Monday, January 16, 2006

Nanotech debate continues, solar momentum questions, and Safe Hydrogen

  • As we've mentioned before, there is both great optimism (see posts here, here and here) and great concern about the green and clean potential for nanotechnology. Thanks to Charlie Kireker for pointing out this NPR coverage of the topic, spurred by a recent report by a former EPA staffer. It's a good, brief recap of the ongoing debate, which cleantech investors should be paying careful attention to...
  • Safe Hydrogen, LLC has raised $308k from the Massachusetts Renewable Energy Trust SEED (Sustainable Energy Economic Development) Program. The capital will be used to finish an ongoing demonstration project of the company's hydrogen storage technology, which should be interesting to track, as storage is one of the critical roadblocks to the emergence of a "hydrogen economy".

VCs speak out: Cleantech is the #1 trend

Red Herring's annual panel of five top VCs predicting 2006's "top 10 tech trends" came out, with "More investment in green startups" at #1. VCs participating on the panel included John Doerr, Steve Jurvetson, Roger McNamee, Joe Schoendorf, and Ann Winblad. The panelists also suggested that biological sciences would start to attract a lot more college student interest going forward, given their applicability for both biotech and green technologies. Jurvetson even went so far as to state his opinion that:

“All the breakthrough development in science and technology will increasingly come from bio-derived or bio-inspired origins.”

All this attention, of course, is bringing yet more attention to the space. Business Week, for example, mentions that Doerr's Kleiner Perkins and/or Vinod Khosla are already invested in a few "stealth" cleantech startups (See: Ion America, Miasole, EEStor, Methanotech). Doerr appears to have mentioned that there's a fifth such investment as well...

Thursday, January 12, 2006

AgION raises an additional $5M

Antimicrobial materials developer AgION, which raised a $3M Series D from two strategic investors back in September, announced that they have added $5M to the round. The new capital came in from new and existing investors including SAM Private Equity, Prescher Capital, Paladin Capital Group, BASF Venture Capital, and Motorola Ventures. AgION has now raised a total of $45.7M. SAM Private Equity appears to have played a lead role in bringing in the new funding.

Tuesday, January 10, 2006

Market sector catch-ups

Having been pulled away a bit lately, I'm going to lump together a lot of different articles and thoughts that have come up over the past few weeks...

WATER

Sewerbots for pulling communication cables through pipes underground. At what point does "water, the commodity" become valuable enough compared to "bits, the commodity" that this technology gets repurposed and adapted to the difficult but overdue challenge of water distribution infrastructure build-out and repair? Meanwhile, there are even bigger unmet needs and "pain points" outside of North America, and they're starting to drive ramped up spending...

ENERGY

Solar continues to get all the attention these days. But will the looming polysilicon shortage throw a breaker on the party? Expect a lot of early-stage investor interest in both silicon production technologies and any emerging solar technologies that minimize or eliminate the use of silicon altogether (ie: thin films and concentrators), and a major uptick in market share for such 2G solar technologies in 2006 (albeit from a really small base level). In the meantime, the solar land rush continues apace, and now the emerging-markets aspects are finally getting mainstream attention. It makes sense -- it's always been strange that the U.S. would play such an important role in supplying solar technology to the rest of the world without being the top consumer itself, especially when other regions are increasingly dominating electronics manufacturing in other sectors, and especially when there's already a lot of experience manufacturing products that use solar technology. This is one reason why even U.S. solar manufacturers are rapidly moving their own manufacturing overseas (see this link, too), to get closer to end-markets and lower costs. As emerging technologies become better commercialized, and innovation starts to take a back seat to manufacturing efficiencies, expect this trend to continue.

But while solar gets all the attention, other clean energy technologies are making their own progress. The ever-knowledgeable Tyler points out that the North American wind market is going gang-busters... but has the industry jumped the shark from a venture investor (i.e., proprietary and scalable technology) perspective? Probably not (there are definitely still intriguing innovations being developed and thus perhaps another VC investment wave yet to come), but it is somewhat telling that a lot of the financing activity these days in wind power is on the project side.

And, lest we forget, investor interest in fuel cell developments (terrific SOFC primer here) and storage markets and timing the hydrogen economy and biofuels (note: pdf) and energy infrastructure continues to grow apace -- they just haven't been getting the press lately.

NANOTECHNOLOGY

Not by and of itself "clean technology," as we've talked about before, but with significant overlaps (see here, too), nanotech continues to attract significant capital. But as the linked article points out, only 9% of venture-backed nanotech startups have achieved exits to date. This is probably a sign of the early stage of the industry as much as anything else. But sooner or later investors are going to need to see more exit activity... Expect pressure for M&A exits to increase as investment periods draw to an end. Or, if the IPO market picks up, a mad rush...

Prism Solar, SensorLogic, Blacklight Power

  • SensorLogic, which provides software solutions in the M2M communications space, added $4.67M to its own re-opened funding round (now totalling over $15M). The referencing article also has some interesting commentary on the M2M market.
  • Blacklight Power, which has been getting some press lately, has apparently raised $50M. ...I'm not at all sure what to say about this, except to note that clean energy technologies continue to be hindered by the fact that the first question investors often have to ask themselves isn't "will the customers buy it" or "is it a compelling value proposition," but the even more basic "does it work?" Even if the answer is often "yes," it's one reason why it can be rewarding to focus on post-revenue investments in the space...

Friday, January 6, 2006

SDE, Azuro, Zensys, Velocity, and other notes from the week

A few minor notes this week from the world of cleantech investing:

  • Israeli wave-power firm SDE put out a press release announcing they're looking to do a public listing. The title also mentions they're looking for additional funding, for those interested...
  • Azuro, which has developed solutions to reduce the power consumption of semiconductor chips -- re: portable devices -- announced a $9M second round of funding, led by Miramar Venture Partners. Existing investors Benchmark Capital and TTP Ventures also participated "fully". The total amount invested in the firm so far is now $13.3M. While an example of a classic IT investment, the energy efficiency angle is also of interest to cleantech investors, a demonstration of the overlap cleantech markets often experience with other investment areas.
  • In another example of "cross-market" technologies of interest to cleantech investors, mesh wireless technology provider Zensys announced a Series C investment by Cisco. The company's systems are being targeted for use in networking home appliances, but the general mesh wireless market can often be applied toward the remote automation and control of sensors and devices for use in various cleantech applications (e.g., indoor air quality monitoring, energy device automation, factory automation, etc.), something we've discussed before. Zensys has now raised approx. $45M.
  • The launch of a new regional venture firm, Velocity Venture Capital, was announced this week. The seed- and early-stage investor, targeting Sacramento-area technology startups in software, communications, and clean technology, will be about a $20M fund.
  • I was waiting for an official press release to make the mention, but none have been forthcoming since the PE Week Wire mention a couple of weeks ago -- Rockport Capital Partners has reportedly closed on $155M in commitments for their next fund, targeted at $250M. Very encouraging news for the industry, and many kudos to Rockport.
  • In case you haven't heard about the upcoming Clean Edge and IBF Clean Tech Investor Summit, it was recently announced that SunPower CEO Tom Werner will be one of the keynotes at the event.

Monday, January 2, 2006

Year end thoughts: Final fun stories of 2005

  • There appears to be a lot of activity these days among emerging Israeli cleantech investors. Here's one article that provides some insight as to why...
Happy new year to all, and a hearty thanks to those who've come to this site over the past few months. I hope it's been useful for those who have been interested in learning more about the investment side of this rapidly-growing space; it's certainly been terrific to make connections with many of you through the site. Readership has continued to surprise and grow, it's a sign of how exciting things are in the industry right now. Special thanks to those who've left some very thoughtful comments and reactions on the site. Best wishes to all for a happy, prosperous, and clean 2006.