Dell to run headquarters with renewable power
Apr 3 - McClatchy-Tribune Regional News - Elizabeth Souder The Dallas
Morning News
Dell Inc. is betting that fossil fuel power will soon cost more than green
power.
The computer company said Wednesday that it has agreed to purchase renewable
power -- wind power and power generated with landfill gases -- to run its
2.1 million-square-foot headquarters in Round Rock, Texas.
The company declined to say how much it will pay for 80 million
kilowatt-hours of renewable power each year.
Renewable energy tends to cost at least half a cent more per kilowatt-hour
than other forms of power, meaning Dell could initially pay about $400,000
extra.
But Dell officials say that by the end of the three-year contract, prices
for power generated by natural gas will be higher than power from renewable
sources.
"For us, that's the beauty of green energy. Because the source, especially
in our landfill, is predictable and stable," said Dane Parker, Dell's
director of global environment, health and safety.
Forty percent of the electricity for Dell headquarters will come from a
Waste Management landfill in Austin. The sanitation company is tapping many
of its landfills for methane and using the methane to run power generators.
The rest of Dell's power will come from windmills and will be supplied by
TXU Energy, the retail arm of Energy Future Holdings.
Dell is also buying more renewable power from Austin Energy to run its
Austin Parmer Campus. It will increase renewable power to 17 percent from 8
percent. |