TechCrunch » Google: Google Invests $75M In 182MW Texas Wind Farm

TechCrunch » Google
Startup and Technology News 
Learn Adobe Illustrator CS6 Master Techniques from an Adobe Guru!

With over 25 years of experience teaching, Robert Farrell has been a trusted instructor for individuals and companies who want to improve their Adobe skills.
From our sponsors
thumbnail Google Invests $75M In 182MW Texas Wind Farm
Jan 14th 2014, 17:20, by Frederic Lardinois

PAN2 12-20-13 T60 1st site stripped

Google just loves its green energy investments and today, the company announced a $75 million investment into the Panhandle 2 wind farm outside of Amarillo, Texas. This marks the  company’s fifteenth renewable energy investment and its second in Texas.

Once it’s operational, the new wind farm is scheduled to produce 182MW, enough capacity to provide energy to 56,000 homes. The facility is schedule to go online by the end of 2014 and will consist of 79 Siemens 2.3MW turbines. Morgan Stanley has provided financing for the project and Pattern Energy, as well as three tax equity investors will acquire the facility once the construction is completed.

At $75 million, this is not exactly Google’s largest investment in renewable energy yet. That honor belongs to Solar City, which received $280 million from Google to provide financing for residential solar projects. In total, Google says, it has now invested in enough projects to generate over 2GW.

Google’s biggest cleantech investment to date, though, is clearly Nest, which it acquired for $3.2 billion yesterday. There is no direct connection between the two announcements, but Google has obviously had a very strong interest in energy-related projects for a while and this only increased once Larry Page became the company’s CEO again in 2011. With Nest in its portfolio, we may see the company shift a bit more from large-scale energy projects to more consumer-oriented hardware products that help its users save energy directly.


You are receiving this email because you subscribed to this feed at blogtrottr.com.

If you no longer wish to receive these emails, you can unsubscribe from this feed, or manage all your subscriptions
Previous
Next Post »