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Enron Mail |
Check out the EES/ENA separation agreement below. Ignore the DOW Chemical reference --- DOW is our customer. - Mike
-----Original Message----- From: Forster, David Sent: Thursday, October 25, 2001 12:10 PM To: Curry, Mike; Kroll, Heather; Tricoli, Carl Subject: EES Agreement Earlier this week, EES (Dave Delainey and Janet Dietrich) agreed the following with ENA: - EES will continue to approach utilities/munis to sell their "whitepaper" concept, but will restrict their efforts to only the following, until such time as the concept is proven or abandoned: - City of San Antonio - City of Austin - Brownsville Public Utility Board - City of Anaheim - Peoples - SMUD - Silicon Valley (Santa Clara) - City of Memphis - EES agreed that they should not be approaching industrials which fall within the previously established ENA SIC codes and committed to reigning their people in. It was agreed that EES would work with ENA to determine if there are subgroups within the SIC codes which are too small for ENA, but which EES should be covering. Chris Calger agreed to work with EES on determining this. The SIC Code categories which ENA is responsible for are as follows (note that while the categories have been agreed, the actual code numbers are my own interpretation of the categories): 10 - Primary Metals Mining and Extraction 13 - Oil and Gas Extraction 26 - Paper and Forest Products 5169, 2899, 5191, 5169 - Chemicals - except for pharmaceutical, biotech and small specialty chemical that will be EES customers (DOW Chemical) 2911 - Refining 29 - Petroleum and Coal Manufacturing 30 - Plastics and Rubber Manufacturing 5191 - Fertilizer 3531 - Rail 2891, 3559, 5094, 1422, 3241, 3297, 5032 - Cement 3274, 1422, 5191, 2041, 2869 - Large Agricultural Processing Dave
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