| Billionaire Texas Oilman Makes Big Bets On Wind 
    US: April 18, 2008
 
 
 WASHINGTON - Legendary Texas oilman T. Boone Pickens has gone green with a 
    plan to spend $10 billion to build the world's biggest wind farm. But he's 
    not doing it out of generosity - he expects to turn a buck.
 
 
 The Southern octogenarian's plans are as big as the Texas prairie, where he 
    lives on a ranch with his horses, and entail fundamentally reworking how 
    Americans use energy.
 
 Next month, Pickens' company, Mesa Power, will begin buying land and 
    ordering 2,700 wind turbines that will eventually generate 4,000 megawatts 
    of electricity - the equivalent of building two commercial scale nuclear 
    power plants - enough power for about 1 million homes.
 
 "These are substantial," said Pickens, speaking to students at Georgetown 
    University on Thursday. "They're big."
 
 Pickens knows a thing or two about big. He heads the BP Capital hedge fund 
    with over $4 billion under management, and earned about $1 billion in 2006 
    making big bets on commodity and equity markets.
 
 Though a long-time oilman, Pickens said he has embraced the call for cleaner 
    energy sources that don't emit heat-trapping greenhouse gases.
 
 "I'm an environmentalist - I can pass the saliva test," he said.
 
 But Pickens is not out to save the planet. He intends to make money.
 
 Though Pickens admits that wind power won't be as lucrative as oil deals, he 
    still expects the Texas project to turn at least a 25 percent return.
 
 "When I go into these markets, I expect to make money on them," Pickens 
    said. "I don't expect to lose."
 
 America is facing a looming power crunch, with electricity demand expected 
    to grow 15 percent in a decade. And while many states have rejected big 
    coal-fired power projects on environmental concerns, they are offering a 
    bounty of incentives to build renewable sources.
 
 US crude futures at new records above $115 a barrel means a bright future 
    for renewable sources like wind and solar.
 
 Pickens' wind farm is part of his wider vision for replacing natural gas 
    with wind and solar for power generation, and using the natural gas instead 
    to power vehicles.
 
 To picture Pickens' energy strategy, imagine a compass.
 
 Stretching from north to south from Saskatchewan to Texas would be thousands 
    of wind turbines, which could take advantage of some of the best US wind 
    production conditions.
 
 On the east-west axis from Texas to California would be large arrays of 
    solar generation, which could send electricity into growing Southern 
    California cities like Los Angeles.
 
 The end result would be to free up more clean-burning natural gas - 
    primarily a power-generation fuel now - to power automobiles.
 
 Major oil companies have embraced so-called natural gas liquids because they 
    have spent billions of dollars building refineries and pipelines to turn 
    crude oil into gasoline, Pickens said.
 
 But shifting natural gas used in power generation to transportation needs 
    could cut US crude oil imports by nearly 40 percent, he said.
 
 (Reporting by Chris Baltimore; Editing by Marguerita Choy)
 
 
 Story by Chris Baltimore
 
 
 REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
 
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