Gautam Kandlikar

February 21, 2011

Should I be bothered by this? – Parte Uno

I work out about 5-6 times a week. In the last month or so, I’ve settled into a routine of weight training 2-3 times, and something aerobic (exercise bike, elliptical, running, etc) all other times. The results are pretty good. I definitely feel stronger, and I think I have improved my stamina/endurance.

There are various reasons why I started putting in more physical activity into my routine. Back in April, the spring weather felt great and I wanted to enjoy it, so I ran. I was slightly overweight back then, and I knew I had the possibility of gaining weight in the long run, so I wanted to control that. I’m glad to see that the efforts have been paying off.

There’s something about this whole thing that bothers me, though. The fact that I’m working out necessitates that I consume more food. If I was consuming 2400 calories/day last April (when I started running and stuff) I now have to consume 500-800 more per day. If I don’t do that, I feel tired and generally listless all day – you know how it goes. So, effectively, that means I am consuming approx. 3000 cals or more/day.

500-800 cals/day translates to 1 whole meal per day. What if that meal went to a starving person, who would certainly have a higher marginal utility of consumption than I would? Is my 20+% increase in calorific intake somehow adding fuel to the raging fire of higher commodity prices? Why do I matter more in determining my appropriate level of utility than a starving child in Minneapolis (let alone India/Africa/etc.)?

Here are some stylized facts that I should take in consideration as I analyze this issue:

  1. A calorie is not a calorie is not a calorie is not a calorie. A calorie from fat is not the same as a calorie from carbs. 100 calories from eating a bag of potato chips is not the same as a calorie from consuming a slice of bread. There are differential levels of energy/processing which go into producing/transporting those items. The “waste” (read: unused sources of calories/nutrition) generated when producing the two products are different. The effects various foods have on health are different.
  2. I know I can die in the next moment, but I also know that medical advances may help me live longer and more comfortably than did my grandparents or even my parents. I may not be able to predict exactly how long I live, but along the course of my future, I will be able to predict with more and more accuracy how long I’m going to live.
  3. Working out adds a lot of non-food consumption to my consumption bundle, too. Working out implies new working out shorts/shirts/shoes every 8-12 months, some equipment, water, etc. Thus, overall, the relative changes in the consumption bundle are fairly dramatic. If everyone resident of an OECD nation worked out a fair bit, then we might see a lot of flux in the aggregate consumption variables.

I don’t have the time to analyze this right now. Just some thoughts. I will write more about it when I have the time.

November 5, 2010

Are HOV lanes being well utilised?

I am on the SW Transit bus right now, heading home for a while the bus was on the Westbound HOV lane of 394, cruising at 60 or whatever. The thing is: all other non HOV lane occupying vehicles were cruising at 60 mph (if not faster) as well. Pn the other hand, Eastbound 394 was backed up, all the way to St Louis Pk/Golden Valley. So, I immediately asked myself: wouldn’t the HOV lane have been better used for all the EB travelers? Would we WB, public-transit-using folks, have been inconvenienced with using the regular lanes?

There are two ways to answer this, I guess. On the one hand, you can simply ask: what proportion of EB cars would have been eligible to use the HOV lane? If the answe to that would have been 1 in 5, then it surely would have made sense. If the answer had been 1 in 20, it probably wouldn’t lhave made sense. In the latter case it would probably have been better to just open up the 2 lanes for all EB traffic.

However, the situation can be approached another way. When the public planners were designing the HOV lane system, they probably had some data on the distribution of traffic flow. In particular, this data must have told them about the distribution of traffic flow, i.e. the mean rate at different time of the day, the standar deviation, kurtosis, skewness, etc. From this data, (and, of course, comparing the relative flows in each direction) they probably inferred that it is optimal to open up the HOV lanes to WB traffic from, say, 4-7 PM (I don’t know if these are the actual times, but for the sake of argument, let’s assume they are.) All is well and good, right?

Wrong. There will always be some outliers. I am willing to bet that if there’s a game at Target field at 6 PM, EB 394 is gonna be more crowded. If any other major route leading into downtown is closed there are probably gonna be more cars on EB 394, etc. The traffic flow rates, as I suggested above, will follow a distribution. On average they will take the mean value, but they might not. I think that might have been the case today, with a lot more cars going EB than going WB.

The immediate question that arises is: is it possible to control the HOV lane direction so that traffic flows are optimized? I think so. We probably have a lot of sensors on that road that give us a good idea of how traffic is flowing an a particular instant. Why don’t we leverage this information when we decide the direction in which traffic flows. It will lead to fewer headaches for those poor people stuck on EB 394.

Of course, I may be wrong about all this… but I really don’t think such is the case.

–Gautam
PS: I have reached home at this point. Happy Diwali to all readers.

November 2, 2010

Election coverage and ETFs

Filed under: Econ,News,Opinions — Gilbert Keith @ 7:08 pm

I spent about 90 minutes at my house, 87 of which involved some level of the idiot box being on. 100% of those 87 minutes were dedicated to election coverage. Sure, elections are an important thing (if you did vote, you are officially cool) but the amount of energy that is spent speculating on how the senate will change if Republicans have 49 seats instead of 48 is truly mindboggling. Of course, all of this arises due to a desire to pack the airwaves with as much news as possible. I think we know better and can differentiate between news and speculation. Fully 33% of the aforementioned 87 minutes seemed to be dedicated to what the senate outcome would be depending on who won the races. DUH. Even we could make those calculations.

In other news, I will write about my fantasy stock picks on updown.com. I’ve been playing this market for a couple of years now, and I don’t think I’ve written about it at all, so here goes. Last night, I gave sell orders for PCLN, TECH, and SIRI. I put in roughly $300,000 toward emerging market ETFs, like EPI (230K), IDX (9K), FNI (26K), EIDO (15K), BRF (12K), and EWZ (8K.) In retrospect, I should have made this move much earlier, probably immediately after the September speech on QE2. Look at this chart for a comparison of the various ETFs since 9/21.The intuition is that the massive amounts of quantitative easing (read: money printed by the fed to buy up long term treasury securities, thereby lowering the yield on those assets) would lead investors to seek more risky assets such as stocks. Furthermore, since the emerging markets like Brazil, Chindia, and Indonesia promise higher growth (ergo higher returns; note, there are a few steps in this mechanism which have been glossed,) investors have been pouring in a lot more money (hot money) into these equity markets. As noted in one of the links above, some countries are even resorting to capital controls in order to limit the inflow of hot money.

I think I’ll hold onto these ETFs for a little while, because they represent do appear attractive for the long run. I shorted SPY (the S&P 500 etf or whatever) but I’m not sure if this was a good idea. Oh well, one day after people have partied enough about QE2 and the election results, it will fall below 119.32 and then I’ll make a measly profit out of it…

 

NOTE: I am not a sophisticated trader of any kind. I am just doing this as a hobby and as a learning experience. Some day, when I have a tonne of money, I will invest it into the stock market and dedicate a blog to that. Until then, I am happy as is.

May 28, 2010

Why am I such a poor half-asser

The title of the post was originally going to be “Why I AM a poor half-asser” but guess what, I couldn’t half-ass enough reasons to support the titular claim. I mean, let’s be honest: I think I have plenty of “real knowledge” of things that I have encountered in classes, that I have encountered from my readings outside of classes, that I have encountered while talking to “experts,” etc. Yet, every time I make claim or try to summarize someone else’s beliefs/work, I find myself hesitating. I am not sure if I am accurately citing my facts, or if I am accurately representing someone’s position on a topic.

I find it amazing how some people are able to produce “facts” out of thin air. I mean, unless I trust someone’s authority of the subject, I’m always skeptical about these claims and I double-check to make sure people’s claims. For instance, I’ll happily accept a statement Dr. Matthes makes about Semaphorins, but no way am I going to accept a claim some random quizbowler makes about what the De-Haas van Alphven effect. This goes the other way too, though. I won’t hesititate to make some bold(ish) conclusions about how things people claim on Bloomberg TV are wrong, but I’m most likely going to pussyfoot on what exactly the Bell’s Theorem means. I’ve definitely encountered the latter topic much less frequently than the former, but I’ve taken a class on quantum mechanics, too! How then, can it come to pass that I have to spend half an hour researching about Bell’s theorem before being able to explain it?

I probably am afraid of the consequences of making an incorrect claim. Just today, I was looking up some topics for the GRE issues essay. One of the topics presented on the official website was:

“What most human beings really want to attain is not knowledge, but certainty. Gaining real knowledge requires taking risks and keeping the mind open—but most people prefer to be reassured rather than to learn the complex and often unsettling truth about anything.”

This topic is so juicy. Probably the most obvious thing I can think of for this topic is John Kenneth Galbraith’s definition of conventional wisdom. This passage summarizes exactly what this passage is talking about. I still didn’t feel comfortable citing Galbraith because I was afraid I would be misrepresenting his ideas. I’ve only read the Affluent Society once, so I’m not exactly familiar with every passage of the book.

Perhaps this is an indication that I should be more well read? Instead of spending more time on this blog or looking up youtube videos of noted Hindi song from Pukar called “Que Sera Sera,” should I be spending all my useful time reading up Galbraith and Keynes so that when I do cite them, I’m more confident about it?

Maybe I should.

Gautam

January 13, 2010

Mass Spectrometry

Filed under: bio,Interests,Opinions — Gilbert Keith @ 10:57 pm
Tags: , ,

Today in Mass Spectrometry class, Dr. Higgins talked about a 2002 study that was published in The Lancet (warning: UMN Access required. PubMed Link article access here.) The study used proteomics to generate the profiles of serum proteins from healthy individuals and from individuals suffering from ovarian cancer. The findings, from the abstract, state:

The algorithm identified a cluster pattern that, in the training set, completely segregated cancer from non-cancer. The discriminatory pattern correctly identified all 50 ovarian cancer cases in the masked set, including all 18 stage I cases. Of the 66 cases of non-malignant disease, 63 were recognised as not cancer. This result yielded a sensitivity of 100% (95% CI 93–100), specificity of 95% (87–99), and positive predictive value of 94% (84–99).

There was apparently a lot of hullabaloo raised over the publication of this article. Sorace and Zhan (2003) and Baggerly, Coombs, and Morris (2007) do a lot of good work going over the objections to the conclusions of the Lancet study.

Based on the results I have seen in the Mass Spectrometry course, I feel kind of convinced that in the short term, it will be very difficult for proteomics and mass spec profiling to make waves in the diagnostics world. The technologies still seem to be too expensive, and we still need to target the right variables for these tools (i.e. quantifying a protein might not be enough; we might need to look at ratios of different proteins, etc.). We have also been unable to come up with good solutions to address sample contamination by ubiquitous proteins such as albumin and keratins. I will admit, though, that I don’t know how big of an issue keratin and albumin present; I feel like any contamination would be detrimental, but experts might just be happy enough to acknowledge the problem and move on.

So, in one of my first “thinking about the future” posts, I will say this: I think that before 2020, we won’t have the right set of technologies that might help us come up with robust proteomics-based diagnostic techniques. I will also state that biologists who understand statistics and computational sciences will be worth twice their weight in gold. Biologists who understand biology will only be worth their weight in gold.

December 27, 2009

Why Facebook Search Sucks

Filed under: Opinions — Gilbert Keith @ 1:31 am

I used to like the old Facebook search. It helped me find people.

Even if the person I’d just met in 1301W physics lab was a sophomore named Michael, or if it was an Emily in WRIT 1401, I could find them based on their major and their year in school (which I usually ask about when I meet people.) The old facebook search allowed you to enter in that information as a filter, so you could find your Michael or Emily from 10 people who fit the info rather than from 700. Back in the day, people filled out this info, too, which made them much easier to find.

The thing with the new Facebook search is that you can only narrow down based on name, location, institution, and workplace. It seems to do a good job letting me know of all the Emilys that exist on the UMN network. This is a pretty uneecessary thing, since Onestalk already does that for me. Perhaps I should begin to start asking Emily “where have you worked before?,” or “what’s your current location on your Facebook profile?” instead of “what’re you majoring in” and stuff.

I’m also wondering if it’d be possible to implement a system where I can search for people based on “who else they know” rather than from 3 generic parameters. For instance, if I met an undergraduate at the U from a Sonu Nigam concert, it’s highly likely that this person is a member of the Indian Student Association who’d also be friends with some of my other friends from ISA. I could obviously go to the profile page of my friends from ISA and look within their friends, but this takes too much time and effort. Alternatively, if I could just specify in my search that ‘I’m looking for a Vivek who likely knows Rahul, Ajay, or Siddharth’ I could narrow down my list of Viveks pretty easily.

–Gautam

EDITED second paragraph.

December 25, 2009

City boss: Bonuses are good for Britain | News

Filed under: Opinions — Gilbert Keith @ 1:26 pm

City boss: Bonuses are good for Britain | News.

“We have to accept that inequality is a way of achieving greater opportunity and prosperity for all.”  — Lord Griffiths

This is old news, but: Wow, I’d never heard of this until recently, but this has got to be the worst, the most ugly statement to have been made in 2009.

–Gautam

September 18, 2008

Toilets in Nigeria

Filed under: Interests,Opinions — Gilbert Keith @ 6:52 pm

http://www.reuters.com/news/video?videoId=90278&videoChannel=74

I think this is great enterprise, and I would be happy to see more of such projects. If indeed DMT is offering safe, hygenic services, which improves sanitation conditions in Nigeria, I actually wouldn’t mind government subsidising this venture at, say, 75% or even 100%. I mean, think of all the people that would benefit by having better sanitation and, ultimately, a cleaner, more hygenic place to live.

What one of the people said in the video is absolutely right: there about 150 million people in that country, and even if 10% of the people in Nigeria do patronize the business, it provides 15 million people (about 4 Minnesotas put together) with much needed service.

Gautam

September 1, 2008

Palin’s teen daughter is pregnant – CNN.com

Filed under: News,Opinions — Gilbert Keith @ 6:22 pm

What is this nonsense being tolerated here? Sarah Palin’s daughter is a) teenage b) unwed c) pregnant, and Republican’s out there are proud that she is keeping her baby rather than lamenting the fact that fucking abstinance only education and bull shit like that does not work! Also, look at the shamlessness with which the Palin family is “proud” of being “grandparents” and not shocked to see the negative product of unrealistic policies they support. I think it is imperative that we stop listening to nonsense about how “family support” is a good thing in this case, and how it’s all made out to be fine in the end.

The candidates are probably correct in saying that kids should be kept out of politics, but uh, Barack Obama, if I don’t see your campaign attack this abstinence only hogwash like it was nobody’s business, I am going to be disappointed. It is indeed an election about the future of this country, Mr. Schmidt, but if the future of this country is going to be full of “educated” “young people” who can’t quench their needs to fuck around town, then you and the ideas you support are not what the country needs, okay?

———————————–

Palin’s teen daughter is pregnant – CNN.com

Palin’s teen daughter is pregnant

  • Story Highlights
  • Bristol Palin, 17, is pregnant and will keep baby, VP candidate says
  • McCain knew of pregnancy before choosing Palin as running mate
  • Information revealed in effort to correct rumors that Palin’s baby is daughter’s
From Dana Bash
CNN

ST. PAUL, Minnesota (CNN) — Bristol Palin, the 17-year-old daughter of Sarah Palin, is pregnant and will keep the baby and marry the baby’s father, the Republican vice presidential candidate said Monday.

John McCain was aware of Bristol Palin’s pregnancy before he chose her mother for his running mate, a top adviser to the Republican presidential candidate said.

The adviser, Doug Holtz-Eakin, said Monday that Palin “was completely vetted by the campaign” before she was chosen.

“Sen. McCain knew this and felt in no way did it disqualify her from being vice president,” said an aide who asked not to be named. “Families have difficulties sometimes and lucky for her she has a supportive family.”

The McCain aide emphasized that Bristol decided to keep the baby, a decision “supported by her parents.”

Senior McCain advisers said Palin told McCain about her daughter’s pregnancy in one of their “private conversations” last week before he officially asked her to run with her.

However, McCain aides said he already knew, having found out about it earlier in the vetting process.

“She was very upfront about it,” one aide insisted.

Asked how the unmarried teenager’s pregnancy would be received by the American people, another senior McCain adviser, Steve Schmidt, replied, “I don’t know; I’m not a psychic.”

Reacting to the news, Sen. Barack Obama said firmly that families are off-limits in the campaign for president.

“Let me be as clear as possible,” Obama said. “I think people’s families are off-limits, and people’s children are especially off-limits. This shouldn’t be part of our politics. It has no relevance to Gov. Palin’s performance as governor or her potential performance as a vice president.”

Bristol Palin, a senior in high school, is about five months along, in her second trimester, according to the aide who asked not to be named.

The aide said the Palins and the McCain campaign decided to reveal the information now because of Internet rumors that Sarah Palin’s 4-month-old baby, who has Down syndrome, was actually Bristol’s.

“In the course of correcting that, we needed to get the truth out,” the McCain aide said. iReport.com: Share your thoughts

Sarah and her husband, Todd Palin, issued a statement saying they are “proud of Bristol’s decision to have her baby and even prouder to become grandparents.”

“Bristol and the young man she will marry are going to realize very quickly the difficulties of raising a child, which is why they will have the love and support of our entire family,” they said in a statement issued by McCain’s campaign.

They also asked the media to respect their daughter’s privacy, a request echoed by McCain adviser Schmidt.

“The one thing that all the candidates agree on is this: Leave the kids alone. Leave the kids alone. This is an election about the future of the country,” he said.

McCain unveiled Sarah Palin, a 44-year-old first-term Alaska governor and former small-town mayor, as his running mate Friday. The choice was a surprise to many. VideoWatch analysts discuss the choice »

Palin said when running for governor in 2006 that she would support funding for abstinence-only education in schools, according to Eagle Forum Alaska, a conservative group that sent a questionnaire asking gubernatorial candidates their views on a range of issues.

Tony Perkins, president of the influential conservative Family Research Council, on Monday issued a statement supporting the Palin family.

“Fortunately, Bristol is following her mother and father’s example of choosing life in the midst of a difficult situation. We are committed to praying for Bristol and her husband-to-be and the entire Palin family as they walk through a very private matter in the eyes of the public,” Perkins said in a written statement. 

Find this article at:

http://www.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/09/01/palin.daughter/index.html

August 3, 2008

Wind Energy or Water?

Filed under: Green,Opinions — Gilbert Keith @ 9:58 am

A bunch of Articles:

From CNN

Oil billionaire Pickens puts his money on wind power

  • Story Highlights
  • T. Boone Pickens launches plan to reduce U.S. dependence on foreign oil
  • Oilman calls for more use of wind power, switch to natural gas to power vehicles
  • Pickens’ company has announced plan to build world’s largest wind farm in Texas
  • Wind turbines could supply 20 percent or more of U.S. power needs, Pickens says

(CNN) — Billionaire oilman T. Boone Pickens is putting his clout behind renewable energy sources like wind power.

The legendary entrepreneur and philanthropist on Tuesday unveiled a new energy plan he says will decrease the United States’ dependency on foreign oil by more than one-third and help shift American energy production toward renewable natural resources.

“The Pickens Plan” calls for investing in domestic renewable resources such as wind, and switching from oil to natural gas as a transportation fuel.

In a news conference outlining his proposal, Pickens said his impetus for the plan is the country’s dangerous reliance on foreign oil.

“Our dependence on imported oil is killing our economy. It is the single biggest problem facing America today,” he said. VideoWatch Pickens discuss plan for wind power »

“Wind power is … clean, it’s renewable. It’s everything you want. And it’s a stable supply of energy,” Pickens told CNN in May. “It’s unbelievable that we have not done more with wind.”

Pickens’ company, Mesa Power, recently announced a $2 billion investment as the first step in a multibillion-dollar plan to build the world’s largest wind farm in Pampa, Texas.

Pickens said Tuesday that if the United States takes advantage of the so-called “wind corridor,” stretching from the Canadian border to West Texas, energy from wind turbines built there could supply 20 percent or more of the nation’s power. He suggested the project could be funded by private investors.

Power from thousands of wind turbines that would line the corridor could be distributed throughout the country via electric power transmission lines and could fuel power plants in large population hubs, the oil baron said.

Fueling these plants with wind power would then free up the natural gas historically used to power them, and would mean that natural gas could replace foreign oil as fuel for motor vehicles, he said.

Using natural gas for transportation needs could replace one-third of the United States’ imported oil and would save more than $230 billion a year, Pickens said.

“We are going to have to do something different in America,” Pickens told CNN. “You can’t keep paying out $600 billion a year for oil.”

His energy plan could be implemented within 10 years if both Congress and the White House treat the current energy situation as a “national emergency and take immediate action,” he predicted.

Pickens, a lifelong Republican, says he is not advising either presidential candidate, but is prepared to work with the next president.

The Web site for the plan urges people to sign up and help spread the word.

Oil analyst Peter Beutel of Cameron Hanover, an energy risk manager, said Pickens’ plan could definitely reduce the country’s dependency on foreign oil.

“The best thing about it is that it’s a definite plan — it’s not something that either party has pitted itself outrightly against. It therefore has a tremendous chance for success on Capitol Hill.”

Analyst Fadel Gheit of Oppenheimer & Co. Inc., an investment firm, added that such a plan “has been on the drawing board for years.”

At least 21 states and the District of Columbia have set deadlines or goals for utilities to obtain electricity from clean, renewable sources instead of fossil fuel-burning plants. See where states stand on renewable resources »

The scramble has triggered construction of large-scale wind farms throughout much of the nation, including proposals for the first U.S. offshore facilities.

Delaware and Galveston, Texas, have offshore projects in the works, although a farm proposed off New York’s Long Island was shelved this year because of high projected construction costs.

In Massachusetts, where utilities are under the gun to obtain four percent of electricity from renewables by 2009, builders await federal approval of a hugely controversial wind farm off historic Cape Cod.

The Cape Wind project envisions 130 wind turbines each rising 440 feet above Nantucket Sound by 2011. State officials said the farm will eliminate pollution equal to 175,000 gas-burning cars.

CNN’s Emily Anderson and Thom Patterson contributed to this report.

————

From http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,395304,00.html

Pickens Gives New Meaning to ‘Self-Government’

Thursday , July 31, 2008

By Steven Milloy

ADVERTISEMENT

The more you learn about T. Boone Pickens’ plan to switch America to wind power, the more you realize that he seems willing to say and do just about anything to make another billion or two.

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.

———–

From: Forbes

Green In Greentech For Pickens
Sarah Terry-Cobo and Wendy Tanaka 07.11.08, 12:24 AM ET

Burlingame, Calif. –

The Texas oilman T. Boone Pickens seems to be turning environmentalist, pushing a plan to address the nation’s energy crisis by reducing “America’s staggering dependence on imported oil.”

The goal of the “Pickens Plan,” announced Tuesday, is to replace more than a third of the oil the United States imports with wind, natural gas and other green energy sources, in the process, saving the country more than $230 billion annually. Currently, the U.S. spends $700 billion a year on foreign oil.

“Our dependence on imported oil is killing our economy,” Pickens said in a statement. “It is the single biggest problem facing America today.”

While the billionaire’s goals are laudable, his renewable energy proposals likely would serve his business interests as well. He has direct investments in a plethora of energy companies, including BP Capital, a hedge fund that invests in renewable energy companies, Exco Resources, Clean Energy Fuels, Interoil, Westport Innovations, Mesa Power and Mesa Water. And the scope of Pickens’ projects are massive. Mesa Power, for instance, is set to spend $2 billion on 667 General Electric wind turbines as part of the first phase of a four-stage effort to build the world’s largest wind farm in Texas.

Analysts say if Pickens’ renewable energy plan catches on, it would mean more business for his Seal Beach, Calif.-based Clean Energy Fuels, which sells natural gas to service stations and municipalities, and Westport Innovations, a Canadian company that makes heavy-duty trucks that use natural gas.

Brian Fan, senior director of research at the Cleantech Group, sees the plan as a crafty way to get the public to let Pickens’ companies put up transmission lines anywhere, even in their backyards. “He is really quite savvy in trying to rally public support of his plan and overcome these obstacles,” Fan says.

Pickens is hoping to rally support to get the next president to enact his plan. “The plan … is doable in five to 10 years if we can get Congress and the Administration to act quickly,” he said. Since 1990, Pickens has contributed nearly $350,000 to political campaigns, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

National Bank Financial analyst Rupert Merer says the Pickens Plan won’t be a hard sell to Republicans and Democrats. Presidential candidates John McCain and Barack Obama are both in favor of expanding use of renewable energy, and McCain recently voiced support for using natural gas in vehicles. The real challenge Pickens faces is building grassroots support that will keep pressure on the new president.

Pickens is spending $58 million of his own money to market his plan. He started airing ads on TV, radio and in print this week. He’s also launched his campaign on social networks Facebook, Myspace, LinkedIn, YouTube and instant messaging service Twitter.

Stay tuned to see if Pickens can save America–and reap a harvest of greenbacks.

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As much as I support massive investment in Wind, I think it would be absurd to let Mr. Pickens obtain the rights to all that water. While it may not seem like a big problem now, I am willing to bet that shortages of clean water are going to cause big problems in the future.

World Bank VP Ismail Serageldin: “If the wars of this century were fought over oil, the wars of the next century will be fought over water.”

We may come up with advanced desalination/purification technologies and be able to use sea/ocean water for daily purposes, but it’s going to be a difficult venture for all these prairie states located in the middle of nowhere to benifit from those technologies.

I do not find this wind/water tradeoff to be worth it in the future. I would much rather leave the Ogallala aquifer under the current management rather than give it to this Pickens guy to make a quick buck out of it.

From here:

“The future economy of the High Plains depends heavily on the Ogallala Aquifer, the main source of water for all uses. The Ogallala will continue to be the lifeblood of the region only if it is managed properly to limit both depletion and contamination.”

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