Monday, November 23, 2009

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Why T. Boone Pickens Could Be the Best Hope for Wind Energy

The Texas oilman's 'green conversion' is all about business

Posted August 22, 2008

All of a sudden, everyone seems to be talking about wind energy. Sleek, gray wind turbines, rising hundreds of feet into the sky, rotate in steady, clockwise loops in television ads that pop up almost hourly. Both presidential candidates have heartily endorsed wind power. Even oil giants like Shell and Chevron are on board. Yet this spring, when the Department of Energy looked at wind power, it found huge hurdles, particularly the question of how to send electricity from the blustery Midwest to the big coastal cities.

T. Boone Pickens appears before a congressional panel.
T. Boone Pickens appears before a congressional panel.

The logistical and technological challenges remain, so why the new gust of interest? Four-dollar-a-gallon gas and concerns about oil, for starters. But the emergence of a Texas oilman and 1980s corporate raider as a national spokes-man for wind energy is transforming the playing field. T. Boone Pickens isn't offering any new technological solutions, but his endorsement is the most emphatic signal that wind energy has moved beyond the realm of the green lobby. It has gone mainstream, led by a titan of business with decades of oil experience. Returning to the national spotlight at the age of 80, Pickens is everywhere these days, traipsing across cable news shows and before congressional hearings. Moving beyond his reputation as a Republican partisan who funded the controversial swift boat ads attacking John Kerry in 2004, he has personally pitched his "Pickens Plan" to both Barack Obama and John McCain. And he is starring in his own TV ads, touting his plan to wean America off oil. Pickens wants 20 percent of U.S. electricity to come from wind power in 10 years, in the process helping to free up natural gas to become the country's main transportation fuel.

Game changer. Since his ads began airing, Pickens has won praise from politicians and the media alike for his "green conversion." But his fervor is not a sudden convert's zeal as much as a businessman's quest for a legacy. In the corporate world, Pickens has long been a game changer, and his embrace of wind is a good harbinger for alternative energy. America, he says, is ready for green energy. It just needs a leader.

Over the past 20 years, since he first became wealthy by mounting takeover bids on much larger companies, Pickens has routinely been asked if he is in it just for the money. He invariably says something like, "I'm worth enough money already." Maybe so, but easily overlooked is the simple fact that a growing number of companies believe that they can make money from wind. This wasn't always the case, of course. Wind turbine technology has advanced significantly in recent years, and the cost of generating electricity from wind has dropped by about 80 percent from the 1990s. U.S. wind production jumped 45 percent last year, and, in July, the country overtook Germany as the world's top wind producer.

Today, Pickens may be the most high-profile investor in wind, but he's far from the only one. A number of big investment banks, like Goldman Sachs, as well as top hedge funds, are hopping into the game. JPMorgan's energy unit, for example, has invested $4.4 billion into more than 40 U.S. wind farms.

Until Pickens emerged this summer, along with a $58 million ad campaign paid for out of his own pocket, the excitement was largely limited to trade publications and corporate boardrooms. Pickens took wind public, a move that comes at just the right time. Wind power, despite its recent advances, is still in a delicate position. It produces around 1 percent of the country's electricity. It's competing for attention with other nascent renewable energies. And it's still alarmingly dependent on government support. Over the past decade, every time federal tax credits for wind energy have lapsed—and it has happened three times—the wind industry has crashed. There's no guarantee that wind (or solar, or biofuels) will succeed on a large scale.

Certainly, Pickens stands to win big if wind power blossoms. Mesa Power, the wind firm he launched, is planning to build the world's largest wind farm near Pampa, Texas, for which it has already spent $2 billion to buy 667 wind turbines from General Electric. His hedge fund, BP Capital, is heavily invested in natural gas, and he stands to profit if natural gas becomes a transitional source of automobile fuel, as he envisions.

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Reader Comments

wind power texas

Over the past decade, every time federal tax credits for wind energy have lapsed—and it has happened three times—the wind industry has crashed. There's no guarantee that wind (or solar, or biofuels) will succeed on a large scale.

Here is a link that might be useful:lincenergy.us/

The Plan is Poetry

We are in a lot of trouble. Thankfully T. Boone is helping to bring national attention to the fact. We need to get off of foreign oil as fast as we can and stop the exportation of our wealth. To say that the Plan is dependent of Government support should not surprise. “Alarmingly” obvious is the fact that we have (you and I and our Government) done little of consequence about it since the Carter administration formed the DOE specifically for that purpose. “We sort a lazy’d it” says T. Boone…”but we had cheap oil”. Then this past summer he did the math…$142 a barrel, 13 Million barrels a day…yup $ 688 Billion a year, and it was time to strike.

“Well but it’s only $70 a barrel now”…correct…and it was $35 a barrel and 42% imported oil when the Carter Administration thought it might be a good idea. Thank God it hit $142. They awoke the “sleeping giant” that so terrorized Yamamoto after the Pearl Harbor attack.

We’ll need “Leadership” that is clear. What else do we need?

• A long term (10 year) extension of the PTC so that institutions, investors, and manufacturers can depend on it.

• A new electrical grid and infrastructure. The current grid is inadequate, inefficient, and old (some of it 50+ years). A new national grid has been developed by the DOE which would provide the access to the central continental wind corridor. The Government needs to provide the access.

• Legislation requiring transportation be migrated into NG vehicles for the following:

o Public Transportation

o All Federal and State vehicles and Postal

o Municipalities and Services (School Buses, Trash Collection, etc.)

o Large over the road Fleets and Carriers

o Tax credits or incent all other vehicles for any alt. energy (non-oil) fuels.

Why is the Pickens Plan poetry? First, it is all founded on technology that is available NOW as Ken Garber points to in his article. Second, it’s a giant step in the green direction. No one except Boone has suggested anything close to a 200,000 MegaWatt “super farm” in the Central US. The other day I heard him say “take to 400,000 if you want”. That’s BOLD but that is exactly what we need.

One more thing for what it’s worth. Let’s open and drill ANWR and OCS. Continuing with the “War in the Pacific” theme….It’s the perfect “Doolittle Raid” to let them know “we’re coming”.

it is really good

its good but needs more pictures

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