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    Big Things Happen Here

    How Dallas could help power 1.2 million California homes with clean energy

    Diana Oates
    Oct 6, 2014 | 1:39 pm

    Four companies, including one co-headquartered in Dallas, recently proposed an $8 billion project that could change the way 1.2 million Southern California households get power. The green energy initiative would link one of the nation’s largest wind farms to one of the world’s biggest energy storage facilities.

    If approved and financed, the facility would send vast amounts of clean energy — the output equivalent to a large nuclear power plant — to the Los Angeles area by 2023.

    Pathfinder Renewable Wind Energy, whose corporate activities are in Dallas, along with Magnum Energy, Dresser-Rand and Duke-American Transmission Co., plan to submit a blueprint to the Southern California Public Power Authority by early 2015 that includes creating one of the country’s largest wind farms near Cheyenne, Wyoming, along with a storage site near Delta, Utah, and a 525-mile electric transmission line connecting them.

    Sammons Enterprises, a $45 billion private company based in Dallas, is the lead investor in Pathfinder, which would build, own and operate the proposed $4 billion wind farm.

    John Reed, Pathfinder co-founder and managing director and a Tech Wildcatters partner, says that Jeff Meyer is the one who introduced Dallas to the conversation of wind energy initiatives across the country by getting this project funded. Meyer, managing partner of Pathfinder Renewable Wind Energy, calls this project a “21st century Hoover Dam.”

    Sammons Enterprises, a $45 billion private company based in Dallas, is the lead investor in Pathfinder. That funding allowed Pathfinder to acquire 250,000 acres of working ranches in 2008; they have since added to that figure to reach 700,000 acres. Pathfinder would build, own and operate the proposed $4 billion wind farm and help install the $1.5 billion storage system.

    “Jeff Meyer originated the concept of combining ranch ownership with renewable energy development,” Reed says. “He has worked tirelessly for six years to create the coalition of industry players that led to last month’s announcement.”

    Under the proposal, the underground energy storage facility, using a compressed air system in four vertical caverns carved out of an underground salt formation on the site, would help solve one of renewable energy’s biggest challenges: its intermittency. Wind farms produce no electricity when there's no wind; solar farms produce no electricity when there’s no sun.

    Linking the wind farm to the energy storage facility would enable the wind farm to function largely like a traditional coal, nuclear or natural gas power plant — capable of reliably delivering large amounts of electricity whenever needed, based on customer demand.

    The energy storage facility also would reduce the need for LA-area utilities to build expensive backup power plants and power lines to serve customers on days when there’s no wind, at night when there’s no sunlight, and during other periods when traditional wind and solar farms are unable to produce electricity.

    This project is not only exciting for the states it impacts, but also for the home of one of the lead investor groups, which considers itself on the cusp of something truly spectacular in the world of wind energy.

    “Pathfinder’s Dallas investor base is indicative of the entrepreneurial backbone of Dallas business,” Reed says. “Each of our investors has a strong interest in sustainability and the environment, combined with a mandate to build businesses and generate long-term returns.”

    Reed says that Pathfinder’s equity ownership is 100 percent in DFW, but with strategic relationships from across the nation. He feels that it’s a shining example of what can be accomplished when you apply Meyer’s original thinking with entrepreneurial investors and solid business practices.

    “What is unique to Dallas — and what is a real asset for the community — is a culture of financial decision-making that allows original thinking and individual responsibility for what are traditionally institutional investments made by an investment committee.”

    A proposed $8 billion initiative with Dallas ties could send clean energy to 1.2 million households in California.

    Wind turbine in the sky
      
    Courtesy photo
    A proposed $8 billion initiative with Dallas ties could send clean energy to 1.2 million households in California.
    unspecified
    news/innovation

    Women Rule

    Carrollton CEO makes list of fastest growing women businesses in U.S.

    Raven Jordan
    May 8, 2025 | 3:30 pm
    Buzzballs
    Buzzballs
    Buzzballs' Merrilee Kick

    A CEO based in Carrollton was recently named one of the fastest-growing women-led businesses in the United States: Merrilee Kick, founder of spherical cocktail brand BuzzBallz, made the top five on nonprofit Women President Organization's 50 Fastest Growing Women-Owned/Led Companies list.

    BuzzBallz, which is in the fourth spot on the list, was founded by Kick in 2009 and acquired by spirits company Sazerac in 2024. Following a career as a high school teacher, Kick decided to create ready-to-drink cocktails, such as martinis and margaritas, served in a plastic can rather than a glass.

    To be considered for this list, businesses must operate under the leadership of a woman, and have a minimum of $500,000 in annual revenue for each of the previous five years. Plus, they must have sustained substantial year-over-year growth, demonstrating post-pandemic recovery in industries like travel and hospitality, health and wellness, manufacturing, and food and beverage.

    The top five include:

    1. Collette led by President and CEO Jaclyn Leibl-Cote, based in Pawtucket, Rhode Island
    2. Unite Digital led by President and CEO Stacey Coopes, based in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan
    3. Embark Beyond led by Co-founder and Managing Partner Julie Danziger, based in New York City, New York
    4. BuzzBallz (Southern Champion) led by CEO and Founder Merrilee Kick, based in Carrollton, Texas
    5. Cymbiotika led by CEO Durana Elmi, based in San Diego, California

    Kick joins two other Texas business owners on the list — both in Houston — including Pamela Chambers O'Rourke, founder and CEO of Icon Information Consultants, and Tara Harmon-Kramer, owner of Meltar Supply, at sixth and 23rd place on the list respectively.

    According to a release, businesses on this year’s list collectively generated more than $7 billion in gross revenue, and employed more than 15,000 people, in 2024.

    Most of the selected companies offer remote work arrangements and parental leave, and company milestones included major contracts secured and national retailer launches.

    “With a strong commitment to innovation, purpose, and people, these companies exemplify the essential role women-owned and led businesses play in building a more sustainable and inclusive economy," says CEO of the Women Presidents Organization Camille Burns in a statement. "This recognition is more than a milestone — it’s a powerful affirmation of the transformative influence women have in shaping modern business."

    The 50 Fastest list is sponsored by J.P. Morgan Commercial Banking, and participation was open to all qualifying businesses.

    A comprehensive evaluation process then ranked all eligible companies using a proprietary sales growth formula that factored in both percentage and absolute growth, finalizing the WPO’s selection of the top 50 performers for recognition.

    Honorees will be recognized during a ceremony at the WPO Entrepreneurial Excellence Forum at The Hyatt Regency Hill Country Resort in San Antonio on May 8.

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