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General Shaikh Mohammad presents Amory B. Lovins from Rocky Mountain Institute with an award. Image Credit: WAM

Abu Dhabi: This year's Zayed Future Energy Prize 2011, a $1.5 million (Dh5.5 million) award, went to Vestas, a Danish manufacturer of wind turbine technology.

General Shaikh Mohammad Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Deputy Supreme Commander of the UAE Armed Forces, presented the award to Detlev Engel, CEO of Vestas, during an awards ceremony at the Emirates Palace on Tuesday evening.

Upon receiving the award, Engel announced that Vestas would like to split half of its award with the three finalists that didn't make it to the stage that night.

"On behalf of everyone at Vestas, I'm extremely proud and humbled to receive such an honour," Engel said.

"We would like to share with others because I think it's fantastic and some of these initiatives I had never seen or heard about before and to help them keep going because that's what the world needs," he told Gulf News.

"It's not just about Vestas, but creating energy around the world. I promise you we will keep fighting for the vision of your father," he told Shaikh Mohammad.

The three beneficiaries of this gesture will be Barefoot College, First Solar, and Terry Tamminen, CEO and Founder of 7th Generation Advisors.

The runner-up prize of $350,000 went to Amory B. Lovins, Chairman and Chief Scientist of the Rocky Mountain Institute for his work on integrative design for energy-efficient buildings, vehicles and factories.

Aspiration

E+Co, a clean-energy investment company, was also awarded a runner-up prize of $350,000, for supporting and investing in small and growing clean-energy enterprises in developing countries to affect climate change and energy poverty. The winners were among six finalists that had been chosen from a pool of 391 entrants from 69 countries.

"I could have wished 30 years ago when we were really trying that we would have some aspiration and support because this is really what you need," Engel told reporters following the awards ceremony.

The other half of the first prize money will go into an initiative that Vestas is starting to get consumers involved in, to combat climate change.

Engel said that wind energy was "for real" and one that should be taken very seriously. "In Denmark, where I come from, we get 20 per cent of our electricity from wind. The total world figure is two per cent, so we've got 98 per cent to go," he said. "Now we have to harvest it.

This is the second time that a company has won the Zayed Future Energy Prize. "It's just a coincidence that for the past two years we've had two corporations win the award," said Dr R.K. Pachauri, the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate and Chairman of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, who led the jury.

"There's no such preference whatsoever," he said. "It does not in any way represent a trend."