Archive for the ‘
CleanTECH San Diego ’ Category
Friday, October 14th, 2011
Since 1987, the CONNECT Most Innovative New Product (MIP) Awards have been San Diego’s “Oscars” for local technology innovation. The 2011 finalists in the Clean Technology category include Genomatica for Process for High-Volume Chemicals from Renewable Feedstocks, Noble Environmental Technologies Corporation for ECOR and Wildcat Discovery Technologies for 5V Cathode (CM1) and Electrolyte (EM1). Winners will be announced on Friday, December 9th before an audience of more than 800 of San Diego’s top executives, entrepreneurs, VCs and academics. Click here to register for the MIP exhibition and awards luncheon.
San Diego’s 18th Annual TechAmerica High Tech Awards finalists in the Clean Technology category include EcoATM, Hadronex, Juice Technologies and Sapphire Energy. Click here to register for the October 28th event.
The regional cleantech cluster in San Diego continues to receive national recognition. On Wednesday the Global Cleantech Cluster Association announced the semifinalists for the 2011 Later Stage Award competition. This best-of-the-best recognition includes four San Diego cleantech companies, Genomatica, PowerGenix, Achates Power and EcoATM. In another forum Sapphire Energy was honored as a “Game Changer of the Year 2011” in Clean Technology by Grow-California for their impact on California’s green industry.
Tags: Achates Power, ecoATM, Genomatica, Global Cleantech Cluster Assoc, Hadronex, Juice Technologies, Noble Environmental Technologies, PowerGenix, Sapphire Energy, Wildcat Discovery Technologies
Posted in
Algae, Biofuel, CleanTECH San Diego, CONNECT, Smart Grid, Transport Technology, Water |
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Thursday, October 13th, 2011
Voith Turbo announced that it has opened a hybrid power-train development center in Poway, CA. The facility will further develop Voith Turbo’s innovative hybrid diesel/electric power-train drive systems for transit buses.
The office, warehouse and testing facilities cover more than 5,000 square feet. Expanding on Voith Turbo’s stellar commitment to environmental sustainability, the building features a large solar panel installation that provides electricity for most day-to-day facility operations.
“We are extremely excited to open a U.S.-based Hybrid Power-Train Development Center,” said Rob Wiss, Vice President of Voith Turbo’s U.S. Road Division. ”The center will allow us to further develop hybrid bus technologies and cater to the specific needs of our customers who want to expand their use of this emerging technology. Above all, we are making an important contribution to the U.S. economy by expanding the use of clean-energy technology in transportation fleets across the country.”
By embedding the engineering component in the development center, Voith Turbo will be able to offer expanded technical service and better serve customers’ needs and requirements. Currently, much of the (more…)
Tags: Maxwell Technologies, Poway, ultra-capacitors, Voith Turbo
Posted in
CleanTECH San Diego, Transport Technology |
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Thursday, August 25th, 2011
Since 1987, the CONNECT Most Innovative New Product (MIP) Awards have been San Diego’s “Oscars” for local technology innovation. CONNECT is now accepting nominations for the 24th MIP Awards. Nominate your new product for an opportunity to compete in San Diego’s most prestigious competition honoring technology and life science innovation. Of the 100+ companies that vie to be the Most Innovative New Product of the year, 24 make it through the rigorous judging process and only eight walk up to the podium to receive this prestigious honor. The MIP categories are:
Action and Sport Technologies
Aerospace and Security Technologies
Clean Technology
Communications and IT
Hardware and General Technology
Life Sciences – Diagnostics and Research Tools
Life Sciences – Medical Products
Software
To be considered for the 2011 MIP Awards, the product must have been developed in San Diego and introduced between March 2010 and September 2011 and never been nominated for this award before. The product must have generated revenue from sales.
For scores of San Diego innovators the CONNECT MIP Awards have opened doors to investors, venture partners and customers. If you are a San Diego innovator the products which you have recently introduced may qualify for the 2011 MIP Awards. Click here to submit your nomination. The nomination deadline is September 2nd.
Winners will be announced on Friday, December 9th before an audience of more than 800 of San Diego’s top executives, entrepreneurs, VCs and academics. Click here to register for the MIP exhibition and awards luncheon.
The Clean Technology winner in 2010 was Multispark, LLC for PowerSTAR Performance Spark Plug.
Tags: Clean Technology, CONNECT MIP Awards, Innovation, La Jolla, Life science, Multispark, Technology
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CleanTECH San Diego, CONNECT, Transport Technology |
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Sunday, August 7th, 2011
I am reading Mark Stevenson’s book, An Optimist’s Tour of the Future. He quotes Ray Kurzweil, “Our intuition is linear and I believe it’s hardwired into our brains.” This linear bias bangs hard against the “Law of Accelerating Returns”. Technological innovation feeds upon itself. Innovative growth is not 1+1+1+1, but rather 1+2+4+8. Although the ubiquitous iPhone is a reminder of the how explosive innovation can be, we look to the future dreading that positive change will be too little, too late. Our linear bias leads to judgments influenced by static inputs rather than future values which will be determined by innovation replicating exponentially. The commercialization of algae biofuels is an important example.
The algae business is basically farming. The output of the algae agricultural system will be used to produce “drop-in” biofuels as well as animal feed and a myriad of other products. If all technological innovation were frozen at this moment, the algae biofuel business would most likely not be commercially viable. However, just like corn and pigs, improvements are being made over time.
In my lifetime the yield per acre of corn has tripled due to improved genetics and production technology. What took years and decades to happen with grains and livestock is happening over weeks and months with algae. The algae industry is not only benefiting from the explosive technological innovation of the past decade, but also from the huge universe of algae being screened to identify commercially viable strains.
There are over 800 breeds of cattle. The gestation period for cattle is about the same as humans. Heifers can be bred at about 12 to 14 months. Now imagine a breeding program with cattle drawn from over 5,000,000 different species which can produce a new generation every 30 days. With existing technology, genome engineering and capital, the accelerating refinement of super strains is rapidly advancing the algae industry. The algae of the very near future will be as dramatically improved as the pig of 2011 compared to his scrawny ancestor of the 1950s.
La Jolla is at the center of the global algae Petri dish. Greg Mitchell, director of the Photobiology Group at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, has a global reputation as an algae pioneer. The San Diego Union Tribune wrote about his exciting life, “Algae visionary imagines a future that’s green — literally”. Click here to read.
The two largest equity fundings for algae biofuel development were done in the La Jolla zip code (Synthetic Genomics and Sapphire Energy). On Wednesday I attended a press conference for California Assemblyman Nathan Fletcher who was named chair of a new committee that will focus on creating a climate for jobs. Sapphire Energy was selected as the site for the event to showcase the importance of innovation for job creation. After the remarks we toured Sapphire’s labs. Their time line is clearly stated. “We expect to be at demonstration scale in three years and at commercial scale by 2018.” Sapphire Energy has received $54.5 million
in loan guarantees from the USDA Biorefinery Assistance Program to build a plant to turn algal oil into jet fuel.
The challenge for most disruptive technologies is finding a deep-pockets customer that is sufficiently convinced to make a meaningful buying commitment. The algae biofuels business has that in the U.S. military. The military’s motivation is both financial and strategic. They know that their greatest vulnerability is dependence on imported oil. Their bill for fuel and electricity last year was $20 billion. The prospect of growing fuel in Hawaii and Southern California versus shipping oil half way around the world has a strong appeal. Of greatest importance to the algae biofuel industry is a military making their decisions based on future economic and strategic plans unimpeded by the wrong-headed influence of politicians.
The military’s impact on accelerating the growth of the algae biofuels industry will be enhanced if legislation is passed allowing the Pentagon to sign long-term contracts for up to fifteen years as opposed to the current five-year limit. A long-term commitment from a highly-rated buyer makes deal financing substantially more doable. Members of the aviation industry testified at a Senate Aviation operations, safety and security subcommittee hearing requesting legislation enabling the Defense Department to enter into long-term contracts for fuels.
To learn more about the local burgeoning biofuels cluster go to the San Diego Center for Algae Biotechnology (SD-CAB). Greg Mitchell was one of the founders. SD-CAB along with UCSD, SDSU, CleanTECH San Diego, and BioCOM collaborated to launch Educating and Developing Workers for the Green Economy (EDGE) focused on educating a next-generation workforce in green technology.
Tags: BIOCOM, EDGE, Kurzweil, Nathan Fletcher, Sapphire Energy, SD-CAB, SDSU, Stevenson, Synthetic Genomics, UCSD
Posted in
Algae, Biofuel, CleanTECH San Diego, Legislation |
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Thursday, August 4th, 2011
By Guest Author Mary Rosenthal Executive Director, Algal Biomass Organization
In our country’s spirited debate over energy, innovation and the economy, perhaps no phrase has been uttered more often than “green jobs.” While the precise meaning of “green job” continues to be a topic of debate, I would submit that jobs in the algae industry are indeed at least a little shade of green. Or maybe blue-green.
In today’s biofuels industry, most of the growth has centered on jobs for those workers who have already been trained in the fields of construction; engineering; chemistry and biology; sales and marketing; legal and administrative, and others. The industry now supports tens of thousands of direct and indirect jobs across the country and up and down the value chain – from Ph.D-level microbiologists to plant personnel to legal counsel to metal fabricators and truckers; from the labs of San Diego to the ethanol plants of Iowa to the offices of Silicon Valley.
That is something we rightly celebrate as an industry. It also something policymakers in Washington D.C. would be wise to recognize as they continue to seek ways to create jobs and spur economic growth.
The next generation of green jobs
Much less has been said, however, about the tremendous need to develop the next generation of biofuels innovators. Regardless of technology, feedstock or business plan, this is something that is a concern of the industry as a whole. Because a new generation of experts will be required to help today’s companies continue to (more…)
Tags: ABO, EDGE, SD-CAB
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Algae, Biomass, CleanTECH San Diego, Guest Author |
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Monday, August 1st, 2011
On Thursday, August 11th, award-winning author and filmmaker Josh Tickell will join leading biofuels producers and retailers at “Biodiesel and Flex Fuel for Fleets – Just the Facts” – an interactive workshop for regional businesses to address common misconceptions about domestic biofuels. During the workshop, hosted by Propel Fuels, New Leaf
Biodiesel, CleanTECH San Diego, the San Diego Regional Clean Fuel Coalition, the California Center for Sustainable Energy, and Pearson Fuels, Tickell and other speakers will discuss the performance benefits, cost advantages, incentives and availability of renewable fuels in Southern California with fleet managers, fuel distributors and other decision makers.
WHO:
Josh Tickell, Award-Winning Filmmaker of FUEL and FREEDOM
Jake Millan, Fleet Sales Manager, Propel Fuels
Brendan Reed, Environmental Resource Manager, City of Chula Vista
Lisa McGhee, San Diego Airport Parking
WHAT:
A free, interactive workshop for fleet managers, fuel distributors and other decision makers interested in learning about the performance benefits, cost advantages, incentives and availability of renewable fuels in Southern California.
WHEN:
Thursday, August 11th, 2011,
Media Availability: 3:00 p.m.
Workshop: 4:00 – 6:00 p.m.
WHERE:
Pearson Fuels
4067 El Cajon Blvd.
San Diego, CA 92105
TO REGISTER: www.energycenter.org/flexfuel
Tags: biodiesel, CCSE, New Leaf Biodiesel, Pearson Fuels, Propel Fuels
Posted in
Biofuel, CleanTECH San Diego, Events, Transport Technology |
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Wednesday, June 22nd, 2011
Last week CleanTECH San Diego hosted the first San Diego Wind Energy Symposium. The keynote speaker was Michael Picker, Senior Advisor to the Governor for Renewable Energy Facilities. Picker’s comments included a progress report on California’s Renewable Portfolio Standard (RPS). The target is for 33% of electricity sold in the California to come from renewable energy by 2020. Renewable energy projects require long lead times to grind through the process of permitting, land acquisition, environmental impact studies and financing. Many projects fall by the wayside. Picker’s analysis of the project pipeline data from state government agencies including the CPUC suggests that the “queue currently holds more than double the generation capacity needed to achieve a 33% RPS”. The consensus is for 33% to be likely achieved a few years prior to the 2020 deadline. In his signing letter to the State Senate for SB2 Governor Brown stated, “I think 40%, at reasonable cost, is well within our grasp in the near future”. Picker’s presentation supported that projection as realistic.
Government regulations like Califonia’s RPS are effective in the sense that they produced a measurable response. However, there is a bigger challenge than attaining a 33% RPS. Efficiently coordinating this new mix of energy production into the grid will in the long run determine the economic feasibility of reaching a RPS far beyond 33%.
Video of the entire Symposium is available at:
Keynote and Panel 1
Panel 2
The San Diego Wind Energy Symposium was made possible by the sponsorship of CleanTECH San Diego members Invenergy, Iberdrola Renewables and Enel Green Power.
The following resources provide some background into the challenges and opportunities of wind energy. Click on each to connect.
California Wind Map and Resource Potential
U.S. Wind Resource Map
How Wind Power Works
Wind Power Glossary
Tags: Enel Green Power, Iberdrola Renewables, Michael Picker, UCSD, Wind Energy
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CleanTECH San Diego, Events, Uncategorized, Wind Energy |
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Monday, June 20th, 2011
After fire and the wheel, it was only logical to invent the patent attorney. San Diego’s vibrant cleantech cluster exists because of a concentration of human capital including research institutions, a technically skilled labor pool, savvy VCs, creative entrepreneurs and intellectual property attorneys.
Most of the large law firms in San Diego have actively embraced the cleantech opportunity as exemplified by their support of CleanTECH San Diego. Several individual attorneys in the region are actively engaged in helping all of us understand the issues and opportunities of cleantech.
Eric Lane of Luce, Forward, Hamilton & Scripps in San Diego is the author of Green Patent Blog. His cleantech IP blog was recently honored as one of the top 50 environmental law and climate change blogs by the LexisNexis Environmental Law & Climate Change Community.
John Lormon of Procopio, Cory, Hargreaves & Savitch in San Diego produces the firm’s Environmental Breakfast Club, a series of seminars addressing today’s key environmental issues. He also has the lead on Procopio’s Climate Club, a periodic gathering of prominent business, political, technical, and policy leaders for the purpose of education and discussion on climate related issues.
In the right column of this website is my BLOGROLL. Included are links to cleantech blogs by law firms Best Best & Krieger, Latham & Watkins, Mintz Levin, Morrison & Foerster, Stoel Rives, Troutman Sanders and Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati. All of the firms mentioned in this post are members of CleanTECH San Diego.

- Pyron Solar
Tags: Best Best & Krieger, Eric Lane, Forward Hamilton & Scripps, John Lormon, Latham & Watkins, Mintz Levin, Morrison & Foerster, Procopio, Pyron Solar, Stoel Rives, Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati
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CleanTECH San Diego |
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Wednesday, June 8th, 2011
The 41 companies in the San Diego region which are involved in wind energy represent every aspect of the industry from project design and finance, manufacturing, energy production and distribution.
The 25 wind turbines which make up the 50 MW Kumeyaay Wind project on the Campo Reservation are an impressive display of renewable energy from I-8 in Alpine. The tribe’s second wind farm, Kumeyaay Wind II, is a 160-megawatt project to be built in partnership with San Diego Gas & Electric and Invenergy. Major players such as Iberdrola Renewables and Enel Green Power are involved in projects representing billions of dollars of wind energy capacity. Viridity Energy deals in solutions which address the coordination of energy demand and supply including energy storage. Upwind Solutions recently established their presence in San Diego with the purchase of Knight & Carver’s turbine blade business.
On June 14th CleanTECH San Diego will host the San Diego Wind Energy Symposium. Michael Picker, Senior Advisor to the Governor for Renewable Energy Facilities will be the keynote speaker. There will be two panel presentations; Renewable Energy Policy – State and Local Perspective followed by Specific Wind Power Considerations.
Click here for complete details.
San Diego Wind Energy Symposium
June 14th 8:00 am – 12:00 pm
SCRIPPS SEASIDE FORUM
at Scripps Institution of Oceanography
8610 Kennel Way | La Jolla, CA 92037
Click here to register today.
The following resources provide some background into the challenges and opportunities of wind energy, Click on each to connect.
California Wind Map and Resource Potential
U.S. Wind Resource Map
How Wind Power Works
Wind Power Glossary
Tags: Enel Green Power, Iberdrola Renewables, Invenergy, Kumeyaay Wind, San Diego Gas & Electric, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UCSD, Upwind Solutions
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CleanTECH San Diego, Events, Wind Energy |
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Saturday, June 4th, 2011
On Thursday June 9th CleanTECH San Diego’s Electric Vehicle Showcase will be the latest event focused on San Diego’s position at the front line of the largest transportation electrification project in history. What’s so special about San Diego?
San Diego has a culture of technology early adapters. San Diego has been one of the top markets for hybrid EVs like the Toyota Prius. California ranks first in Prii sales and second only to Vermont in Prii Per Capita. (Yes, the plural is Prii). Hybrid EV owners are predisposed to consider plug-in EVs.
San Diego is one of 16 cities selected under a DOE grant headed by ECOtality to implement the largest-ever rollout of electric vehicle infrastructure. Federal grants plus matching funds will total $230 million.
Because the ultimate utility of EVs is tied to the establishment of a charging infrastructure, Nissan, Chevy, Ford and others have focused on a limited number of metropolitan regions including San Diego.
San Diego is the #1 solar city in the #1 solar state. 40 percent of Leaf owners have solar panels according to the California Center for Sustainable Energy (Source North County Times).
San Diego’s terrain and climate is less taxing on EV batteries than much of the U.S.
Successful integration of EVs to the grid is a task of great complexity. For the past two years, San Diego Gas & Electric’s advancements in smart grid infrastructure has earned them recognition as the most intelligent utility in America by IDC Energy Insights and Intelligent Utility magazine.
General Electric has partnered with the City of San Diego, San Diego Gas & Electric, the University of California San Diego and CleanTECH San Diego in Smart City San Diego, a public-private collaboration that aims to improve the region’s energy independence, empower consumers to adopt electric vehicles, reduce greenhouse gas emissions and drive economic growth.
To boost use of electric vehicles, the General Services Administration is installing charging stations for government vehicles in San Diego and four other cities.
The University of California, San Diego has been at the center of several major initiatives which are contributing to the region’s growth as a clean energy center. The EVs which will be used by students, faculty and staff will form a living laboratory of human behavior and technology.
Qualcomm and ECOtality have entered into an agreement to implement cellular connectivity into charging stations. The solution will allow ECOtality to use a commercial cellular network to manage its Blink brand charging station operations, transfer usage data, download firmware updates and publish availability to electric vehicle drivers in real time.
CleanTECH San Diego is an important nexus for regional clean technologies of all types. You can click through to their website to learn about their crucial mission. While you are there you can register for the CleanTECH San Diego Electric Vehicle Showcase. Indy 500 legend and electric vehicle convert Danny Sullivan will be the keynote speaker. UC San Diego’s Byron Washom will lead a panel including the CEO of Flux Power, Chris Anthony and General Electric’s Michelle Lesh. Held on the LEED Silver certified Port Pavilion on the Broadway Pier, the Showcase will include a variety of demonstrations of EV technologies and cars.
Show up on Thursday with a fistful of business cards to network harborside and kick the tires of the EVs that are in the poll position in the race for energy efficient transportation. Register here today.
CleanTECH San Diego’s Electric Vehicle Showcase
Date: Thursday June 9, 2011 4 PM to 7 PM
Port Pavillion on Broadway Pier
1000 North Harbor Drive
San Diego, CA 92101
Click here to view Danny Sullivan’s classic moment in Indy 500 history.
Tags: Byron Washom, Chevy Volt, Ecotality, Electric Vehicles, Ford Focus Electric, General Electric, Nissan Leaf, Qualcomm, San Diego Gas & Electric, UCSD
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CleanTECH San Diego, Events, Solar Energy, Transport Technology |
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Thursday, April 28th, 2011
By Guest Author Lee Barken, CPA, LEED-AP
Blink twice in Seoul, South Korea, and you might think you’re in any big city in the United States. Cars whiz by, tall buildings sprawl out in familiar, dense, urban patterns, and of course, there’s the occasional Starbucks dotting the landscape. My visit to this country came at the invitation of the SWEET Renewable Energy and Cleantech Conference. Given that this was to be my first trip to Korea, I accepted the speaking invitation with the eagerness and anticipation of a young wizard on his first train ride to Hogwarts. Frankly, I had no idea what to expect, but I was excited to be on board. What I discovered was striking. Korea is a country with vast differences and abundant similarities to western culture. “How is that possible?” you might be wondering. Let me explain.
After spending a week in Korea, one might make the observation that westerners are in familiar territory. This is a place where the people are friendly, the cars drive on the same side of the road, and one can survive on English alone. In short, it feels safe and navigable. (OK, so all the measurements are in metric units, but you get the point.) However, once you start engaging strangers in conversation and (more…)
Tags: Haskell & White, Lee Barken, SWEET Renewable Energy and Cleantech Conference
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CleanTECH San Diego, Guest Author |
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Saturday, April 23rd, 2011
On Tuesday I attended the San Diego Regional Smart Grid Working Group Stakeholder Meeting. Organized by CleanTECH San Diego, the meeting reviewed San Diego’s leadership position in integrating Plug-In Electric Vehicles (PEV) into the grid. With over 2,000 PEVs (primarily Nissan Leaf and Chevy Volt) scheduled to hit San Diego streets this year alone, there is much to do to create an effective infrastructure to handle what will soon be a substantially larger base of electric transportation. Included on the “to do” list is the construction of 1,400 non-residential PEV chargers.
“If you don’t know where you’re going, any road will get you there” is frequently included in the preamble of major planning projects. Muggs Stoll of SANDAG presented an overview of San Diego’s 2050 Regional Transportation Plan (RTP). SANDAG is the first regional planning agency in California to integrate Green House Gas (GHG) reduction targets and PEVs in its regional plan. On Friday the SANDAG Board of Directors released the Draft 2050 RTP and its Sustainable Communities Strategy (SCS). The release of the Draft 2050 RTP begins the public comment period which will extend through June 30, 2011.
Click to link to the 2050 Regional Transportation Plan. It is a hefty 313 pages and over 50 mb if you download the PDF as one file. SANDAG has created a three-minute video entitled “Our Region. Our Future.” about the 2050 RTP.
Tags: 2050 Regional Transportation Plan, Chevy Volt, Nissan Leaf, SANDAG
Posted in
CleanTECH San Diego, Energy, Smart Grid, Transport Technology |
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Sunday, March 27th, 2011
Monday May 23rd is the date for the next CleanTECH San Diego SCRUB session. SCRUB is an opportunity for a small group of prescreened early stage cleantech companies to present their business plans to a panel of CleanTECH San Diego members representing a mix of venture capitalists, engineers, marketing specialists, intellectual property attorneys as well as local leaders from industry, research and government. The objective of SCRUB is to provide feedback and assistance to take each company to the next stage.
In the past eight quarterly SCRUB sessions CleanTECH San Diego has provided advice, introductions and critical evaluations to 29 future cleantech stars. If you have a cleantech enterprise that would benefit from a good SCRUB you should forward your business summary to Lisa Bicker at lisab@cleantechsandiego.org
CleanTECH San Diego SCRUB Graduates 2008-2010
(Click on name to link to website)
MultiSpark LLC.
TourEngine Inc.
Lightwave Photonics LLC.
Home Town Farms
Butler Sun Solutions
350 Green
WaterSmart Software
Shrink Nanotechnologies
Eco ReBox
Vari-Ro
Marine Power Partners
OnRamp Wireless
New Leaf Biofuel
TransPacificEnergy, Inc.
Balboa Pacific
EcoDog
Malama Composites
Pyron Solar
Kai BioEnergy
Community Fuels
ISE Corporation
Chlorofill
Sustainable Green Technologies
California Wind Systems
ECOR (Noble Environmental Technologies)
Strategic Enzyme Applications
SleepServer
Tags: Lisa Bicker
Posted in
CleanTECH San Diego, SCRUB |
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Thursday, September 23rd, 2010
On September 8th I participated in the latest CleanTECH San Diego SCRUB session. SCRUB is an opportunity for early stage cleantech companies to present their business plans to a panel of CleanTECH San Diego members. Three local emerging cleantech ventures made their case to thirty-one CleanTECH San Diego members representing a mix of venture capitalists, engineers, marketing specialists, intellectual property attorneys as well as local leaders from industry, research and government. The objective of SCRUB is to provide feedback and assistance to take each company to the next stage.
This quarter’s SCRUB showcased three distinctly different cleantech businesses. MultiSpark LLC designs, manufactures and sells a new high performance spark plug called the PowerSTAR. Tour Engine Inc. is developing a revolutionary opposed-cylinder split-cycle internal combustion engine. An early stage Light Emitting Diode (LED) chip company Lightwave Photonics is developing low-cost ultra high brightness green, blue and whites LEDs. (more…)
Tags: LED, Lightwave Photonics, MultiSpark LLC, PowerSTAR, Tour Engine Inc.
Posted in
CleanTECH San Diego, SCRUB, Transport Technology |
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Wednesday, September 22nd, 2010
Californians face a crucial vote on Proposition 23 on November 2. Funded primarily by Texas oil companies, Proposition 23 would undo California’s landmark climate change law, AB 32. In the midst of a frustratingly stalled economy, dirty energy companies seek to jam a monkey wrench into the one area of our economy which is showing measureable progress, clean technology.
The intent of Proposition 23 is to thwart the strongest clean energy policy ever passed in the United States. To protect their future markets, big oil interests spread the fear of job loss. In fact, the clean technology sector in California has been one of the few areas of job creation in our country. With or without California the world will move forward with clean technology. California’s leadership in this transformation means jobs now and more jobs later.
Let’s focus on what we know for sure. Our planet is occupied by 6.87 billion people. California has 37 million. Although California represents less than 0.5% of the world’s population, its portfolio of (more…)
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CleanTECH San Diego, Climate change |
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Thursday, July 29th, 2010
Next 500 is a San Diego-based media website which “takes you inside the most innovative and captivating companies set to one day emerge as Fortune 500 powerhouses”. Several of Next 500’s high quality videos feature companies listed in CleanTECH San Diego company database. Each of the engaging videos run about five minutes. The host is Beck Bamberger of BAM Communications. Take a click to view the flicks.
Solatube
ZuumCraft
Portable Farms LLC
D&K Engineering
Elliptigo
EcoATM
DriveCam
Tags: BAM Communications, D&K Engineering, DriveCam, ecoATM, Elliptigo, Next 500, Portable Farms LLC, Solatube, ZuumCraft
Posted in
CleanTECH San Diego, Media, Solar Energy, Transport Technology |
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Wednesday, June 30th, 2010
There is no place in the world where more people are working to advance the science and commercialization of algae biofuel than in San Diego. Three announcements this week underscore the region’s standing in the quest to develop practical alternatives to fossil fuels.
On Tuesday the California Department of Labor awarded the San Diego region a $4 million grant to implement new workforce training programs for jobs in the emerging biofuels industry. The San Diego Biofuels Initiative, a collaborative effort including CleanTECH San Diego, BIOCOM, San Diego Regional EDC, San Diego Center for Algae Biotechnology (SD-CAB) and the (more…)
Tags: Algae, General Atomics, Sapphire Energy, Sempra Generation, UCSD
Posted in
Algae, Biofuel, CleanTECH San Diego, CONNECT, Department of Energy, Funding |
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Sunday, June 13th, 2010
The CleanTECH San Diego Showcase presents Solar Power – The Path to Profitability on Monday, June 14th at the La Jolla Marriott. Keynote speaker, Daniel Gross is one of the founding Partners of Hudson Clean Energy, a private equity fund with over $1 billion in assets under management focusing on renewable energy and clean technology. Following Mr. Gross’ remarks will be a panel discussion featuring Dr. Burkhard von Spreckelsen, CEO of Valliant Solar Systems, Scott Sporrer, general manager of Siliken Renewable Energy and Joe Budano, CEO of Energy Innovations.
CleanTECH San Diego’s database of cleantech companies include 47 solar innovators and 129 solar facilitators.
The networking hour before the CleanTECH San Diego Showcase is a unique opportunity to get face to face with the captains of industry, futurists, venture capitalists and propeller heads who play in the clean tech space. All you need to do is register and show up with a fistful of business cards. Click here to make your reservation.
Tags: Energy Innovations, Hudson Clean Energy, Siliken Renewable Energy, Valliant Solar Systems
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CleanTECH San Diego, Events, Solar Energy |
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Friday, May 14th, 2010
On Wednesday I participated in the latest CleanTECH San Diego SCRUB session. SCRUB is an opportunity for early stage clean tech companies to present their business plans to a panel of CleanTECH San Diego members. Four local emerging clean tech ventures made their case to two dozen CleanTECH San Diego members representing a mix of venture capitalists, engineers, marketing specialists, intellectual property attorneys as well as local leaders from industry, research and government. The objective of SCRUB is to provide feedback and assistance to take each company to the next stage.
This week’s SCRUB showcased four distinctly different clean tech businesses. 350 Green intends to provide developmental infrastructure for electric vehicle charging stations. Butler Sun Solutions has developed a solar assisted hot water system, featuring “do-it-yourself” installation options. Home Town Farms plans a vertical organic urban farming model that has the capacity to reduce water and energy consumption. WaterSmart Systems provides resources to water utilities to help optimize water conservation.
In January the SCRUB featured Shrink NanoSolar, Eco ReBox, and Vari-Ro Technologies. In the past six quarterly SCRUB sessions CleanTECH San Diego has provided advice, introductions and critical evaluations to 21 future clean tech stars. If you have a clean tech enterprise that would benefit from a good SCRUB you should forward your business summary to Shaina Brown at shainab@cleantechsandiego.org
Tags: 350 Green, Butler Sun Solutions, Eco ReBox, Home Town Farms, Shrink NanoSolar, Vari-Ro Technologies, WaterSmart Systems
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CleanTECH San Diego, SCRUB, Solar Energy, Transport Technology, Water |
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Tuesday, March 30th, 2010
The Graduate. It’s 1967 and Ben Braddock gets career advice.
Mr. McGuire: I want to say one word to you. Just one word.
Benjamin: Yes, sir.
Mr. McGuire: Are you listening?
Benjamin: Yes, I am.
Mr. McGuire: Plastics.
Benjamin: Exactly how do you mean?
Mr. McGuire: There’s a great future in plastics. Think about it. Will you think about it?
Dustin Hoffman as Ben spent the rest of the movie being distracted by the archetypical cougar and never got around to seeking gainful employment. A current-day sequel would find a 65 year-old Ben advising his grandson to seek his fame and fortune in the ripe opportunity of energy storage.
The certainty of long-term expansion of energy storage as an industry segment is driven by huge needs which exist on both the supply and demand side of the equation. Giant utility companies are mandated to dramatically increase the production of electrical power from alternative sources of energy. The two largest sources, solar and wind, share the problem of intermittency. Unlike coal and natural gas generated power, solar and wind have an uneven output which is to varying degrees challenging to forecast. Until recently this was of manageable consequence for most utilities because wind and solar were a small percentage of their total input. But what happens when these uneven sources move towards 20% as mandated in California? For many utilities the peaks of need are satisfied by natural gas “peaker plants” which are fired up to meet demand on the electric grid. During periods of low demand wind turbines can be idled to avoid excess power into the grid. Both of these alternatives underutilize the production capacity of the capital equipment. With efficient energy storage a higher portion of power produced can be utilized and production capacity can be designed to more closely approximate average demand rather than peak demand. Just these two important needs present a life-time of opportunity for the development of energy storage.
Ben Braddock’s grandson will also find a target rich environment of opportunities for energy storage on the demand side of electrical consumption. As smart grids are installed, electrical utilities will be able to flatten out consumption using technology to influence consumption behaviors via pricing and information. The Nissan Leaf automobile in our garages will be used as a reserve of electrical power to be sold back to the utility. Excess electricity from PV solar panels on the roofs of our homes will flow into energy storage for future use or to sell into the grid. Energy storage systems in cars, homes, businesses, substations and in the field become a stabilizing buffer to smooth out the variations of both production and consumption. It’s a business proposition as compelling as plastics were 43 years ago.
Energy storage systems are as big as Lake Meade and as small as a AAA battery. Included are:
Pumped-storage hydroelectricity
Superconducting magnetic energy storage
Flow batteries
Conventional batteries (e.g. rechargeable electricity storage system)
Gas holder
Grid energy storage
Fuel cell and hydrogen technology
Gravitational mass
Capacitors (e.g. rechargeable electricity storage system)
Electromagnetic mass
Mainspring
Thermal energy storage
Solar chimney
Compressed fluids (e.g. compressed air)
Flywheels
Vacuum storage (in rush generation technology)
CleanTECH San Diego’s database of cleantech companies lists nine companies in the energy storage sector. Sempra has stated their interest in compressed air as a large capacity energy storage system for wind and solar. San Diego is one of only five cities in the U.S. selected to participate in the EV Project. 1000 Nissan Leaf automobiles owned by San Diego business and individuals will be driven and monitored in the best possible test lab, the real world. Maxwell Technologies is a leading producer of ultracapacitors and power systems for consumer and industrial electronics, transportation, telecommunications, and electricity generation industries.
The wealth of opportunity in energy storage which young Ben Braddock III faces is supported by a simple but enormous truth. The amount of electricity produced by any utility is substantially greater than what is ultimately consumed. Some is lost in transmission. A greater amount is wasted because of the mismatch in time of supply and demand. Energy storage addresses the mismatch. As the cost of electricity escalates the economic advantage of “waste not” becomes more compelling.
There are frequent meetings in San Diego about smart grid, smart meters, energy storage, etc. On April 22nd the San Diego EDC and CleanTECH San Diego will present, Earth Day Brilliance Found in Smart Meter Opportunities. Click here for details.
Tags: Energy Storage, San Diego EDC, Sempra Generation
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Sunday, February 14th, 2010
On Wednesday the second CleanTECH San Diego Showcase event: WIND POWER – Leading the Renewables Revival was held at the Marriott in La Jolla. After the active networking session the 240 attendees heard Jim McDermott, Managing Partner of US Renewables Group, give the opening presentation followed by a panel discussion with Dr. Jim Walker, Vice Chairman, Board of enXco, Ian Gardner, CEO of Helix Wind, James Sahagian, VP for commercial development with Sempra Generation and Steven DeWolf, principal of Wind Tex Energy LP.
McDermott noted that wind power represents about 75% of (more…)
Tags: enXco, Helix Wind, Sempra Generation, US Renewables Group, Wind Tex Energy LP
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Wednesday, January 27th, 2010
The CleanTECH San Diego Showcase presents WIND POWER: Leading the Renewables Renaissance Wednesday, February 10th at the La Jolla Marriott. Keynote speaker, Jim McDermott, Managing Partner of US Renewables Group, will discuss the wind market and strategies for buyers, sellers and new market entrants. US Renewables Group is one of the largest investment firms focused exclusively on the renewable energy industry with $750 million of capital commitments. Following Mr. McDermott’s remarks will be a panel discussion featuring regional wind developers and technology companies including Dr. Jim Walker Vice Chairman of enXco and the CEO of Helix Wind, Ian Gardner.
In addition to enXco and Helix Wind, there are 22 other wind power companies listed in CleanTECH San Diego’s database of cleantech companies include Cannon Power, Knight & Carver and Padoma Windpower.
The networking hour before the CleanTECH San Diego Showcase is a unique opportunity to get face to face with the captains of industry, futurists, venture capitalists and propeller heads who play in the clean tech space. Click here to make your reservation.
Tags: enXco, Helix Wind, US Renewables Group
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Sunday, November 15th, 2009
My parents never sought my approval as a child. That was not part of their generation’s mission statement. Nor did they seek my opinion. That I might have some input on what we were going to eat or when was not a consideration let alone my thoughts on the selection of a family car. My friends and I never had any expectation that our parents sought our approval in their decisions. That things are different today is obvious, although not inherently good or bad.
Excesses which result from elevated attitudes of entitlement are all around us. There are also significant positive behavioral changes which emanate from the parental quest for approval. The emotional hook of an 8 year old girl crawling into her father’s lap and saying “Daddy, I don’t want you to die” has had a broader and deeper impact on smoking than even the American Lung Association could have ever hoped. Second graders have assumed the role of family recycling czars and energy efficiency auditors. Last year I purchased a couple of cases of Compact Fluorescent Light Bulbs (CFLs) to distribute to my co-workers. Angie, my assistant, said her daughter had been bugging her for weeks to change the lights in their house to CFLs. Another approval problem solved.
How can we ramp-up constructive opportunities to build upon this approval seeking phenomenon? Are there viable strategies appropriate for business to embrace? At the CleanTECH San Diego Showcase this week (see post below) the wide-ranging discussion on Smart Grid included some comments by the presenters about their children. Lee Krevat of SDG&E described telling his 13 year old that perhaps the all electric Nissan Leaf would be a good choice for the family. After doing her internet research his daughter expressed her approval and (more…)
Tags: Aptera, EcoDog, San Diego Gas & Electric
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Saturday, November 7th, 2009
The inaugural CleanTECH San Diego Showcase presents Smart Grid, Transforming the Energy Industry this Thursday November 12th at the La Jolla Marriott. Keynote speaker, Ellen Pao, is a partner with Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, the preeminent player in the venture capital universe. Kleiner Perkins’ successes include Amazon.com, Compaq, Electronic Arts, Genentech, Google, Intuit, Lotus Development, Netscape, Segway, Sun Microsystems and scores of other ventures over a 37 year history. A year ago the firm’s $500 million Green Growth Fund committed $75 million to smart grid start-up Silver Spring Networks. Following Ms. Pao’s remarks will be a panel discussion by the CEO’s of three venture-funded clean tech companies, Aptera, Applied Solar and PCN Technology. Each of these San Diego-based companies is (more…)
Tags: Aptera, Kleiner Perkins, On-Ramp Wireless, PCN Technology, San Diego Gas & Electric, stimulus
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Wednesday, October 28th, 2009
Under the leadership of CleanTECH San Diego, nine local governmental bodies have received bonding authority for over $154 million of Clean Renewable Energy Bonds (CREBs). Announced by the Treasury Department today, the allocation is 19% of the $800 million awarded for the entire country. This over-sized allocation is the result of a substantial collaborative effort which included several San Diego companies, non-profits and even a team of four UCSD students.
All of the applications submitted from San Diego were for solar energy. The largest total award in the U.S. went to the San Diego Unified School District which received an allocation for $74 million bonds for 111 projects. The financial benefit to the School District is the indirect subsidy provided by the IRS which greatly reduces the interest expense. “These bonds function as tax credit bonds which allow investors to receive federal tax credits in lieu of the payment of a portion of the interest on the bond. For CREBs, the federal tax credits will cover 70 percent of the interest on the bonds”.
The local winners were City of Chula Vista, City of Lemon Grove, Fallbrook Public Utility District, UC San Diego, San Diego State, San Diego Unified School District, San Dieguito Union High School, City of Santee and Santee School District. Click here for the national list.
Today’s good news really amounts to a knock on the door to opportunity. In the months ahead each award winner will have the real work of issuing bonds and implementing the solar projects.
Tags: CREBs, San Diego Gas & Electric, Treasury Department, UCSD
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