By Murray Evans
The Norman Transcript
Oklahoma has vast potential for the development of the renewable resource and it could be a boon to the state's economy, speakers at a wind energy conference said Tuesday.
About 400 people are expected to attend the two-day Oklahoma Wind Commerce 2009 at a Norman hotel, state Commerce Department officials said. The conference comes just days after the state's ninth wind farm was dedicated near the western Oklahoma towns of Elk City and Hammon.
Tuesday's speakers included the state's commerce, energy and environmental secretaries and Lt. Gov. Jari Askins, who noted Oklahoma's longtime status as an energy leader.
"We believe that Oklahoma is perfectly located for us to develop this industry in our state," Askins said. "Energy and agriculture have been mainstays of our economy for decades. Wind energy is an opportunity to continue developing the energy industry and continue it moving forward into the 21st century."
The state also has an abundance of natural gas, which can be used in tandem with wind, state Energy Secretary Robert Wegener said.
"Natural gas and wind are perfect partners," Wegener said. "They are perfect energy solutions for Oklahoma. Because we all know that wind is intermittent. We have to have backup generation capabilities," which he said should be tied to natural gas.
Oklahoma is 12th among the states in wind energy generation, but state officials said it could climb into the top two in the next couple of decades if it continued to develop its resources. By 2030, it could provide 10 percent of the nation's electricity, state Commerce Secretary Natalie Shirley said.
But for the state to reach its potential, the electric grid must be updated so power can be moved from place to place, Wegener said.
"The development of the wind industry in Oklahoma over the next five to 10 years will be closely correlated with the development of transmission in Oklahoma," Wegener said. "I think the wind resource will develop, but real significant development ... that will be completely dependent on transmission."
The manufacturing portion of the wind industry also has the potential to create jobs and lure employers to Oklahoma, Shirley said.
State Environmental Secretary J.D. Strong said he is
enthusiastic about wind's potential as a so-called "green" energy
source, but there are environmental concerns. Wind farms are
already reducing habitat for the lesser prairie chicken, a stocky
ground-dwelling bird found in parts of New Mexico, Colorado, Texas,
Oklahoma and Kansas, he said.
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