CarbonFreeLatest Report




GE Has $6 Billion Target For Renewable Energy Investments

11th July 2008

With a goal of investing $6 billion in renewable energy by 2010, GE Energy Financial Services surpassed the $4 billion mark by investing in New York State’s three newest wind farms. The unit of GE will invest a total of $100 million in the three wind farms, whose construction began last month.

“We have reached the $4 billion milestone just five months after hitting $3 billion, confirming that renewable energy is our fastest-growing business,” said Alex Urquhart, President and CEO of GE Energy Financial Services. “Such project-level investments—coupled with our venture capital investing in clean tech, GE’s technology and research—reinforce GE’s company-wide leadership in renewable energy.”

GE Energy Financial Services closed more than $2 billion of renewable energy transactions last year, and by 2010 expects they will comprise 20-25 percent of its overall energy and water portfolio, up from about 10 percent in 2006. Including the three new farms, GE Energy Financial Services has invested or committed to invest equity worldwide in 76 wind farms, with a total capacity of more than 4,000 megawatts.

When the projects are completed during the fourth quarter of this year, GE Energy Financial Services will invest equity as the non-managing member of the three New York State farms and Noble Environmental Power, a leading wind energy developer based in Essex, Connecticut, will invest as the managing member. With this new investment, GE and Noble will have co-invested in more than 80 percent of New York State’s wind capacity. In addition to remaining a significant equity investor, Noble will construct, operate and manage the facilities, located in the predominantly dairy producing farmland of northern and western New York.

The portfolio consists of:

The Noble Chateaugay Windpark (106.5 megawatts), in Franklin County The Noble Altona Windpark (97.5 megawatts), in Clinton County
The Noble Wethersfield Windpark (126 megawatts), in Wyoming County

The portfolio addition is the second in which GE Energy Financial Services has partnered with Noble. In June 2007, GE Energy Financial Services invested in the Noble Bliss, Clinton, and Ellenburg Windparks, also in New York State.

Workers are laying foundations and installing turbines at the new wind farms, adjacent to the three wind farms in which GE Energy Financial Services invested last year. Two are located in northern New York, about 15 miles from the Canadian border and the other is in western New York. When the three begin commercial operation, they will increase the wind producing capacity of New York State by 47 percent. Using 1.5-megawatt GE wind turbines, the three wind farms will generate a combined 330 megawatts of energy—enough to power more than 110,000 average New York homes. In total, the farms will avoid 385,000 tons of greenhouse gases per year—equivalent to taking 64,000 cars off the road.

Along with helping GE meet its renewable energy investment target, this new capital for New York wind farms helps the state meet its Renewable Portfolio Standard. That standard requires that 25 percent of the electricity consumed by New Yorkers come from renewable energy by 2013 and is expected to reduce emissions of carbon dioxide by 7.7 percent, nitrogen oxide by 6.8 percent and sulfur dioxide by 5.9 percent.

“Wind farms provide not only clean energy but more jobs,” said Kevin Walsh, Managing Director and leader of renewable energy at GE Energy Financial Services. “Local people have already been hired to construct the wind farms, build and plow the roads, and eventually maintain the projects. As we showed in a study we released last month, wind farms will create tax revenues for local and federal governments. In a world with rising fuels costs, this new form of energy—and the millions of dollars in economic benefits it provides—is truly America’s new cash crop.”

Use to send this story to a colleague or to add it to your social web.

Subscribe to the CarbonFree weekly newsletter

Disclaimer




Receive CarbonFree News by email.
Subscribe

or as a Newsfeed.

More News

Reports

Zero And Low Emission Buildings

Buildings, both while they are being constructed and when they are in operations, are a major source of carbon emissions. This has made the property sector a prime target for a range of emission control initiatives and is providing an opportunity for architects and developers to differentiate themselves in an increasingly competitive market... details

Storing Renewable Energy

Renewable energy tends to arrive in the wrong place at the wrong time. As the use of energy derived from renewable, but inherently intermittent sources, continues to grow there is a expanding market for energy storage technology... details

Other Reports

Low Emission IT
Householders As Energy Providers
101 Ways To Kick The Carbon Habit
New Ownership, Fuelling and Use Models For The Automobile Industry
Farming Renewable Energy

City Power

Terms Of Use / Privacy
©Steinkrug Publications