Additional money was contributed to the fund in 2000, with the merger of PECO and Unicom to form Exelon. The fund is administered by The Reinvestment Fund (www.trfund.com), based in Philadelphia. In 2002 and 2003, the SDF has helped finance four Pennsylvania wind energy projects totaling 159.5 MW, with wind power production incentive agreements totaling $10 million. A solar photovoltaic (PV) grant program has approved 52 system applications for a total of 195.8 kW. So far, 33 systems have been installed, for 120.5 kW. Other initiatives supported by the SDF include co-marketing an energy performance contract-financing product through energy service companies that assist customers in becoming more energy-efficient, and investing in lightingcontrol and fuel-cell technologies. Annual golf events sponsored by Exelon Generation at Hartefield National Golf Course in Avondale, Pa., just south of Exelon Generation’s headquarters in Kennett Square, delivered big checks to worthwhile national and local causes in 2003. The third annual Exelon Generation Charity Golf Tournament benefited the ALS Hope Foundation, a not-for-profit public charity that provides hope and support to those impacted by Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), commonly known as Lou Gehrig’s disease. Players and volunteers raised $201,000 through corporate hole sponsorships, individual hole sponsorships, individual contributions, a silent auction, and a raffle. The fifth annual Exelon Invitational Golf Tournament, hosted by Exelon-sponsored golfer Jim Furyk, has seen many of the big names from the Professional Golf Association (PGA) each year, and draws a good crowd – more than 8,500 in 2003. The tournament is preceded by one of the PGA season’s most exclusive entertainment and networking events, the Gala on the Green. A centerpiece of the Gala is a live and silent auction for the benefit of the Boys and Girls Clubs of Philadelphia and Harrisburg, which helped raise more than $100,000. Supporting two Chicago charities with one golf outing Providing insight through youth internships Teaching and learning about the workday world Two Chicago charities were the big winners at Exelon Generation’s 2003 Charity Golf Outing at Harborside International Golf Club in Chicago. The Association for Individual Development and The Big Shoulders Fund will share more than $315,000 raised from corporate and individual hole sponsorships, individual contributions, an auction, and a raffle. The Association for Individual Development is a private, not-for-profit organization for children and adults with disabilities and mental health problems. The Association annually helps more than 2,000 people become more independent by providing education, training, therapy, counseling, and other support in a range of vocational, therapeutic, and community living settings. The Big Shoulders Fund was established by former ComEd chairman James O’Connor to provide operating support and scholarships to 121 Catholic elementary and high schools in inner-city Chicago. Approximately 40,000 students attend these schools, with about two-thirds from families with incomes below the poverty level. In 2001, 2002, and 2003, six inner-city high school students got a six-week taste of the business world through an internship program with Exelon’s Power Team. The students, from the Granville Academy in Trenton, N.J., each paired up with Power Team mentors to accumulate real understanding and experience in a different facet of Power Team’s day-to-day operations. At the end of their internships, each student gave a presentation on what they had seen and learned, impressing parents, family members, Power Team employees, and Granville Academy officials with their very real understanding of sophisticated business practices. Presentations covered such topics as the ins and outs of building long-term power contracts, the relationship between transmission, generation, and load, and the demands of information technology management at a complex operation such as Power Team. Granville Academy was founded by the Rev. William Granville, Jr., who rose from a disadvantaged youth in inner-city Trenton to become a successful Mobil Oil Company executive. Now a chain of 12 schools on the East Coast, the Academy works to develop internship opportunities with top-tier companies. Each year, Exelon Generation hosts a Take Your Child to Work Day event. In 2003, they took the work part seriously. Instead of listening to speeches and pocketing giveaways, more than 65 children of Exelon employees at the Kennett Square headquarters spent the day getting hands-on experience in marketing, career development, meteorology, law, and finance. Two age groups participated in teambuilding exercises. The younger group had to develop a product idea or a company name, decide what the product would be called, and design and produce T-shirts featuring the name and logo. The older group learned how to prepare a résumé and act appropriately in an interview, role-played issues of work-life balance, or interviewed Power Team employees about their careers. All the children toured the Power Team trading floor to get a better idea of how their parents’ jobs connect to the power marketing function. As one tour leader explained, “If their parents work with the generating stations, you say ‘We find companies who want to buy electricity from the station,’ and the kids get it.” 31 32 Promoting cleaner transportation Supporting the World Series of Birding In 2003, its tenth year of supporting improved local air quality by promoting cleaner transportation, PECO Energy has assumed chairmanship of the Clean Cities Program. Sponsored nationally by the Department of Energy (DOE), this program exists to promote deployment of light-duty alternative fuel vehicles pursuant to the 1992 federal Energy Policy Act (EPACT) purchase requirements for commercial vehicle fleets. The program made significant progress in 2003 by securing grant funds to implement a program at the Philadelphia International Airport. The airport is now developing a long-term ground transportation strategy to use natural-gas transit buses on the passenger side. On the flight side, the airport will be evaluating electric support equipment, such as ground-power units, service trucks, pushback tractors, and baggage handlers. Clean Cities also secured grants to assist Lower Merion School District, the Abington Art Center, Bryn Mawr College, and Schwan’s Foods. The “World Series of Birding” is an annual event in New Jersey, sponsored by the New Jersey Audubon Society. It attracts teams of birders from all over the world, who raise money for their favorite conservation causes while they also raise awareness of our precious habitats and the needs of migrating birds. In 2003, Exelon sponsored two teams in the 20th Anniversary World Series of Birding – Amergen Oyster Creek’s Oyster Crackers and the Birding Club of Delaware County’s Exelon Cape Island Coyotes. Our sponsorship supports the event itself, while the teams solicit pledges for the conservation cause of their choice. Pledges are calculated “by the bird,” based on the team’s final count. The Oyster Creek team was comprised of employees who did their birding on company property to demonstrate that we not only support, but also provide habitat for, birds. The Exelon Cape Island Coyotes team used its pledges to support an education grant fund that promotes the study of the environment and conservation. Promoting small-source emission reductions In recent years, regulatory programs have dramatically reduced emissions from industry. Now, small sources represent a larger percentage of local emissions that must be reduced if ozone nonattainment areas are to meet air-quality standards. One voluntary community initiative to educate the public about actions they can take to help reduce emissions is the “Clean Mower Rebate Program” (CMRP) that Exelon Power has sponsored with the Pennsylvania Resources Council (PRC) and Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (PADEP) since 1998. We received a 2002 Pennsylvania Governor’s Award for Environmental Excellence for sponsoring this program. Under the CMRP, PECO Energy service area residents register with the PRC to retire gasoline lawn equipment at one of several springtime event locations, in exchange for a rebate towards the purchase of a new electric model. More than 1,000 gasoline lawnmowers and 100 string trimmers have been retired since 1998, including 286 mowers in 20022003. Mowers replaced under the CMRP are estimated to net a one-ton-per-day reduction of hydrocarbons, carbon monoxide, particulate matter and NOx. C community Watching falcons return to nest at Three Mile Island Building more ladders for shad on the Schuylkill River For a pair of nesting Peregrine falcons, there’s no place like dome – the domed containment building at Three Mile Island, where the pair and their chicks reside. In 2003, the pair produced offspring for the second consecutive year, thrilling state ornithologists who initially thought the pair would move their nest before producing chicks. Three Mile Island, which is in the Susquehanna River, is an excellent location for the falcons, because the river is a flyway for many migrating birds – providing excellent hunting to feed the falcons and their young. Peregrine falcons are an endangered species in Pennsylvania. There are only about a dozen known nesting pairs in the state. In the early part of the 20th century, Pennsylvania boasted some 350 nesting pairs, but the birds were decimated by the use of pesticides – particularly DDT. No nests were reported in the state from the end of the 1950s to 1987, but as evidenced at TMI, reintroduction efforts over the past 15 years are having an effect at last. The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (PADEP) has targeted the Schuylkill River as a river system where the restoration of a self-sustaining population of migratory fish, particularly the American shad, may be feasible. To help restore the American shad population, Exelon Generation is building fishways at the Schuylkill’s Norristown and Black Rock dams. Prior to reaching the Norristown and Black Rock Dams, shad must pass three downriver dams not owned by Exelon. PADEP has approved Exelon Generation’s request to utilize a type of fishway that can accommodate large numbers of American shad and river herrings. It will be many years before the estimated 25,000 American shad per-day capacity of this ladder is exceeded. In fact, the ladder will fully accommodate the low end of the range of the goal set for a fully restored population – an annual run of American shad in the range of 250,000 to 750,000. For more information on American shad, visit the Pennsylvania Fish & Boat Commission website: www.fish.state.pa.us/ 33 34 E economics Economics | Trading drives increased coordination of functions What do the environmental folks at Exelon Power have to do with the electricity traders on the Power Team Trade Floor? More all the time. In recent years, federal and state environmental regulations have been implemented to reduce sulfur dioxide (SO2) and nitrogen oxide (NOx) emissions from the utility sector. Instead of dictating the exact actions that affected electric generators must take to comply, these regulatory programs allow electric utilities to buy and sell emission allowances to meet their compliance obligations. This regulatory shift, combined with the deregulation of energy markets in Pennsylvania and Illinois, has necessitated a greater integration of thinking across the environmental and trading functional areas within Exelon Generation to determine the most cost-efficient combination of actions – installing technology and emission allowance trading – for Exelon to meet its compliance obligations. 35 E economics As noted in the financial data provided earlier in this report, 2003 was a challenging but financially rewarding year for Exelon. Our share price closed 2003 at $66.36, up from the previous two years. Some of Exelon’s environmental actions in both the product and service areas helped create economic benefits for the company, shareholders, and our communities in 2002 and 2003. On the product side, Power Team participated actively in the renewable energy credit (REC) market. PECO Energy gained regulatory approval to offer a retail wind product in southeastern Pennsylvania starting in 2004. ComEd continued its wholesale renewable energy certificate program and expanded its REC portfolio by agreeing to buy the output from the Crescent Ridge Wind Project in Illinois. In total, Exelon had agreements to purchase electricity and/or RECs from more than 350 MW of renewables during 2003. On the services side, Exelon Energy Delivery continued to work with customers on energy efficiency and peak energy demand reduction projects. 36 Adding wind to ComEd’s renewable energy portfolio Continuing to promote renewable energy markets ComEd’s renewable energy portfolio has been based on solar energy and generation fueled by landfill gas. During 2004, we expect to add wind to the mix. ComEd purchases power generated from landfill gas at two sites in Chicago and at 19 sites across Northern Illinois. This process converts the byproduct of the decomposition of landfill waste – methane – into a valuable energy resource. Over the past three years, our solar portfolio has grown to represent almost 90 percent of the photovoltaic (PV) capacity in the state, helping Illinois rank fifth among states in installed solar PV capacity, according to National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) statistics. We have helped install more than 900 kW of solar arrays on many Chicago buildings, including schools, museums, and on our company facilities – with more on the way. In our latest initiative, we are helping Illinois Wind Energy and Tomen Power Corporation develop their Crescent Ridge wind energy project, one of the first commercial scale wind farms in Illinois, which will be located about 110 miles west of Chicago in Bureau County. We have agreed to purchase the entire output of the 51 MW facility – enough renewable energy to power approximately 20,000 homes. ComEd continued to support renewable energy over the past two years through its wholesale renewable energy certificate program. The program was developed in 2000 under a marketing agreement with the Environmental Resources Trust. The program expanded in 2003 to include Community Energy Inc., a leading marketer of wind certificates. The City of St. Charles recently became the first municipal utility in Illinois to offer a green power program to its customers. ComEd will be supplying St. Charles with renewable energy certificates, including wind certificates from the Crescent Ridge wind project. Community Energy will assist St. Charles in marketing the program. Selling wind energy in Pennsylvania In 2001, the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission (PUC) approved a Wind Energy Service Rider for PECO Energy. A competitor appealed the approval, however, delaying implementation of a program. In the third quarter of 2003, PECO won the appeal and began preparing an offering for 2004. PECO currently anticipates that it will begin selling Pennsylvania New Wind Energy to large customers in early 2004, and to all customers in mid-2004. PECO Energy is partnering with Community Energy of Wayne, Pa., to offer Pennsylvania New Wind Energy to its retail customers. Pennsylvania New Wind Energy is available to all PECO customers who are not being served by another electric generation supplier. Customers may elect to purchase wind energy either for their entire electric load or in increments of 100 kilowatt-hour blocks up to 100 percent of their total load. All wind energy sold under this offering will be generated by wind farms in Pennsylvania. Our Wind Generation Portfolio Project Name Installed MW Waymart 63 Mountaineer Average Annual Capacity Factor Commercial Operation Date Owner* Location 32% FPL Energy Near Scranton, PA October 2003 66 32% FPL Energy Near Thomas, WV December 2002 Mill Run 15 29% FPL Energy Near Pittsburgh, PA December 2001 Somerset 9 30% FPL Energy In Somerset, PA December 2001 *FPL Energy purchased all of the projects from project developers. Exelon Generation has long-term power purchase agreements (PPAs) in place with four wind generation projects, for a total wind capacity of 153 MW. The original rationale for our wind PPAs was that the primary demand would be for Renewable Energy Credits (RECs) associated with the products, and that sales would be through competitive retail suppliers and, with the approval of a wind block rider, through PECO. We also expected increased demand due to New Jersey’s renewable portfolio standards law. As the market has developed over time, however, retail choice has not been a growing market. Instead, we discovered a natural demand for wind energy, chiefly among large institutions such as universities and government agencies. The primary challenge for the portfolio is trying to sell our wind RECs on a longer-term basis that reduces the exposure of our supply contracts. A secondary challenge is creating new products to find new demand. 37 Making load reduction a win-win proposition Business customers of ComEd and PECO Energy can participate in programs that promote energy efficiency, environmental quality, business savings, and reliability. In peak demand times, electricity providers need the assistance of customers to help reduce load, ensuring the stability of the energy supply. Such programs are mutually beneficial solutions. They provide a financial incentive to the customer to curtail use, while providing benefits to the community and the environment through a lower, more stable load. Exelon’s Smart Returns programs provide participating customers with financial incentives to reduce electricity use upon request during times of high wholesale prices or demand. The more the customers curtail, the more energy they save, and the more financial incentive they can potentially earn. 38 ComEd’s Smart Returns Program 2. Active Load Management (ALM): A mandatory ComEd’s load response programs combine to create one of the largest, most successful load response portfolios in the United States. To operate these programs, ComEd works closely with its large commercial, institutional, and industrial customers to customize curtailment plans and maximize energy-efficiency opportunities. ComEd’s Load Response programs can contribute a 900 MW reduction to system peak loads on a hot summer day. program in which customers who choose to participate guarantee that they will reduce their energy consumption within one hour of PECO’s request. This is an emergency program, designed to respond to events that are triggered within the PJM power pool. PECO gained 58 MW of new ALM customer load under this program during 2003, in addition to the existing 50 MW under contract. PECO’s Smart Returns Program First implemented in 2001, it has three specific products, and customers may participate in any or all. 1. High Value: A voluntary program for PECO customers who are willing to respond to energy demand situations occurring outside of the regional Pennsylvania-New JerseyMaryland (PJM) power pool. Examples of situations include plant outages, abnormal weather, or emergency conditions. PECO has been aggressively pursuing customers for High Value since 2001, resulting in 164 MW under this program for 2003. 3. Voluntary Load Reduction (VLR): A voluntary program in which customers receive a onehour notification to curtail energy consumption and customers share in a percentage of PECO’s energy cost savings. PECO had 126.5 MW under this program for 2003. In total, PECO’s load response program accounts for nearly 400 MW of reduction. E economics Saving energy, avoiding emissions, improving economics in Chicago Boosting Philadelphia’s economy and PECO revenue Through a number of initiatives with the Chicago Department of Environment (DOE), ComEd is demonstrating its commitment to help business, government, and nonprofit organizations identify opportunities for improved energy-efficiency and pollutionprevention. Through the Chicago Industrial Rebuild Program in 2002, for example, we analyzed the area’s chemical processing industry. At 16 sites, assessments identified 187 savings opportunities. These opportunities would result in yearly savings of 9.8 million kWh, 418 billion BTU, and 12 million cubic feet of water, as well as avoidance of 23 million pounds of carbon dioxide air emissions. In 2003, we began analysis of the area’s confectionery industry, which promises significant opportunities as well. The Corridor Initiative is helping facilities in Chicago’s industrial corridor identify and implement energy-efficiency and pollutionprevention opportunities. Also, ComEd assisted Chicago in meeting energy efficiency goals for the city’s own facilities. Partnering with Chicago’s Department of Environment, ComEd managed projects toward the city’s goal to retrofit 15 million square feet of government buildings. By year-end 2003, dozens of facilities were contributing savings. The Economic and Business Development team at PECO, working with the Greater Philadelphia Chamber of Commerce, has been helping to market the region to businesses throughout the country. Their success can be measured in dollars, jobs, and awards. In some recent examples, the team helped persuade Siemens Medical Solutions to move its American sales and service headquarters to the region, bringing with it 3,000 jobs and $75 million in capital investment. When GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) needed to expand its pharmaceutical research and development operations, the team helped facilitate a deal in which GSK is expanding its operations into a $40 million, 200,000-square-foot building for 800 workers. The result of such activity is not only revenue for PECO from the new business, but also good will for the company. It’s no wonder that Site Selection magazine honored PECO as its 2003 Utility of the Year for Economic Development, stating, “PECO’s record is even more impressive when one considers that the utility has won this honor despite a sluggish national economy, the increasing pressure of utility deregulation and mounting competition from regions eager to recruit companies out of the Northeast.” The Philadelphia region now has a website dedicated to promoting the facts and figures about why business should be in Greater Philadelphia: www.SelectGreaterPhiladelphia.com 39 Exelon Corporate Policy: Environment Policy Statement Implementation Exelon is committed to constantly improving its environmental performance. We will strive for leadership in environmental management and will partner with the communities we serve, to preserve, restore and enhance the environment. We will promote a corporate culture where full compliance with environmental regulations is the minimum level of acceptable performance and where business initiatives are consistent with environmental responsibility. This policy shall be implemented by establishing and maintaining: Policy Intent Exelon shall: – An independent Compliance Audit Program and an independent EMS Conformance Audit Program. – Comply with all applicable environmental laws, regulations, and commitments, with the objective of moving beyond compliance. – Support for the development of low impact energy resources and energy efficiency. – Take a risk management approach to the management of environmental impacts of our operations – first, prevent pollution, where possible, then reduce environmental impacts, and implement cost-effective mitigation measures for environmental impacts that cannot be avoided. – Training programs for employees and contractors to educate them about their environmental responsibilities. – Utilize natural resources more efficiently. – Consider environmental issues when planning process changes, infrastructure design modifications, and other business decisions. – Consider stakeholder environmental expectations in decision-making. – Measure and publicly communicate the progress being made towards improving environmental performance. 40 – A corporate-wide Environmental Management System consistent with the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) 14001 Environmental Management System (EMS) specification. – The Exelon Environmental Council. – Annual objectives and targets for measuring and improving environmental performance. – Support for environmental public policy based on sound science and economic analysis. Exelon Corporate Policy: Safety Policy Statement Implementation Exelon shall manage its business to promote the safety of its employees, customers and the general public from hazards associated with the services it provides. This policy shall be implemented by establishing and maintaining safety procedures and standards for each Business Unit and Corporate Department which contain the following features: Policy Intent – Education programs that develop safety awareness among employees, customers, and the general public. Exelon shall: – Acknowledge that management has the responsibility for ensuring a safe work environment and establishing programs that promote safety for employees, customers, and the general public. – Communicate the expectation that employees have the primary responsibility for safety through their behaviors on the job. Unsafe work behaviors shall not be tolerated. – Proactively minimize hazard exposure to employees, customers and the general public through the use of a systematic approach which includes awareness, risk assessment, mitigation and continuous improvement. – Proactively support research and apply methods designed to improve the safety of work practices, procedures and technology. – Risk assessment and mitigation to eliminate, isolate, or reduce the hazard exposure to employees, customers and the general public. – Work practices, personal protective equipment standards and training programs for employees to perform their duties safely when the conscious decision is to approach the hazard. – Systems to investigate accidents and near misses for the purpose of continuous improvement. – A Risk Management Council that analyzes the frequency and causes of public liability incidents and initiates and conducts periodic cost benefit reviews of loss control programs. – An Executive Safety Council that provides sponsorship for and monitors the safety program. 41 Appendix A: Exelon Owned Net Electric Generating Capacity by Major Station 1,7 Fossil Plant Capacity [MW]2 2001 MWh3 GEN ERATION 2002 MWh3 2003 MWh3 EMISSIONS [TONS] 2002 2003 Conemaugh [New Florence, PA] 2 coal units (baseload), SO2 scrubbed. Data reflects Exelon Generation’s 20.72% plant ownership. 352 2,638,656 2,622,261 2,795,752 SO2 NOx CO2 1,343 4,323 2,513,200 1,230 4,032 2,404,168 1,528 4,456 2,666,915 Cromby [Phoenixville, PA] 1 coal unit (baseload), 1 oil/gas steam unit (intermediate). Coal Unit utilizes SO2 scrubber and SNCR NOx reduction technology. 345 1,138,130 624,138 876,462 SO2 NOx CO2 5,588 2,166 1,333,715 3,664 1,379 887,530 5,442 1,952 1,257,579 Delaware [Philadelphia, PA] 250 109,711 129,220 160,399 SO2 NOx CO2 314 219 121,342 379 261 164,087 501 359 187,805 Eddystone [Eddystone, PA] 2 coal units (baseload), 2 oil/gas steam units (intermediate). Coal units utilize SO2 scrubbers, SNCR NOx reduction technology & low NOx burners with separate overfire air. 1,341 3,903,269 2,743,718 3,528,070 SO2 NOx CO2 10,213 7,244 5,016,668 6,718 4,892 3,535,648 9,415 5,975 4,794,725 Fore River [Weymouth, MA] 688 0 0 1,446,927 SO2 NOx CO2 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 65 840,854 1,441 1,945,836 1,527,990 1,651,387 SO2 NOx CO2 47 1,578 1,341,420 8 1,846 1,618,853 9 830 1,396,256 Keystone [Shelocta, PA] 2 coal units (baseload), SCR NOx reduction technology. Data reflects Exelon Generation’s 20.99% plant ownership. 358 2,678,043 2,564,230 2,611,887 SO2 NOx CO2 33,526 4,038 2,510,074 31,615 3,821 2,418,471 34,317 2,398 2,501,247 Mountain Creek [Dallas, TX] 893 1,748,648 880,070 792,174 SO2 NOx CO2 119 1,095 1,140,050 120 578 675,290 10 196 535,860 2,155 1,741,130 1,529,884 6,496,533 SO2 NOx CO2 7,262 1,672 1,247,778 5,003 1,143 1,435,490 5,839 1,344 3,933,642 New Boston [South Boston, MA] 1 gas steam unit (intermediate). 353 565,551 656,201 199,135 SO2 NOx CO2 4 665 702,708 2 424 488,296 2 101 128,496 Schuylkill [Philadelphia, PA] 1 oil steam unit (peaking). 166 44,589 42,159 41,724 SO2 NOx CO2 131 51 45,677 149 53 49,987 125 47 46,224 2 oil steam units (peaking). Gas-fired combined cycle unit utilizing SCR NOx reduction technology (operational 2003). Handley [Fort Worth, TX] 5 gas steam units (peaking/intermediate). Units 4&5 utilize SCR NOx reduction technology. 5 gas steam units (peaking/intermediate). Unit 8 utilizes SCR NOx reduction technology. Mystic5 [Everett, MA] 1 oil/gas steam unit (intermediate). 2 combined cycle gas units utilizing SCR NOx reduction technology (operational 2003). 1 Table does not list Exelon plants comprised solely of peaking combustion turbines, units related to Exelon’s ownership interest in Sithe Energies, Inc., or plants in which Exelon owns less than 100 MW of capacity. For nuclear stations except Salem, capacity reflects the annual mean rating. All other stations, including Salem, reflect summer rating. Generation Available for Sale (GAFS). 4 Exelon Generation Company, LLC gained full ownership of Clinton, Oyster Creek and Three Mile Island on 12/22/03 when it purchased the 50% of AmerGen from British Energy that it did not already own. Data for 2001-03 adjusted to reflect 100% ownership. 5 Mystic units 4, 5 and 6 were retired in December 2003. 6 All nuclear stations are boiling water reactors (BWRs) except Braidwood, Byron, Three Mile Island and Salem, which are pressurized water reactors (PWRs). 7 Additional information on utility plants owned by Exelon and other U.S. power generation companies can be obtained at EPA’s “e-GRID” website: http://www.epa.gov/cleanenergy/egrid/. 2 3 42 2001 Hydroelectric Plant Capacity [MW]2 Conowingo [Harford County, MD] GEN ERATION 2001 MWh3 2002 MWh3 2003 MWh3 Exelon Power TRI Reported Total Releases and Offsite Transfers in 2001 & 2002 [pounds] 536 1,165,233 1,638,114 2,581,170 YEAR 1,072 1,598,971 1,549,863 1,834,582 Ammonia 2001 2002 57,605 94,679 Arsenic 71,377 70,644 Barium 135,974 109,981 13,726 14,125 3,730 0 38,969 35,813 Hydrochloric Acid 3,514,449 3,209,538 Hydrogen Flouride 345,950 307,352 Lead 20,852 19,433 Manganese 35,418 30,171 1,466 1,381 Nickel 51,995 26,665 Selenium 4,408 4,618 811,590 732,138 1,036 622 176,247 160,126 Zinc 47,797 40,863 Other 31,134 29,259 Totals 5,363,723 4,887,408 11 units (baseload) Muddy Run [Lancaster, PA] 8 pump storage units (intermediate). Nuclear 4,6 Braidwood [Braidwood, IL] 2,388 19,157,576 20,004,278 19,688,789 2 units (baseload) Chromium Byron [Byron, IL] 2 units (baseload) 2,364 20,181,956 19,307,277 20,065,461 Clinton [Clinton, IL] 1,030 7,896,568 7,680,168 8,719,496 1,742 12,671,820 13,763,412 13,819,352 1 unit (baseload) Dresden [Morris, IL] 2 units (baseload) LaSalle County [Seneca, IL] 2 units (baseload) 2,288 19,516,919 17,903,056 18,156,947 Limerick [Limerick Township, PA] 2,309 19,376,443 19,241,804 19,306,059 2 units (baseload) Copper Mercury Oyster Creek [Forked River, NJ] 1 unit (baseload) 625 5,256,526 5,035,572 5,238,988 Peach Bottom [Peach Bottom Township, PA] 1,131 8,887,543 9,188,357 9,067,151 2 units (baseload). Data reflects Exelon Generation’s 50% plant ownership. Quad Cities [Cordova, IL] Cobalt Sulfuric Acid 1,303 9,690,327 9,232,793 10,112,162 2 units (baseload). Data reflects Exelon Generation’s 75% plant ownership. Thallium Vanadium Salem [Hancock’s Bridge, NJ] 2 units (baseload). Data reflects Exelon Generation’s 42.59% plant ownership. 942 Three Mile Island [Londonderry Township, PA] 837 7,302,629 5,139,496 7,198,899 7,313,164 7,284,925 8,719,496 1 unit (baseload) *Exelon will compile and report its 2003 TRI emissions to EPA after the publication date of this report. 43 2002 | 2003 Recognition and Awards Environment Illinois Environmental Protection Agency’s Partners for Clean Air 2003: Recognized ComEd Fleet Management in 2003 for having a “Green Fleet”in the Illinois Green Fleet Program. (ComEd) Illinois Arborist Association Gold Leaf Award 2003: Acknowledged support of Arbor Day programs and tree giveaway projects throughout the years and the service territory. In the award’s 20-year history, no other utility has received it. (ComEd) National Arbor Day Foundation’s TreeLine USA Award 2003: Recognition for environmentally responsible tree care, worker training, tree planting, and public education programs, for the fourth consecutive year. (ComEd) Energy User News’ Efficient Building – Best Public Space Facility Award 2003: For completion of several turnkey projects to help the Adler Planetarium to reduce their energy consumption and operating costs. (ComEd) Project Habitat Utility 2002 and 2003: Recognized by BASF for the management of transmission rights-of-way in a manner that is compatible/conducive to wildlife. (ComEd) Interstate Renewable Energy Council (IREC) Innovation Award 2003: For its innovative partnership with the Chicago Public Schools to promote solar energy. (ComEd) 44 Pennsylvania Governor’s Award for Environmental Excellence in the category of “Education and Outreach” 2002: Recognizing the educational Plumbing & Mechanical Contractors Association of Northern Illinois (PAMCANI) “Commitment to Safety” Award 2002: For improvement in lost benefits of the Clean Mower Rebate Program. (Exelon Power) workday, incident rate, insurance modification ratio, and other safety measures, which must be better than the company’s three-year average. (Exelon Services) American Wind Energy Association’s Wind Energy Market Maker Award 2002: For effectively building a market for wind power in the Mid-Atlantic Region. (Power Team) Mechanical Contractors Association of America (MCAA) Safety Awards 2002: For safety PennFuture’s Green Team Award 2003: For performance measures similar to PAMCANI. (Exelon Services) holding together an alliance that worked to overcome local opposition to the Waymart wind facility. (Power Team) Green Power Pioneer of the Year Award 2003: Awarded to Power Team’s Mike Freeman by the Center for Resource Solutions for his contributions to advancing the development of renewable electricity sources in the marketplace. (Power Team) Safety Energy Association of Pennsylvania Safety Achievement Award 2002 and 2003: Presented for outstanding safety performance. (PECO) Energy Association of Pennsylvania Safety Improvement Award 2002: Presented for the best year-to-year improvement in safety performance among Association member companies. (PECO) Community Diversity Best Practices and the Business Women’s Network 2003: John W. Rowe, Chairman and CEO, Exelon Corporation, along with 10 other CEOs, was named one of the most powerful champions of diversity for his commitment to diversity values, leadership in developing strategic initiatives, and ongoing support of sustainable change in the corporation. Chicago Chapter of the Association of Fundraising Professionals Executive Leader Award 2003: Pamela B. Strobel, EVP and Chief Administrative Officer, Exelon Corporation, was recognized for her work as a fundraising leader and philanthropist. design: Paragraphs Design, Chicago / copy: Rector Communications, Philadelphia / editor: Bruce Alexander, Exelon Corp. We welcome your comments and questions regarding this report. Please contact Helen Howes, Vice President, Environment, Health and Safety at the listed address or by calling 215.405.7998. E This report was printed with soy-based inks on recycled paper containing 30% post-consumer waste. ©2004 Exelon Corporation. Exelon is a registered servicemark. Exelon Corporation Corporate Environment, Health and Safety 2301 Market Street, S21-2 P.O. Box 8699 Philadelphia, PA 19101-8699 www.exeloncorp.com