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Cleantech's Hottest Start Ups: Forbes and SharesPost

One quick hit this Monday morning involving a Schwartz PR client and the cleantech start-up world. Forbes created a slide show featuring the 12 hottest cleantech start ups according to SharesPost.

At SharesPost.com, you can find bulletin boards of private company shares, including offers to buy and sell in companies like Suniva, Bloom Energy, Amyris Biotechnologies, Altra Biofuels, Altarock Energy, eSolar, GreatPoint Energy, GridPoint and Bright Source Energy. These are some great early stage companies backed by a "whose who" of cleantech VCs, including NEA Ventures, Draper Fisher Jurvetson, Khosla Ventures, Kleiner Perkins, Lightspeed Venture Partners, Sequoia and others, in markets like smart grid, solar, biofuels and fuel cells.

As investors wonder about private company liquidity even amid some potential cleantech IPOs, secondary market options like SharesPost are stepping in. It is an exciting time to be at the intersection of clean technology and private equity.

The cleantech VC world will come together next week at AlwaysOn GoingGreen East in Boston, where the organization showcases the GoingGreen 50. Drop us a line if you're planning to attend, as Schwartz handles the public relations for that event.

Tags: altarock, altra+biofuels, amyris+biotechnologies, bloom+energy, bright+source+energy, cleantech+pr, cleantech+vc, draper+fisher+jurvetson, esolr, goinggreen+east, greatpoint+energy, gridpoint, khosla, kleiner+perkins, lightspeed+venture+partners, nea+ventures, sequoia, suniva

Posted by Jason Morris on March 1, 2010 at 1:01 PM
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Cleantech & Green Industry Enters Event Run on PR High

The last few weeks may have been the best PR stretch of 2009 for solar, wind and other cleantech and green markets, especially from a finance standpoint.  It should provide a considerable uplift to spirits at AlwaysOn GoingGreen next week as the cleantech venture capital, private equity and investment banking community gathers to discuss industry issues in water, smart grid, energy management, solar, wind, energy storage and renewable fuels. Some of the positive news from the past few weeks:

-Treasury grants started flowing from the American Recovery & Reinvestment Act (ARRA), promising to fund a new way of renewable energy projects in wind and solar.

-The Department of Energy (DOE) loan program blessed Solyndra with a $500+ million guarantee, promising to create more than 3,000 green collar jobs in the process.

-Vinod Khosla's firm, Khosla Ventures, raised a $1.1 billion round which is expected to help fund dozens, if not scores or start-ups across the sector.

-IBM predicted that a "smart grid of water" business could be worth $20 billion over five years.

-Cleantech patents hit an all time high in Q2, showing that companies and entrepreneurs continue to innovate and that many new Green technologies are likely coming to market in 2010 and beyond.

That last bullet flew under the radar in many circles (a partner in a late stage VC firm I talked to said he had not heard anything about IBM's interest in water) and water as a whole gets less attention than energy on a national level. I am a firm believer that water is the next big sector that will attract massive investment and media attention, as the US comes to better understand that water is a national issue.

Couple all of these developments with Hara and other companies being successful in their fundraising activities, and you have what looks to be a significant financial thaw across various green industries. It could also be with Obama's speech on healthcare reform tonight that some form of bill gets passed and that the Energy & Water bill moves back to the top of the legislative priority list, which could result in the creation of the Green Bank and more funding avenues for cleantech companies.

With GoingGreen, PVSec, Solar Power International, Dow Jones Alternative Energy Innovations Conference, Power-Gen, Clean Tech Futures and a number of other events upcoming, we'll be able to monitor the impact of all of this news on the collective psyche of the cleantech market. It should be a fun final third to 2009.

**Schwartz Plug Alert**

We issued a release today highlighting the growth of our Cleantech & Green PR and Public Affairs Practice during 2009. We've become the Agency of Record for ten great organizations thus far in 2009, thereby doubling our footprint in the market. It's an exciting time to be in PR.

 

Tags: alwayson, arra, cleantech+pr, cleantech+public+affairs, cleantech+venture+capital, doe, doe grants, goinggreen, green+pr, khosla, loan+guarantee, power-gen, smart+grid+pr, solar, solar+power+international, water+desalination, wind

Posted by Jason Morris on September 9, 2009 at 9:54 PM
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Solar Demand Increases Internationally; US Next?

Interesting post today from Camille Ricketts at VentureBeat discussing how solar demand in Europe and Asia is on the rise amid falling prices, whereas the US has yet to heat up. The post tosses out some cost per watt statistics from abroad (which may annoy those that would like to see $/kwh or levelized cost of electricity--LCOE--used as the metric), presenting China as the cost leader.

Like I've been hearing from the Intersolar conferences, Ricketts says that popular opinion has the US catching up during the second half of 2009 once cleantech stimulus funds kick in. Regardless, US companies should expect to hear more solar PR noise from global companies through the end of this year and into 2010.

I'll report back and let you know if the discussion is the same at AlwaysOn GoingGreen, Solar Power International and PVSEC.

Tags: $/kwh, alwayson, cleantech+stimulus, goinggreen, lcoe, levelized+cost+of+electricity, pvsec, solar+demand, solar+power+international, solar+pr, venturebeat

Posted by Jason Morris on July 20, 2009 at 11:36 PM
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Green Stimulus for the UK Economy?

In a recent interview with The Independent, UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown hinted that a slew of green initiatives will be announced as part of the Government's April 22 budget review, designed to drag Britain out of recession on a low carbon path.

gwiz.jpg

Top of the list are new plans for electric and hybrid vehicles, which echo London Mayor Boris Johnson's pledge to make the city "the electric car capital of Europe" earlier this month. The Government is expected to announce trials of environmentally friendly cars in two or three cities and initiate talks with utilities companies to roll out a national network of roadside charging points.

Brown also said that the Government was considering a "scrappage" scheme to give consumers a £2,000 windfall when they trade their older, polluting cars in for new, lower emissions alternatives – a step called for by the UK's ailing automotive industry, which saw new car sales slide almost 30% in Q1 2009.

The news coincides with two European Investment Bank loans of £340m to Jaguar Land Rover and £373m to Nissan to fuel the development of green vehicles in their UK plants. But Brown's intent to deploy more low emission vehicles within the public sector should also act as encouragement to smaller, UK-based manufacturers, such as Smith Electric Vehicles and Modec, which are already seeing strong traction amongst high-profile enterprises such as DHL, Royal Mail, Tesco and UPS.

But aside from the automotive industry, what other environmental initiatives are the Government proposing? Well, Brown has promised to set a target of creating 400,000 jobs in "green industries" over the next five years, which loosely encompass "pharmaceuticals, healthcare, education, the creative industries, information technology, bioscience and advanced manufacturing".

Other plans are mooted to include greater support for the development of clean coal, guidelines for the installation of smart meters in every home in Britain, and relaxed planning rules to allow more wind farms to be built.

The latter measure will help to quell some of the ill feeling that the Department of Energy and Climate Change generated last month when it announced that the £50m well reserved for funding solar projects on public buildings had dried up three months early. 

While not as far reaching as the US' stimulus package, the rumoured measures at least highlight a growing appreciation that green technology could act as a major catalyst for reviving the UK's economy, resurrecting Britain's once thriving automotive sector and reducing the country's dependency on the financial and services industries.

We'll be watching closely for the official budget announcement later this month.

Tags: electric vehicles, green stimulus, hybrid vehicles, jaguar land rover, modec, nissan, recession, renewables, scrappage, smith electric vehicles, UK

Posted by Luke Nava on April 14, 2009 at 9:07 AM
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Following the Money at GoingGreen East 2009

GoingGreen East 2009 was full of great chatter about energy efficiency, batteries, storage, VCs and the government's deep pockets. Check out a quick podcast discussing what we saw here.

Tags: cleantech+gr, cleantech+pr, GoingGreen, venture capital

Posted by Mike Farber on March 23, 2009 at 4:34 PM
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First Impressions from GoingGreen East

AlwaysOn GoingGreen East is underway here at the Four Seasons Boston. Some first impressions:

  • Packed show. Despite the economy plenty of VCs, entrepreneurs, bankers, lawyers, cleantech pr types etc have deemed GoingGreen worth attendeding.
  • Stellar panels. All top the VCs and east coast cleantech cos are here.
  • Tone is realistic, not pessimistic. Cleantech cos will take off, it just may take a bit longer b/c of the recession.
  • Particular enthusiam for efficiency, smart grid, battery storage.

Best way to stay on top of things is to follow our tweets, @mfarbs.

 

 

Tags: cleantech+pr, GoingGreen

Posted by Mike Farber on March 10, 2009 at 12:03 PM
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Renewablog Live from GoingGreen East

GoingGreen East starts tonight at the Four Seasons in Boston. Renewablog is on the job, posting, podcasting and tweeting (@mfarbs).

As Scott Kirsner says, everyone from top VCs to Secretary of Energy/Environment Ian Bowles to the CEOs of 1366 Technologies, Ze-Gen, Mascoma, Oasys Water, and GreatPoint Energy will be in attendance. Check out both Renewablog and the live show feed on the GoingGreen site for real-time updates.

Tags: cleantech, cleantech+pr, GoingGreen, VCs

Posted by Mike Farber on March 9, 2009 at 2:23 PM
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All Eyes on Stimulus Package

I think everyone would agree with me that regardless of whether you support the stimulus package or are against it, any sort of resolution is welcome so we can stop hearing about the different machinations of the bill.

In any event, lots of stimulus-related talk today:

The NY Times says Tech will get a big boost, including high-speed connectivity ($7 billion), digitizing of health records ($20 billion for EMRs) and smart grid support ($20 billion). This definitely creates a large public affairs opportunity for relevant companies.

CNN says that the price tag has dropped below $800 billion and that an agreement could come today. Time is tight with Obama wanting the bill on his desk by Monday.

The Senate version is being applauded by AWEA for its support of the wind market.

It will be interesting from a Public Affairs standpoint to see how the funds are allocated. A chunk will definitely go to the states, while agencies will have budget for "shovel-ready" projects.

Even if signed next week, expect the stimulus to be a major focus of upcoming cleantech events, including the upcoming AlwaysOn GoingGreen conference in Boston.

Tags: awea, cleantech, emergency medical records, emr, public+affairs, public+relations, smart+grid, stimulus+package

Posted by Jason Morris on February 11, 2009 at 12:45 PM
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GoingGreen with Katie Fehrenbacher of Earth2tech

Managed to grab the very busy Katie Fehrenbacher of earth2tech for a quick podcast. Great insights on the GoingGreen show and cleantech industry.

Please excuse the background hotel music--no sound proof studio at the show!

Tags: cleantech, cleantech pr, earth2tech, green, Katie Fehrenbacher

Posted by Mike Farber on September 22, 2008 at 12:17 PM
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Some Random Thoughts: Green PR & GoingGreen

Some random thoughts on which I may expand later after digesting the week at GoingGreen:

-There is a debate between two camps in solar and other incentive-boosted renewables. One camp says there needs to be a focus on markets with resources (abundant sunlight) and less emphasis on public policy. The other camp thinks that policy is the major issue short and long term. I think they are both right in that eventually the technology will be so efficient and cost-effective that it will end the ROI debate, but incentives will still help the market and can't be ignored (hello, Germany).

-Most experts agree that the country cannot afford to ignore nuclear in the short term. That said, many believe that new nuclear wouldn't have an impact for a decade or more (kind of like new oil fields) and so the emphasis should not be on nuclear as the primary solution. Most support keeping it at 20% of our energy source. Elise Zoli of Goodwin Proctor had some of the best points on the subject on the GoingGreen fossil-fuels panel. One point on nuclear by Vinod Khosla that was interesting: The innovation cycle for nuclear is 15 years whereas solar thermal and other technologies will have gone through 15 innovation cycles in that same time period.

-Green and cleantech are the fastest-growing venture asset classes, attracting between 10-14 percent of all venture dollars. It is now the "third leg on the VC stool" with technology and life sciences. -Ira Ehrenpreis, General Partner, Technology Partners

-The most depressing panel of the event was the clean-coal panel. Not depressing in the sense that they made bad points or failed to make a case, but it just seem like the participants anticipated objections and weren't passionate about the subject. One interesting point was made by Oorla Protonics about using natural gas to turn materials into oil. The CEO said that natural gas is the champagne of fossil fuels with oil being the wine and coal the beer. Using champagne to turn materials into low-grade wine or beer is ludicrous.

-Not surprisingly Khosla was the hit of Tuesday and Elon Musk (Tesla, SpaceX) the draw on Wednesday. Khosla talked about how it is "main tech" not "cleantech" that matters and that the market should embrace solutions that can capture 80 percent of the market. He said that using one sheet of toilet paper as suggested by Sheryl Crow is not a solution and that the Prius is a nice status symbol but so are Gucci bags. This is probably the area where I disagree with Khosla most. I know he is looking at it more through an investment lens, but from a practical standpoint EVERY little bit helps. So if what I can afford to do today is buy a Prius and use less goods that leave a footprint, then I should do it. It is analagous to weight loss. If someone focuses on the sixty pounds they need to lose, instead of making small changes to their habits (less sugar, don't eat at night) that result in gradual weight loss, then they will never succeed. I am not saying that we should settle, but there has to be bridges to that 80 percent market solution.

-The most daunting thing from a green and cleantech PR perspective was this: There is SO much noise in the market and we still haven't really seen anything yet. Imagine for a moment that the current financial crisis dies down in Q4, the federal climate becomes green friendly and boosts incentives, the states and municipalities continue their charge. What will that do? Increase funding in cleantech to astronomical levels, likely open the public markets to green IPOs and pour millions upon millions into the marketing and government relations coffers of cleantech and green companies. Most are operating on marketing budgets under $1 million annually today, investing primarily in manufacturing, R&D and go-to-market. Any money they are spending now (and it is not much) is on public relations, search-engine marketing and some local government relations. The second half of 2009? We may see double the number of public companies and marketing budgets in the millions. Advertising will get better and more frequent, and the PR and lobbying noise will get louder. There may be a HUGE government cookie that begins to open in six months.

GoingGreen was a fantastic event held at a great venue. It was yet another cleantech event that was oversubscribed showing the health of the industry. It has made me even more excited for Solar Power International in San Diego. Feel free to get in touch with me if you will be there the week of October 13. jmorris@schwartz-pr.com

Tags: biofuels, clean coal, cleantech, cleantech pr, energy, goinggreen, green pr, green public relations, nuclear, solar, wind

Posted by Jason Morris on September 19, 2008 at 10:41 AM
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Elon Musk on Tesla Model S Sedan

Yesterday, Vinod Khosla captivated the GoingGreen audience (the "pin drop" effect) and today it is Elon Musk. He opened his discussion with a quick overview of his new space venture before delving into some Tesla news.

He announced that the new Tesla Model S will be manufactured in San Jose with 20,000 units per year rolling out of a $250 million plant starting in late 2010 with chances to expand (drawing a round of applause). He said the new Sedan will be, like the Roadster, pure electric and seat five adults with more cargo space than any other sedan on the market. It can also fit two rear-facing car seats in the hatch and will have a 300+ mile range option.

He also envisions a fast charging option that will give it 85% charge in 45 minutes and battery pack swap out capabilities that take less time than filling a tank of gas. He expects to unveil the model early next year.

One other interesting aspect of his talk was his endorsing of solar as the power source of choice for electronic transportation. He is a believer in solar on homes, as well as utility-scale solar thermal. The more that Solar PR can draft the Tesla, the better it is for the solar market.

Tags: cleantech pr, cleantech public relations, elon musk, goinggreen, green pr, green public relations, tesla

Posted by Jason Morris on September 17, 2008 at 4:37 PM
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