T. Boone Pickens' conversion from Texas oilman to darling of the US renewable
energy industry continued apace this week with the billionaire investor
testifying to a Senate committee that oil prices could hit $300 (£150) a barrel
if the country does not step up efforts to limit its dependence on foreign oil.
Pickens made his debut on Capitol Hill to promote his self-styled "Pickens
Plan" for enhancing US energy security by generating up to 22 per cent of the
country's energy from wind turbines over the next decade.
He told a Senate committee that the US already imports nearly 70 per cent of
its oil and that this would rise to 80 per cent over the next 10 years if it
does not increase investment in renewable energy and natural gas. "If we
continue to drift, oil will hit $300 a barrel in 10 years," he warned, adding
that legislators needed to show greater leadership to encourage people to curb
energy use.
"The American people have not been asked to do what needs to be done," he
said. "I'm going to awaken the American people and they will see what they're up
against. When they walk out of the room, they're going to turn off the lights. .
. . We're going to become much more sensitive to energy in the country, and
that's good."
Pickens said that he was not against an expansion in offshore oil drilling, a
central plank of the Bush administration's strategy for limiting dependence on
imports, but warned that there were simply not sufficient US oil reserves to
meet rising demand. He argued instead that there needed to be a much greater
focus on bolstering wind energy capacity.
Earlier this month, 80-year old Pickens announced he was to spend $58m (£29m)
on a PR campaign to promote the "Pickens Plan", which calls on the government to
invest up to a trillion dollars to replace natural gas with wind energy and then
use the excess natural gas to power vehicles.
Pickens himself has long maintained that far from converting into an
environmentalist, he sees the strategy as a great opportunity to make money. His
BP Capital hedge fund has invested heavily in the natural gas sector, while he
also recently announced plans for a massive £12bn wind farm in his home state of
Texas.
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