Silicon Valley Powers Ahead During Power Shortages -- for Now
Updated from 3:34 p.m. ET
Mr. Politician, meet the laws of supply and demand.| Related Stories |
Other Worries
These actions leave them free to worry about other catastrophes, like PC-buyer fickleness. Of course, generators, idle workers and the downed servers of the generator-less cut into corporate coffers. On June 14, 2000, Silicon Valley was hit with rolling blackouts as temperatures in the 100s scorched the area. According to the Silicon Valley Manufacturing Group, the blackouts cost Valley companies $100 million. The corporate group brings together Valley business leaders from member companies to work out public policy issues with local governments. Unfortunately, the state government has yet to select a course of action to clean up the state's half-hearted deregulation mess. California Gov. Gray Davis has widely lamented his state's power problems, taking the case to the federal government for help, only to be denied. Davis' lack of a definite course has frustrated go-go technology types. Infoseek founder Steve Kirsch composed a few options for Davis, which include fixing the current hybrid system, a return to regulation or of deregulation in a sustainable fashion. "This is another crisis that could be forgotten like the drought of several years ago was," says Ruben Barrales, CEO of Joint Venture Silicon Valley, a nonprofit organization that researches many facets of Silicon Valley's economy and community. "Or, if it's not handled correctly, it will be with us for years to come." Deliverables, my good man. It's time for a deliverable.Looking Elsewhere
Last week at the Consumer Electronics Show, Intel CEO Craig Barrett commented that the power crisis logically makes California a less attractive state in which to develop. Intel employs 12,000 in the Golden State, and operates its second-smallest chip-manufacturing fabrication plant in California. Nonetheless, Cisco has planned a 20,000-person campus on the outskirts of San Jose -- in Coyote Valley, which is grappling with the rejection of a planned power plant -- and the real estate market remains red-hot. "The biggest thing we can do is plan for curtailment of power usage, whether voluntarily or mandatory, to follow suit with what a lot of other companies are doing," says Randy Smith, Oracle's vice president of U.S. real estate and facilities. Nothing to do now but turn down the lights.- Loading Comments...
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