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Oklahoma Governor Brad Henry Leads the Way With Renewable Energies

 


One thing that you’ve brought up is that the Pickens Plan not only makes sense given our resources, but the timing couldn’t be better.
That’s right. I believe that the Pickens Plan can really help jump start our economy and get us out of the economic slump that we’re in through reduction of that huge transfer of wealth that goes to foreign nations as we decrease our dependence on foreign oil as well.

And thanks to infrastructure projects, the Pickens Plan will also mean new jobs: building transmission lines for wind power, building the appropriate CNG stations for compressed natural gas run vehicles, building biomass plants. So we’re doing everything we can to help out in Oklahoma.

Give us an example.
We are in the process of encouraging, facilitating and incentivising the development of the all-important transmission lines—the grid —to get power from the remote areas of the state into the urban areas that use the power. This is one of the many places where Oklahoma is really exactly in line with the Pickens Plan. 

Oklahoma is making a full-scale effort to develop its alternative energy industries.
We are. A couple of years ago at my request, we created the Oklahoma Bioenergy Center, which is a consortium of researchers from both the public sector from Oklahoma State University, Boone’s alma mater, as well as the University of Oklahoma, my alma mater, and the private Noble Foundation. Of course the Noble Foundation has led the world in plant genomics and the engineering of plant genes. So it’s a perfect partnership and collaboration. Right now they are focusing on developing a renewable clean biofuel made from perennial grasses like switchgrass, which doesn’t compete for human or animal feed.

That’s been one of the major beefs about corn ethanol.
Right. Corn ethanol is certainly problematic because it competes for food sources for both humans and our domestic livestock. So Oklahoma has really taken the lead in the research and development of biofuels.

What about wind?
Oklahoma is perfectly situated along this wind corridor that Boone refers to as the Saudi Arabia of wind. This corridor runs from Texas up through Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, the Dakotas, and into Canada. And we’re perfectly situated to take advantage of that. If you look at the climatological reports, Oklahoma has as much wind as anybody. Out in the Panhandle, we have an average wind of 13 miles an hour each day.

What an untapped resource.
That’s right: an average wind speed of 13 miles per hour day and night. We understand that we’ve got to do something to reduce our dependence on foreign oil. That it’s critically important for national security purposes as well as protection of the environment, economic development, and the future prosperity of our economy.

INTERVIEW CONDUCTED, CONDENSED, AND EDITED BY ERIC O’KEEFE

Comments2 Responses to “Oklahoma Governor Brad Henry Leads the Way With Renewable Energies”

Glenn A. Ford


It has been reported that Oklahoma has had a lot of trouble with corprorate farming, more specificly with chicken litter. The state has been in litigation with the chicken producers and processors. It is possible to gasifiy the chicken litter and liquefy it to be used as 'neat diesel' which is less toxic than table salt but still gives more power, cooler running, cleaner burning, and more lubricity in any diesel engine without modifications. The carbon dioxide emited from the 'neat diesel' is equal to that which was in the plants the chicken feed was made from; that's net zero emissions. Meanwhile, the chemical fertilizers will be found in the ash from the gasification in its purest form. Glenn

Pat Jack


Gordon Soderberg is a Pickens Plan biodiesel brewer in New Orleans he's a member of Pickens Plan and would find chicken litter to be of great interest, :-). I find great irony that the wisdom Oklahoma has gained bears fruit as the leader in electrical grid infrastructure development at a state level, the dust bowl as Wind Farm, the greatest no-brainer in the history of U.S. Energy Policy, a ripe plum of electrical cash just waiting to be harvested. I'm so tired of waiting on leadership, payed leadership. Chickens and garden vegetables are wonderful together in every respect. A Bicycle with a small internal combustion engine is lots of fun and I've been working on a few models. It would be totally radical to run it on chicken litter biodiesel, that would be a statement to OPEC. I've a gut feeling that Governor Brad Henry offers the strongest support amongst all Governors which Pickens Plan pledges. The position that Governor Brad Henry is in the lower part of the U.S. wind corridor and has strong wind for harvesting. Just as Louisiana is in a position to transmit Pickens Plan wind corridor electricity, (has an opportunity), and transmit that wind corridor electricity to the south eastern states of the United States of America, Oklahoma is in that position and a more valuable position as Oklahoma has good wind to farm. Oklahoma has greater flexibility to capitalize on transmission of green electricity, (any direction over state borders). Oklahoma is building a better electrical transmission grid, a smarter grid, and a better product to take advantage of Pickens Plan wind generated electricity and the transmission of that electricity. Folks don't transmit electricity for free, please remember, there is big money in the transmission of electricity alone. Oklahoma is the sweet state for wind, North Texas is awesome but there on the tip of the tail of the wind corridor. Again, the great irony that the depression "dustbowl" is a key green state for Pickens Plan strikes me as truly American. We'll figure it out one way or another, but we'll do this thing. Push. Pat Jack

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