| Pickens Gives New Meaning to 'Self-Government' |
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| Written by Steven Milloy, foxnews.com | |||
| Thursday, 31 July 2008 | |||
T. Boone Pickens
This column previously discussed the plan’s technical and economic shortcomings and marketing ruses. Today, we’ll look into the diabolical machinations behind it. Simply put, Pickens’ pitch is “embrace wind power to help break our ‘addiction’ to foreign oil.” There is, however, another intriguing component to Pickens’ plan that goes unmentioned in his TV commercials, media interviews and web site -- water rights, which he owns more of than any other American. Pickens hopes that his recent $100 million investment in 200,000 acres worth of groundwater rights in Roberts County, Texas, located over the Ogallala Aquifer, will earn him $1 billion. But there’s more to earning such a profit than simply acquiring the water. Rights-of-way must be purchased to install pipelines, and opposition from anti-development environmental groups must be overcome. Here’s where it gets interesting, according to information compiled by the Water Research Group, a small grassroots group focusing on local water issues in Texas.
Purchasing rights-of-way is often expensive
and time-consuming -- and what if landowners won’t sell? While private
entities may be frustrated, governments can exercise eminent domain to
compel sales. This is Pickens’ route of choice. But wait, you say,
Pickens is not a government entity. How can he use eminent domain? Are
you sitting down?
At Pickens’ behest, the Texas
legislature changed state law to allow the two residents of an 8-acre
parcel of land in Roberts County to vote to create a municipal water
district, a government agency with eminent domain powers. Who were the
voters? They were Pickens’ wife and the manager of Pickens’ nearby
ranch. And who sits on the board of directors of this water district?
They are the parcel’s three other non-resident landowners, all Pickens’
employees.
A member of a local water conservation
board told Bloomberg News that, “[Pickens has] obtained the right of
eminent domain like he was a big city. It’s supposed to be for the
public good, not a private company.”
What’s this
got to do with Pickens’ wind-power plan? Just as he needs pipelines to
sell his water, he also needs transmission lines to sell his
wind-generated power. Rights of way for transmission lines are also
acquired through eminent domain -- and, once again, the Texas
legislature has come to Pickens’ aid.
Earlier this
year, Texas changed its law to allow renewable energy projects (like
Pickens’ wind farm) to obtain rights-of-way by piggybacking on a water
district’s eminent domain power. So Pickens can now use his water
district’s authority to also condemn land for his future wind farm’s
transmission lines.
Who will pay for the
rights-of-way and the transmission lines and pipelines? Thanks to
another gift from Texas politicians, Pickens’ water district can sell
tax-free, taxpayer-guaranteed municipal bonds to finance the $2.2
billion cost of the water pipeline. And then earlier this month, the
Texas legislature voted to spend $4.93 billion for wind farm
transmission lines. While Pickens has denied that this money is
earmarked for him, he nevertheless is building the largest wind farm in
the world.
Despite this legislative largesse, a fly in the ointment remains.
Although
Pickens hopes to sell as much as $165 million worth of water annually
to Dallas alone, no city in Texas has signed up yet -- partly because
they don’t yet need the water and partly because of resentment against
water profiteering.
Enter the Sierra Club.
While
Green groups support wind power, “the privatization of water is an
entirely different thing,” says the Sierra Club. Moreover, the activist
group has long opposed further exploitation of the very groundwater
Pickens wants to use -- the Ogallala Aquifer.
“The
source of drinking water and irrigation for Plains residents from
Nebraska to Texas, the Ogallala Aquifer is one of the world's largest
-- as well as one of the most rapidly dissipating… If current
irrigation practices continue, agribusiness will deplete the Ogallala
Aquifer in the next century,” says the Sierra Club.
In
March 2002, the Sierra Club opposed the construction of a
slaughterhouse in Pampa, Texas, because it would require a mere 275
million gallons per year from the Ogallala Aquifer. Yet Pickens wants
to sell 65 billion gallons of water per year -- to Dallas alone. In a
2004 lamentation about local government facilitation of Pickens’ plan
for the Ogallala, the Sierra Club slammed Pickens as a “junk bond
dealer” who wanted to make “Blue Gold” from the Ogallala.
But
while the Sierra Club can’t seem to do anything about Pickens’
influence with state legislators, they do have enough influence to make
his water politically unpotable. This opposition may soon abate,
however, now that Pickens has buddied up with Sierra Club president
Carl Pope.
As noted last week, Pope now flies in
Pickens’ private jet and publicly lauds him. The two are newly-minted
“friends,” since Pope needs the famous Republican oilman to lend
propaganda value to the Sierra Club’s anti-oil agenda and Pickens needs
Pope to ease up on the Ogallala water opposition.
This alliance isn’t sitting well with everyone on the Left.
A
TreeHugger.com writer recently observed, “… I am left asking myself why
the green media have neglected [the water] aspect of Pickens’ wind-farm
plans? Have we been so distracted by the prospect of Texas’ renewable
energy portfolio growing by 4000 megawatts that we are willing to
overlook some potentially dodgy aspects to the project?”
It
shouldn’t sit well with the rest of us either. Pickens has gamed Texas
for his own ends, and now he’s trying to game the rest of us, too.
Worse, his gamesmanship includes lending his billionaire resources,
prominent stature and feudal powers bestowed upon him by the Texas
legislature to help the Greens gain control over the U.S. energy supply.
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