EcoWatch, Brandon Baker, June 10, 2014
Big money
will mean a bigger, quicker transition to renewable energy in the U.S., and few
statements are larger than the one Warren Buffett made Monday.
Speaking at
the Edison Electric Institute’s annual convention in Las Vegas Monday, Buffett,
the $65.6-billion man, proclaimed that he would double his investment into
strengthening renewable energy across the country. With wind and solar farms in
Iowa, Wyoming, California and Arizona, Buffett admittedly had trouble recalling
just how much he had already invested, according to Bloomberg. One of his
deputies, Greg Abel, told him the amount was $15 billion.
“There’s
another $15 billion ready to go, as far as I’m concerned,” Buffett responded.
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One of the wealthiest men in the U.S., Warren Buffett said Monday that he would double his renewable energy investments. Video screenshot: Georgetown University/YouTube |
Buffett
recently received praise from clean energy advocates all over when his company
announced that it would close Reid Gardner, a 557-megawatt, coal-fired energy
plant near Las Vegas known as one of the nation’s dirtiest. Buffett’s Berkshire
Hathaway inherited the plant as part of its acquisition of Nevada’s largest
utility, NV Energy.
Buffett
also owns natural gas pipelines across the country, but Bloomberg believes that
Buffett keeps an eye far into the future when it comes to his investments. With
renewables positioning themselves as the energy choice of the future, Buffett
likely prefers the reinvestment and acquisition opportunities that will
accompany solar and wind for years to come. His investments will also play a
key role in the government’s desire to decrease carbon emissions by 30 percent,
compared to 2005 levels.
“We’re
going to keep doing that as far as the eye can see,” Buffett said. “We’ll just
keep moving.”
Jeff
Matthews, a Berkshire shareholder and author, said Buffett usually makes good
on investments, even if he can’t recall exact figures.
“If he says
it, he means it,” Matthews said. “The whole complexion of the company has
changed.”
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