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Green Is Good
posted by System Administrator on 11/09/06
"Branson first got interested in green investments nearly a decade ago
based on his belief that oil prices were likely to rise dramatically in
the years ahead. So in 1997 when Britain's Virgin Trains was investing
in a new fleet, Branson wanted to ensure they were fuel-efficient. As a
result, the Pendolino electric trains are the first commercial fleet of
trains with regenerative braking technology, where every time the train
brakes the electricity used is regenerated back into the national grid.
It's the same technology Toyota later used in its Prius cars.
Trains are the
only ones in Europe capable of running on biodiesel, which is made from
renewable energy sources such as rapeseed and soya. Branson is lobbying
the British government to cut the tax on biodiesel, which is currently
taxed higher than regular diesel.
Despite his earlier investment in fuel-efficient trains,
Branson's green conversion began in earnest only recently. Five years
ago, he read The Skeptical Environmentalist,
in which author Bjorn Lomberg argues that things aren't as bad as green
activists make out. Unconvinced, Branson delved deeper, reading a
number of books on global warming including Tim Flannery's The Weather Makers and Al Gore's An Inconvenient Truth.
But the real turning point came two years ago when media mogul Ted
Turner invited Branson to Washington, D.C. to meet a team of global
warming experts. Prior to that meeting, Branson was convinced that the
best to way to combat rising oil prices was to build an oil refinery of
his own. But the meeting in D.C. convinced him that global warming was
a major problem. "It became apparent to me that far from investing in
conventional forms of refining, the more sensible thing for Virgin to
do was to invest considerable sums in alternative fuels and refining,"
he says.
Branson is the first to
admit that going green makes smart business sense. "Investing in
biofuels will put pressure on conventional fuel prices and act as a
natural hedge for our airline and train companies," he says. Plus, if
oil stays at $60 a barrel, he says, biofuels should produce "very
decent returns."
While Branson won't reveal just how much money he thinks these
investments will yield, he points out that Virgin doesn't go into any
new business unless it stands to make a minimum of 40% on capital
invested. "But I think in the case of our new refinery we are talking
considerably more than that," he says.
Analysts agree the money-making potential from biofuels is
massive. Although biofuels currently account for only 1% of the world's
total energy consumption, global production of ethanol has doubled
since 2000. Today, the ethanol industry in the U.S. is currently worth
around $5.5 billion. And with a number of tax incentives for producers
now available, capacity is expected to triple within the next six
years, according to consultants Frost & Sullivan. "Now is the best
time to invest," says Frost & Sullivan analyst Sreekanth
Venkataraman.
Branson's
greenest venture to date is Virgin Galactic. Virgin Galactic's fleet
will be based on the technology developed by aviation legend Burt Rutan
for SpaceShipOne and funded by Paul G. Allen. That spacecraft made
history two years ago as the first privately-manned craft to travel 62
miles above Earth—the official boundary of space.
Virgin's new spaceships are made from carbon composite
materials which are lighter and more fuel-efficient than metal. Even
better, the spaceships generate virtually no pollution. The launch
system will rely on a fuel derived from laughing gas and rubber to
propel anyone willing to pay the $200,000 ticket price into space.
Virgin, which expects to begin the first commercial flights
into space by the end of 2008, says 220 potential space travellers,
including Bryan Singer, director of the latest Superman movie, former Dallas
star Victoria Principal, and British advertising honcho Trevor Beattie,
have ponied up a total of $16.4 million to reserve their seats.
Other interested celebrities include Alien star
Sigourney Weaver, Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie, Morgan Freeman, and
British scientist Stephen Hawking. Branson boasts that Virgin
Galactic's fleet will be much cleaner and greener than NASA's. While
NASA's spaceships are able to go 50 miles further into space, they also
use the equivalent of two weeks worth of New York State's total
electric supply.
In contrast, Virgin Galactic's launch system will be much more
energy efficient. "So we can do thousands of flights for every one NASA
runs," says Branson."
Excerpted from BusinessWeekOnline.com "Green Is Virgin Territory" by Kerry Capell August 14, 2006
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