| Pickens' wind project finds rough sailing
Oct 29 - McClatchy-Tribune Regional News - Elliott Blackburn Lubbock
Avalanche-Journal, Texas
A deflating economy has taken the wind out of a massive Panhandle
alternative energy project.
Tight lending stalled a $2 billion wind farm project headed by billionaire
oilman and alternative power proponent T. Boone Pickens.
Pickens' BP Capital delayed work on a state permit to build 170 miles of
transmission lines carrying enough wind energy to power 300,000 homes.
Pickens ordered nearly 670 turbines last spring for the project and planned
to eventually quadruple that power production.
But the firm has taken a beating in the recent economic downturn. Pickens
told the Wall Street Journal in September that his funds had lost $1 billion
so far this year, including $270 million in personal losses.
BP Capital spokesman Jay Rosser said last week that work continued on the
wind farm but that struggling capital market could delay or reduce those
efforts.
"We are committed to wind development projects and believe it's a viable
business for us," Rosser wrote in an e-mail response to questions. "The
capital markets may lead us to scale back a bit but we are still going
forward with our wind business."
Other companies with active wind construction projects in the state reported
that they remained on schedule. Firms completed more than 690 megawatts of
new wind capacity in Texas as of September and had another 2,500 megawatts
under construction, according to the latest figures from the American Wind
Energy Association.
Texas' largest transmission project, too, had not stumbled during the
downturn. Texas Public Utility Commissioners will meet Dec. 1 to continue
the selection of transmission providers to move power out of specially
designated zones in West Texas and the Panhandle, commission spokesman Terry
Hadley said.
But market conditions and the sheer scale of the effort could have helped
stall the Pickens project.
In addition to battering the hedge fund, the continuing financial crisis had
tightened lending and lowered expectations for fuel demand. Natural gas, a
major electrical fuel in Texas, has fallen with gasoline and dulled wind
power's competitive edge.
Smaller projects were easier to move forward in the current market, said
Walt Hornaday, president of Texas Wind Power in Austin. The projects still
under way in Texas topped out at 283 megawatts -- well short of the 1,000
megawatts Pickens hoped to deliver in his farm's first year of production.
Projects that needed the support of only one bank moved faster than larger
farms that could require cooperation from multiple lenders, Hornaday said.
"The larger the project, the more exposed you are," Hornaday said.
The wind effort marks the second delay in roughly a month to projects
operated by companies under the BP Capital umbrella.
Companies more than a month ago split the wind transmission effort from a
project hoping to pipe billions of gallons of groundwater through a
company-controlled freshwater supply district to a major city.
That effort, challenged by landowners and state politicians and probed by
the U.S. Department of Justice, was put on hold in September.
The water business had struggled to find a fitting customer, and the
Department of Justice nullified the state law allowing the creation of the
board of the related freshwater district. Company officials at the time said
the decision on the water project had nothing to do with a Department of
Justice decision and that they continued to talk to prospective customers.
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