Technology Review - Published By MIT
Advertisement

Potential Energy


Kevin Bullis is Technology Review’s energy editor.

Recent Posts

Blog Topics

Recent Comments

  • kstauff : "I don't know how anyone can take CO2 seriously after the last few weeks"  Some call it faith; I...
  • kstauff : It should be interesting to see the vaporware of "global warming" hackery put up against the very...
  • ... : I don’t think anyone is claiming that natural cycles of CO2 are dangerous to life.  The concerns...
  • tmcmurph : In case all the warming alarmists, politicians and middle men in the proposed carbon scam have...
  • claudioona : Nothing is more essential to life than water. This fact does not make floods less deadly and...
  • ... : Hacked e-mails, political power, billions of dollars, water vapor, effects of sun, and just a...
  • jmaximus9 : No GM is not about to kill the Volt! The Ford Fusion Hybrid cost $30,000 the Volt will only be...
  • RD : The cost of ethanol must take the damage it does into consideration. Read the Outdoor Power...
  • RD : The EPA now is taking control over ALL perenial and seasonal streams, wetlands, and puddles (with...
  • RD : Congress is hazardous to our health, and DC should be shut down.  Only a bureaucrat would claim a...
Advertisement
Wednesday, July 08, 2009

Pickens Pulls the Plug on Wind Farm

Oil tycoon T. Boone Pickens is backing out of a planned 4,000-megawatt wind farm.
By Kevin Bullis

A year ago today, T. Boone Pickens, founder and chairman of BP Capital Management and oil tycoon, revealed his Pickens Plan, which called for wind farms to replace natural-gas power plants, freeing the natural gas for powering cars and trucks, all in an effort to reduce imports of oil (and probably to find new markets for domestic natural gas). In support of that plan, Pickens signed a deal for 667 wind turbines for an enormous 4,000-megawatt wind farm to be built in the Texas Panhandle.

Now that plan is in shambles. Bad credit markets and a lack of transmission lines for the wind turbines have led him to scrap the panhandle project, at least for now, he confirmed today. But he still has to do something with all of those turbines he's ordered. "I'm committed to 667 wind turbines and I am going to find projects for them," he said in a statement.

During the past year, he's also backed off some from his plan to switch to natural-gas cars, which has been widely criticized as impractical, focusing instead on pushing for a fleet of natural-gas tractor trailers.

Lack of transmission is turning out to be a major impediment for wind farms. For example, most of the applications for 67,000 megawatts of wind farms in the Midwest are stuck waiting in line because of a lack of grid connections. (See "Lifeline for Renewable Power.")

Advertisement
Advertisement

Log In

Forgot your password?     Register »
Advertisement
Technology Review November/December 2009

Current Issue

Natural Gas Changes the Energy Map
The United States has vast supplies of this cleaner fossil fuel. But how should we use it?
•  Subscribe
Save 36%
•  Table of Contents
•  MIT News
» Gift Subscription
» Digital Subscription
» Reprints, Back Issues
» Subscribe
» Table of Contents
» MIT News

More Technology News from Forbes

Advertisement
MIT Massachusetts Institute of Technology © 2009 Technology Review. All Rights Reserved.