• DocumentCode
    1343489
  • Title

    Profile: The ¿other¿ electric company: American Electric Power is a study in contrasts ¿ anachronistic, yet progressive, and a giant in spite of its relatively low profile

  • Author

    Friedlander, Gordon D.

  • Volume
    11
  • Issue
    6
  • fYear
    1974
  • fDate
    6/1/1974 12:00:00 AM
  • Firstpage
    48
  • Lastpage
    55
  • Abstract
    For engineers and nonengineer consumer alike, General Electric and Westinghouse Electric are household names. And as for utilities, most of us have heard of Public Service Electric and Gas, and Con Edison. But who, besides the power engineer, its customers, and its corporate stock-holders, knows American Electric Power? Yet the company today ranks as the largest investor-owned U.S. utility, with energy sales, during 1973, totaling nearly 75 billion kWh. Further, as the power engineer well knows, AEP is unique among the utilities in its reliance on coal, rather than oil, as its primary resource. Thus, the events of the last year ¿ the Mideast petroleum embargo and the international energy crisis ¿ have left AEP largely unscathed ¿ and so too its 1.76 million customers, across seven midwest and midsouth states, who are currently paying fuel bills the bulk of us would envy. Through a combination of foresight and fortuitous circumstances, AEP, long regarded in power circles as a modern-day industrial anachronism, a dinosaur living off the remains of dinosaurs, has emerged as a glamor topic worthy of IEEE Spectrum´s focus.
  • Keywords
    Coal; Communities; Companies; Computers; Microwave circuits; Power systems; Sociology;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Spectrum, IEEE
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9235
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/MSPEC.1974.6366551
  • Filename
    6366551