By
Joseph Baker on January 25, 2012
Iowa-based MidAmerican Energy Holdings Company
has launched a new renewable energy subsidiary.
Dubbed MidAmerican Renewables, LLC, the new company will be based
out of Des Moines, Iowa and will encompass a new set of
subsidiaries: MidAmerican Wind, LLC, MidAmerican Geothermal, LLC,
MidAmerican Solar, LLC, and MidAmerican Hydro, LLC.
In Tuesday's announcement, MidAmerica Energy CEO Greg Abel said, “We
look forward to expanding our wind, geothermal, solar and hydro
portfolio, so we can offer energy in the renewables market. We
believe the need for renewable energy will continue to grow, and we
are excited to be a leader in this area,” he said.
The company's actions certainly support Abel's words. In fact, there
is nothing new about MidAmerican's interest or investment in
renewable energy.
Since 2004 the company has invested $6 billion in wind power and
claims to be the "No. 1 owner of wind-powered energy generation
among U.S. rate-regulated utilities," controlling just under 1,400
MW of operational wind capacity. And the wind portfolio is growing.
Just last Friday the company
said it had agreed to acquire the 81 MW Bishop Hill II wind
project in Henry County, Illinois from Invengy LLC. Through its
subsidiary, CalEnergy U.S. which will become part of MidAmerican
Renewables, MidAmerican operates an estimated 327 MW geothermal
generation in California.
However, the preamble to the formation of the new renewables
subsidiary and a growing interest in the unregulated renewable
energy market was MidAmerican's explosion into the solar market last
December. At that time Abel
said, "We are aggressively pursuing opportunities to expand our
presence in the renewable energy sector."
On Dec 7, 2011 the company entered the solar pwer market by
agreeing to purchase the $2 billion, 550 MW Topaz Solar Farm
being constructed in California from solar developer First Solar
Inc. Then, 11 days later, MidAmerican announced plans to acquire a
49% interest in the 290 MW Agua Caliente solar project in Arizona
from NRG Energy Inc.
Now with a renewable energy subsidiary in place MidAmerica can
continue to grow its renewable energy portfolio which, as of end of
2011, sources 28% of its total generation capacity from renewables.
Image Credit:
Payton Chungvia Flickr
Joseph Baker is a freelance writer living in Vancouver BC. His areas
of focus include renewable energy, sustainability and climate
change.
http://www.energyboom.com