Oilman George Mitchell’s foundation aims to usher in a new energy era in the Permian Basin

The Texas state flag flies above workers at Latshaw oil drilling rig #43 in the Permian Basin in Odessa in 2021. The Cynthia and George Mitchell Foundation aims to eliminate barriers slowing the development of advanced energy technologies and unlock the Permian’s potential to unleash a new era in lower-carbon energy in a push to train workers. 

David Goldman, STF / Associated Press

A clean energy future poses an existential threat to the Permian Basin, the prolific oil-producing region in West Texas that transformed the nation into a global energy powerhouse. It’s a problem that a new initiative from the Cynthia and George Mitchell Foundation aims to address.

George Mitchell, who died in 2013, pioneered the hydraulic fracturing techniques that unlocked Permian shale and its oil-producing potential. His foundation now aims to eliminate barriers slowing the development of advanced energy technologies in the region and unlock the Permian’s potential to unleash a new era in lower-carbon energy. 

The initiative, called the Permian Energy Development Laboratory, unites a group of research institutions to tackle questions such as whether hydrogen can truly be a cleaner alternative to fossil fuels, where to site large-scale solar projects and how the region’s vast amounts of natural gas, wind and solar can be deployed in an emerging clean hydrogen economy. Research institutions involved in the initiative include the University of Texas, the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Midland College, Odessa College, New Mexico State University and New Mexico Tech.

Continue reading at Chron.com >>

Amanda Drane

Amanda Drane is an energy reporter for the Houston Chronicle.

Amanda covers the Texas energy industry and the people affected by it, with a particular focus on oil, gas, chemicals and the transition to cleaner energy. Before joining the paper’s business desk in May 2020 she worked as a City Hall reporter in Massachusetts, where she won regional awards for covering issues such as police accountability and the exploitation of undocumented restaurant workers.

https://www.houstonchronicle.com/author/amanda-drane/
Previous
Previous

Odessa College, UT-Permian Basin part of NSF funding opportunity

Next
Next

Consortium introduces Permian Energy Development Lab