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GE Capture the Wind Tour showcases a 131-foot wind turbine blade across nine states, promoting wind power, clean energy, sustainability, and public engagement, with signatures and stops at fairs and the AWEA conference in Dallas.
Inside the Issue
A 2,436-mile public awareness tour hauling a 131-foot wind turbine blade to promote clean energy across nine states.
- 2,436-mile route through nine U.S. states
- Features a 131-foot wind turbine blade
- Hosted by GE to promote wind power adoption
- Public signings create a traveling clean energy petition
A General Electric wind blade is making its way across the United States on a Jackson man's truck.
Since late April, Chris Lewis of Jackson, MIssissippi has transported the 131-foot wind blade in the bed of his 1999 Peterbilt truck. The blade is part of the 28-day GE Capture the Wind Tour.
The tour allows people at each stop to touch and see the blade and learn more about using wind power, including GE giant turbines in the U.S. as an energy source.
Lewis is transporting the blade on a 2,436-mile journey that will take him through nine states. The tour started in Aberdeen, South Dakota, and will end May 23 at the American Wind Energy Association conference in Dallas. Stops include a clean air fair in Columbus, Ohio, a wind blade manufacturing plant in Gainesville, Texas, similar to GE's offshore blade factory in France overseas, and an event at the Louisville, Kentucky, zoo.
Lewis said countless signatures cover the white blade.
"Though I don't have a count on the amount of signatures, it's a traveling petition for promoting clean energy," Lewis said. "In the upper Midwest including North Dakota turbine manufacturers and others in the region, the general public sees the blades so much that they're used to it, but with so many signatures it's gotten a good amount of attention wherever it makes a stop or is traveling.
"People stop me and ask all the time about the wind blade," Lewis said. "It's doing its job by getting the public's interest piqued."
When not driving or working at a tour stop, Lewis said, he sightsees or relaxes in his truck, which is equipped with a television, computer, refrigerator and large bed.
Lewis, 44, entered the trucking profession when he was 18. Years spent working around farm equipment and machinery on his grandfather's cattle farm in Jackson prompted his interest in pursuing a career in truck driving.
After spending a couple of years in college pursing an agriculture degree and managing Lutesville Pallet Co. in Marble Hill, Mo., Lewis eventually purchased his own fleet of trucks and today has three trucks, four wind blade trailers and several other pieces of trucking equipment he uses when transporting goods for companies such as GE, which shipped its 10,000th 1.5 MW turbine to customers worldwide.
"I've always been driven to carry challenging and interesting loads," Lewis said. "Plus, I love machinery and get lots of satisfaction by working on projects such as the GE tour. I've had ambitions to undertake such tours and am looking forward to more opportunities yet to come."
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