GreenFinance: Investing in the Wind
Building renewable energy facilities are critical if we ever want to move away from our dependence on oil, gas and coal. The wind power industry believes it has developed the technology to deliver 20% wind energy penetration by 2030 and it discussed just that at its 2007 Wind Energy Fall Symposium in Carlsbad, California in November.
American Wind Energy Association leaders know its going to take sound alternative energy policy, more people and consensus building to make this happen. Three leaders in the wind energy field are Clipper Windpower, Horizon Wind Energy, and Xcel Energy Utilities Group. Horizon Wind Energy is a wholly owned subsidiary of the Portuguese utilities company, Energias de Portugal, S.A. (EDP), so you can't buy its stock in the U.S. markets.
If you too believe in wind energy, you may want to invest in a company with the same vision. Here's two companies you may want to take a closer look at:
Clipper Windpower (OTC: CRPWF) is an over-the-counter stock, so it's not traded on the major stock exchanges. That does make it a riskier bet. It has three divisions: Clipper Turbine Works, which manufactures Cipper's wind turbines; Clipper Fleet Services, which provides customer services; and Clipper Windpower Development Company, where it develops its new or improved products.
Xcel Energy (NYSE: XEL) is a utility company serving eight states - Colorado, Michigan, Minnesota, New Mexico, North Dakota, South Dakota, Texas and Wisconsin. Its Group President Paul Bonavia told the wind symposium participants that Xcel is fully embracing the 20% wind vision. He said, "We're committed to making it happen, and we believe it needs to occur." Xcel's Windsource and Renewable Energy Trust was ranked first in the number of customers and fifth in energy sales out of over 5,000 U.S. utilities by the National Renewable Energy Lab's green pricing programs. The company's key environmental commitment includes improving air quality, conserving resources, harnessing renewable energy and producing wildlife and habitats.
Bonavia told symposium participants that several things need to happen before 20% wind can become a reality - larger geographical control areas to allow for more diversity of load and more generation resources, better forecasting, continued improvements in technology and development of current transmission infrastructure.













Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
11-16-2007 @ 4:08AM
steve said...
Calling clipper a "leader" is a joke. The leaders in the US turbine market are General Electric and Vestas. Siemens is making solid headway now, Gamesa and Suzlon are farther behind. Clipper is just getting started and their only turbine offering is unproven.
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11-16-2007 @ 4:10AM
greenmachine said...
I don't know about clipper, but Xcel is considered a corporate bad guy here in Minnesota, going back to when it was Northern States Power. They've acted like any other major utility, for example putting the brakes on legislation favoring higher mandates for renewables and pushing for expanded nuclear waste storage on the shores of the Mississippi. It took years to pass the higher renewable energy standard even though most Minnesotans supported it.
Energy activists around here commonly deride the Public Utilities Commission as owned and unfairly manipulated by Xcel.
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11-16-2007 @ 9:22AM
eddie said...
The author quite clearly does not have a grasp on the big players in the wind market. As steve says, Vestas and GE own the majority of the market.
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