The Borneo Post

Lockheed breaks into friendly energy fields

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WASHINGTON: The head of one of the world’s most innovative fish farms sports a scruffy beard and talks about saving the planet by moving “toward a culture of nurture.” His office is a trailer near the beach, where the views are of dolphins, the mission is progressiv­e and the dress code is loose.

All of which makes Neil Sims’ partnershi­p with Lockheed Martin a most unusual corporate alliance.

The world’s largest defence contractor is best known for making the weapons that unleash cataclysmi­c fury on America’s enemies, whether in Iraq, Afghanista­n or Syria. But lately, it has set its sights on a different threat to national security: climate change.

In the past few years, Bethesda, Maryland-based Lockheed has launched a series of new initiative­s — harnessing energy from tides, purifying water, nuclear fusion, and, yes, a new, environmen­tally friendly way to farm fish in a cage that drifts off the Hawaiian shore. Chief executive Marillyn Hewson touts the ventures as growth opportunit­ies, a calculated effort to go green at a time when defence spending is shrinking after more than 14 years of sustained warfare.

The move comes as the Pentagon has classified climate change as a significan­t threat, saying natural disasters and scarcity of food and water could create widespread instabilit­y requiring military interventi­on. That’s why Lockheed, employer to thousands of scientists and engineers, is marshallin­g its forces in what many consider the unlikely new fields of energy and the environmen­t.

But Lockheed’s efforts have been met with skepticism from some analysts who say the company is moving too far from the fighter planes, combat ships and guided missiles that have made it a powerful force in the defence industry and a safe investment. It’s an effort that is unlikely to benefit shareholde­rs, they say, because any returns are likely to be a long time in coming, if at all. Other defence contractor­s have tried to break into energy fields, but some quickly admitted defeat, saying they should stick to what they know best.

“Defence firms look outside their core areas of expertise during spending downturns, but these forays rarely stick when spending returns,” said Roman Schweizer, a defence policy analyst with Guggenheim Securities.

Among the reasons critics have been quick to doubt Lockheed’s forays into alternativ­e energy are that the early results have been spotty, and some of the science sounds more like science fiction.

One of Lockheed’s most ambitious efforts has been years in the making, a headlinegr­abbing attempt to build a nuclear fusion reactor small enough to fit in the back of a truck. Fusion — the forced collision of two atoms forming a single nuclei — produces the same nuclear energy that heats the sun without the nuclear waste caused by fission, which fuels existing nuclear plants. The technology holds out the hope of solving global problems of energy supply, with almost no harm to the environmen­t.

Late last year, Lockheed announced a breakthrou­gh — a design for a compact fusion reactor that the company said it could produce in 10 years.

But being able to create a reactor so small within a decade is still more ambition than reality, several skeptical scientists said.

“As far as I can tell, they haven’t paid attention to the underlying physics of nuclear fusion,” Ian Hutchinson, a professor of nuclear science and engineerin­g at Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology, said shortly after the announceme­nt last year.

Although the fate of its fusion project may still be years away, another attempt to unlock a

clean source of energy — the power of ocean waves — sank quickly. After Lockheed partnered with Ocean Power Technologi­es to build what it called “the world’s largest energy wave project” off the Australian coast, the project failed within six months. Corporate filings declared the venture “no longer commercial­ly viable,” and Lockheed’s partner dismissed its chief executive and got mired in legal battles with investors.

Several other defence contractor­s have struggled when they ventured into unproven areas of renewable energy. One company, Virginia-based Leidos, operates a biomass plant in Connecticu­t that turns discarded wood into energy. But the plant has suffered power outages and hasn’t met its energy-production goals, costing the company $ 40 million in losses last year.

At a time of rock-bottom fuel prices, renewable energy is difficult to make economical without government subsidies, Jim Moos, president of Leidos’ engineerin­g solutions group, said in an interview.

A top executive Technologi­es was

Defence firms look outside their core areas of expertise during spending downturns, but these forays rarely stick when spending returns.

of United especially candid when the conglomera­te, which makes fighter jet engines and military helicopter­s, decided in 2012 to unload the wind power company it had acquired a couple of years before.

“We all make mistakes,” he said in a mea culpa to investors.

But Lockheed is charging ahead, confident that the technical expertise that went into building weapons can also translate to commercial industries.

In a recent state- of-the- company speech, Hewson highlighte­d the foray into energy markets as a growth opportunit­y. She mentioned climate change five times in the speech, sounding at times more like Al Gore than Dr Strangelov­e as she highlighte­d building alternativ­e- energy solutions along with progress in the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter.

“Population growth, resource scarcity and climate change are reinforcin­g each other,” she said.

Although seabed mining and water purificati­on may not sound as if they fit neatly into the defence contractor’s portfolio, she noted that climate change has been classified as a threat to national security by the Pentagon.

“As we consume more than ever, climate change is accelerati­ng as well,” Hewson said in her speech. “In fact, we know that 2014 was the hottest year in human history. These pressures combine to create real threats to security and stability around the world.”

The company won’t provide details about the size of its energy portfolio, but Dan Heller, Lockheed’s vice president of new ventures, said the company sees his unit “as a great potential growth engine.”

To Sims’ surprise, one of those growth areas was his little Hawaiian fish farm.

“Really? This isn’t a joke?” he said when a Lockheed Martin executive called to say that the 112,000- employee defence company wanted to team up with his five-person outfit.

Sims’ company, Kampachi Farms, had been developing a fish cage that looks like a giant ball. Unlike other farms stationed inland, the “mobile fish pen,” as it is called, drifts farther offshore in deeper water, where it can “grow fish with literally no footprint on the oceans,” Sims said.

Lockheed’s contributi­ons are less about biology and more about technology, including setting up the satellite communicat­ions and the motor controls to track the pen.

Lockheed is also building a 10-megawatt power plant off the coast of China that would generate energy by using the difference­s in ocean temperatur­es. Off the northern coast of Scotland, it is working to install giant, windmillli­ke turbines to harness tidal wave energy, which it says will generate enough power for 200,000 homes.

It’s even working on building plants that would transform garbage into energy. Instead of incinerati­ng the waste, it plans to heat the garbage without oxygen so that the material decomposes and produces a gas that can be used as fuel.

Dealing with garbage may not be as exciting as a new fighter jet or a laser weapon, but “how you deal with waste is a huge issue,” Heller said.

The new projects have also helped the company recruit talent, he said — especially younger engineers and scientists. — WP-Bloomberg

Roman Schweizer, defence policy analyst

 ??  ?? Lockheed Martin, the world’s largest defence contractor, lately has set its sights on a different threat to national security: climate change. It is working with Neil Sims’ company, Kampachi Farms, to develop a mobile pen for raising fish in the ocean....
Lockheed Martin, the world’s largest defence contractor, lately has set its sights on a different threat to national security: climate change. It is working with Neil Sims’ company, Kampachi Farms, to develop a mobile pen for raising fish in the ocean....
 ??  ?? Kampachi Farms, now a partner with contractor Lockheed Martin, is developing a fish cage that looks like a giant ball. Unlike other farms stationed inland, the “mobile fish pen” drifts farther offshore in deeper water. (Right) Here, the fish stocked...
Kampachi Farms, now a partner with contractor Lockheed Martin, is developing a fish cage that looks like a giant ball. Unlike other farms stationed inland, the “mobile fish pen” drifts farther offshore in deeper water. (Right) Here, the fish stocked...
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