Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Google Powers Up Alt-Energy Investments

Google seems to be trying to make us think GE stands for Google Energy.

The latest energy investment play from the search and advertising company is a plan it announced Tuesday to plunk down $55 million to help finance Terra-Gen Power’s Alta Wind Energy Center (AWEC) wind farm in California’s Tehachapi Mountains. Citigroup Inc. is also putting up funds for the farm.


Google-Powers-Up-Alt-Energy-Investments
Googleis based in Mountain View, California, and its local server farms suck up huge amounts of power. The Tehachapi project is close enough to home base to help provide power for them.

But the company is also pouring big money into renewable energy across the United States and the globe, spending over the past few months almost as if it were itself an energy company rather than a tech and media giant.

And these aren’t all small, feel-good, projects, with at least some of them pushing the envelope. They’re big, ambitious investments in bold plans that will generate or transmit huge amounts of electricity. Examples include:

A 42 percent stake in the Atlantic Wind Power Consortium, which is in the process of getting approvals to build a transmission line to carry electricity from offshore wind farms that don’t yet exist to the Mid-Atlantic region from New Jersey to Virginia. The total cost of that project is expected to reach about $5 billion.
A $100 million investment in the Shepherd’s Flat Wind Farm in eastern Oregon being developed by Caithness Energy. That project is getting $1.2 billion in subsidies from federal, state, and local governments and will cost $2 billion in all.
A $168 million investment in BrightSource Energy’s Ivanpah Solar Thermal Energy project in the Mojave Desert of California.
A $38.5 million investment in two NextEra Wind Energy projects that was the first of Google’s utility-scale energy investments.
A $5 million investment in a solar energy farm in Germany that will help power a data center there.


In addition, Google has one of the largest solar arrays around at its Bay Area headquarters as it experiments with wringing more efficiency from its data centers.

"With this [Terra-Gen Power] deal, we’ve now invested more than $400 million in the clean-energy sector. We hope AWEC’s success, with its unique deal structure and renewable-energy transmission, encourages more financing and development of renewables that will usher in a new energy future," Rick Needham, Google's Green Business Operations Manager, wrote in a blog post.

Google’s motivations aren’t exactly to get into the energy business to make a lot more money. The company is more concerned with offsetting the cost and pollution involved in its massive power usage.Still, you don’t see Apple or Facebook making similar moves.

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