Archive for November, 2007

Solar showdown in Congress [Green Wombat]

Thursday, November 29th, 2007

solar-energy-bill-2.pngWith Congress back in session, renewable energy proponents are girding for a battle over legislation that could make or break the nascent solar power industry.

At stake in the energy bill now before Congress is the survival of a 30 percent investment tax credit that make large-scale solar power plants a viable option for utilities under pressure to cut greenhouse gas emissions by obtaining more of their electricity from renewable sources. On the home front, a similar tax credit for residential solar installations is up for grabs as Congress tries to reconcile House and Senate versions of the energy legislation.

"There are at least eight or nine well-funded companies that are actually making great progress in developing large-scale solar," says Joshua Bar-Lev, vice president for regulatory affairs for Oakland, Calif.,-based solar power plant developer BrightSource Energy. "I don’t know if any of them are going to be able to finance projects and get the permits they need without these tax credits."

The solar companies and their allies in the utility industry and on Wall Street had been pressing for an eight-year extension of the investment tax credit. They also want to abolish a prohibition on utilities from taking advantage of the incentive if they invest directly in solar power plants. But since word hit the street that Congressional leaders were considering stripping out the incentives to speed passage of the complex legislation -- catchall bills that will affect the fate of nearly every energy-related industry, from Big Oil to biofuels -- solar proponents have been converging on the Capitol in an 11th-hour lobbying frenzy.

"Things are very uncertain at the moment," says Chris O’Brien, an executive at solar panel maker Sharp who serves as chairman of the Solar Energy Industry Association, a trade group. "In recent years, we’ve seen a very sharp increase in corporate investment, project investment and financing for solar technology companies and solar projects. There’s great concern that the U.S. market continue to grow."

Like other renewable energy sectors, solar has lived and died at the hands of tax incentives. In the 1980s a California tax break encouraged the construction of the state's first utility-scale power plants by Luz International, founded by BrightSource's chairman. When the incentives evaporated with the return of cheap energy that decade, the company's business disappeared (though those Mojave Desert solar power stations continue to operate).

Global warming fears, renewable energy mandates imposed on utilities and a flood of venture capital has revived Big Solar over the past two years. The industry argues that longer term tax incentives must be put in place to ensure solar power plant builders have enough time to break into the electricity market and achieve economies of scale that will drive down the cost of green energy. This time around, the solar entrepreneurs have attracted the support of utilities like PG&E (PCG) and Edison International (EIX) as well as Wall Street titans like Goldman Sachs (GS) and Morgan Stanley (MS), both of which have invested in renewable energy companies. (Morgan Stanley, for instance, is backing BrightSource.)

"We’ve gone to Congress and talked to members about the need for multi-year commitments so we have certainty," Rick Carter, PG&E's director of federal government relations, told Green Wombat. "What we’ve seen over past couple years is stop-and-go with tax credits. If you have multi-year leads to build facilities, that doesn’t work."

Take California, for example. Negotiations between a solar energy company and a utility over a power purchase agreement can last more than a year and it can take another three or four years to to obtain regulatory approval for a solar power plant, secure the site and then get the facility built and operating. PG&E, Southern California Edison and San Diego Gas & Electric (SRE) all have signed long-term power purchase agreements for solar power plants that will be financed and built over the next several years.

Given that the prime solar sites and potential economic payoff for Big Solar is in the sun-drenched West, companies like BrightSource have been targeting Congress members from western states. "We want both representatives and senators to see the benefit of this: price certainty, jobs, clean energy," says Bar-Lev.

While the situation changes daily, action on the energy legislation is expected sometime in the next two weeks.

HP greens the bottom line [Green Wombat]

Wednesday, November 28th, 2007

Hp_enviro_1 Overshadowed by Google's jump into the renewable energy business on Tuesday was Hewlett-Packard's more modest move to go green by installing a 1-megawatt solar array at its San Diego facility, buying wind power for its Ireland operations and subsidizing employees' home solar systems.

In Silicon Valley these days putting a whopping solar array up on your roof is akin to having the coolest corporate jet or your CEO back-ordered for a Tesla Roadster. Google (GOOG), of course, has the biggest, a 1.6-megawatt monster that covers buildings and carports at the Googleplex in Mountain View. Not to be outdone, Applied Materials (AMAT) is planning an even larger solar system for its headquarters in neighboring Santa Clara.

But there's more at stake here than green bragging rights. Companies like HP (HPQ) are realizing that tapping renewable energy can also be good for the bottom line. Take HP's solar array in San Diego, for instance. The 5,000-panel system carries no capital costs for HP as the array will be financed and operated by a third-party affiliated with solar cell maker SunPower (SPWR). The Silicon Valley company will install the array and perform maintenance for 15 years while HP purchases the electricity produced by the solar system at a guaranteed below-market rate. That gives the company a hedge against rising energy costs. (HP thinks it'll save $750,000 over 15 years.) HP also retains ownership of any potentially marketable renewable energy credits associated with the array while the financier can take advantage of California’s solar subsidies.

SunPower wasn't disclosing the identity of that financier when Green Wombat inquired on Tuesday, but this morning the company announced a $200 million deal with Morgan Stanley (MS) to provide financing for solar installations and power purchase agreements like the one HP signed. SunPower and Morgan Stanley have formed a jointly owned holding company to finance SunPower's solar systems for customers, with the Wall Street firm kicking in up to $190 million and SunPower putting up as much as $10 million.

In Ireland, HP will buy a year’s worth of clean electricity generated by Airtricity’s European wind farms, saving the company an estimated $40,000 in 2008. Electricity generated by Airtricity’s wind farms is fed into Ireland’s national power grid rather than directly to HP facilities. But the additional power generated by the wind farms, as well as the solar electricity eventually produced by the San Diego array, will eliminate tons of greenhouse gas emissions from the atmosphere.

Last, SunPower will give HP employees a $2,000 rebate if they install the company’s residential solar systems, with HP providing another $2,000. That’s on top of state rebates under the California Solar Initiative program.

Google’s green power play [Green Wombat]

Tuesday, November 27th, 2007

luz-power-plant.jpg

Google the jolly green giant?

In a move to shake up the nascent renewable energy industry, Google announced Tuesday it will spend hundreds of millions of dollars developing new solar and wind technologies while investing in green tech startups.

The goal, according to Google founders Sergey Brin and Larry Page: Send the fossil fuel industry to the coal bin of history by making renewable energy cheaper than coal, a main culprit in the global warming crisis.

“Assuming we can develop this, we want to deploy it as broadly as possible," said Brin during a conference call. “Which means we’ll license the technology or put it in place ourselves.” Of particular interest is spreading renewable energy technology to rapidly industrializing but coal-dependent countries like China and India.

Dubbed RE<C (as in Renewable Energy Cheaper than Coal), the Google initiative will involve hiring green energy engineers and technologists for an in-house R&D program that will focus on developing breakthroughs in large-scale solar power plants. At the same time, Google's (GOOG) philanthropic arm, Google.org, will invest in green energy companies. Within a few years Google wants to be able to produce a gigawatt of clean energy -- enough to power a city the size of San Francisco -- at a price that will undercut cheap electricity from coal-fired plants.

For solar energy companies, the double-headed approach raises the prospect of both a potential brain-drain to Google and the possibility of a payday if the search giant goes on a green tech shopping spree. Page said Google routinely acquires "dozens of companies" and would apply that strategy to the renewable energy initiative where appropriate.

John O'Donnell, executive vice president of Silicon Valley solar energy startup Ausra, said he welcomes Google's bid to become a green energy player.

"I think folks who have or are developing technologies that can deliver RE<C are going to get some speedup in moving to market," he told Green Wombat. "That's good news for the sector and for the planet."

Ausra, backed by venture capital heavyweights Vinod Khosla and Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, builds large-scale solar power plants and recently signed a long-term deal with California utility PG&E (PG&E). "We're at a more mainstream engineer/build stage, and don't expect hiring problems," O'Donnell added. "Google may encourage more smart folks to seek careers in clean energy."

Given that a solar power plant can cost anywhere between half a billion and a billion dollars or more, it appears Google will concentrate on perfecting solar technology rather than get into the utility business. "In terms of building power plants, hundreds of millions of dollars is really not a large sum, so I hope they spend the money in a highly leveraged way to get the most out of it," says John Woolard, CEO of solar power plant startup BrightSource Energy, which is negotiating with utilities to supply 1.5 gigawatts of solar electricity.

"We are very active in the Southwest, and would look forward to working with a group like Google on building out power plants,"  he adds.  "I never would have predicted that Google would emerge as a provocative leader in large scale solar, but I am very excited about the
visibility it brings to an area of technology that we know has real economic potential."

Google already is working with two renewable energy startups. One is eSolar, a Pasadena, Calif., developer of utility-scale solar thermal power plants whose chairman is serial tech entrepreneur Bill Gross. The other is Makani Power, a stealth Bay Area startup that is developing what it calls "high-altitude wind energy extraction technologies aimed at the most powerful wind resources." Page and Brin declined to say if Google has invested in those companies.

PG&E spokeswoman Jennifer Zerwer said RE<C is "clearly a sign of the growing awareness of and response to climate change -- and that is a positive trend, especially for those concerned about climate change, as we are. While we did not work directly with Google on this announcement, we team with them on their energy efficiency and renewable efforts."

Like other California utilities, such as Southern California Edison (EIX) and San Diego Gas & Electric (SRE), PG&E is under the gun to obtain 20 percent of its electricity from renewable sources by 2010 and 33 percent by 2020.

The move into green energy is Google's biggest departure so far from its core search and advertising business. But Page noted it is not a change of mission for Google.org, which currently is managing initiatives to promote plug-in hybrid cars.

Brin and Page took pains to stress that RE<C makes good business sense, with the potential to profit from Google's stake in green energy companies or technology the company develops. Still, acknowledged Brin, "We're not going for huge margins. We want to deploy this fast."

"This has the ability to change the world," he added.

Australia’s green election [Green Wombat]

Monday, November 26th, 2007

kevin-rudd.jpgAustralian voters on Saturday tossed out the decade-old government of conservative Prime Minster John Howard, installing Labor Party leader Kevin Rudd (left) as the new PM. Howard was a staunch ally of the Bush administration on climate change, joining it in refusing to ratify the Kyoto Accord despite -- or because of -- Australia's status as the planet's biggest per-capita emitter of greenhouse gases.

Australia is a proverbial canary in the coal mine when it comes to suffering the consequences of climate change, and Saturday's election may foreshadow how environmental issues will play out elsewhere in the coming years. With the peter-garret-mp.jpgcountry in the grip of the worst drought on record, global warming -- and the Howard government's emu-in-the-sand stance that prompted corporate Australia to push its own climate change agenda -- became a hot campaign topic. The Australian Labor Party's environment spokesman, former Midnight Oil front man Peter Garret (right) -- a rock-star-environmentalist-turned-politico -- hammered the government at every turn. Meanwhile, Rudd promised to sign Kyoto, up investment in green technology and establish a nationwide carbon trading market to help achieve a 60 percent reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. Labor also set a target of obtaining 20 percent of this coal-dependent nation's electricity from renewable sources by 2020.

Just how much Labor's climate change policies contributed to its landslide victory is up for debate, though such was the voters' wrath that it appears that even Howard will lose his seat in Parliament, the first sitting prime minister to do so since 1929. But here's one indicator: The Greens scored 20 percent of the votes in some electorates and will take as many as six seats in the Senate, possibly giving the environmental party the balance of power in the upper house. The Greens also contributed to the Labor landslide because under Australia's preferential voting system, ballots cast for unsuccessful Green candidates were re-directed to the ALP.

So with a charismatic greenie like Garrett as Australia's presumptive new environment minister, Australia is about to become the Scandinavia of the South Pacific, right? Not quite. Australia's current prosperity owes much to the resource boom under way as China buys up just about any mineral that can be dug out of the ground. (See my Fortune colleague Brian O'Keefe's excellent story on the ire ore gold rush in Western Australia.)

img_3574.jpgGreen Wombat got a first-hand look at the pressures Rudd will face during a visit last month to Queensland, the new PM's home state. Driving through central Queensland's coal belt, a never-ending procession of trains piled high with coal flanked the two-lane highway, running 24/7 between the mines and the port, where China-bound coal ships are stacked up by the dozens off shore. Bulldozers scaled mountains of coal piled on the side of the road, scooping the sooty stuff up to be put on a conveyor belt that straddled the highway to connect to a train depot. At the Dingo roadhouse, a big color-coded wall map charts central Queensland's major coal seams and Shift Miner Magazine is on sale, chronicling the explosion in coal mining that has turned places like Rockhampton into boom towns. Riding in from the Rockhampton airport, a former coal miner-turned-taxi img_3569.jpgdriver tells me she rues passing up the chance a couple years' back to buy a house for $A10,000 in a nearby mining town; such homes now go for $A300,000. Out on a cattle ranch about 500 kilometers from Rockhampton, a mining company is drilling for gold but rancher John Dennis tells me he hopes they find something else. "Black gold," he says. "Coal." (The biggest corporate takeover attempt now under way Down Under is Aussie mining giant BHP Billiton (BHP)'s $150 billion offer for rival Rio Tinto (RTP).)

So no surprise that Rudd wants to spend $A500 million on so-called clean coal technology to capture and store greenhouse gas emissions from coal-fired power plants. While sun-drenched Australia has some of the world's best solar resource it currently gets about 86 percent of its electricity from coal-fired power plants. In fact, in recent years, Australian solar energy companies like Ausra have relocated to California, frustrated by the government's lack of support for renewable energy. But with the new Labor government pledging to fund a $A150 million Energy Innovation Fund to stop the brain drain as well as increase the mandatory renewable energy targets, Australia may be the next frontier for green business.

Green Wombat is moving [Green Wombat]

Monday, November 26th, 2007

Green_wombat_1As you may know, I am now an editor at Fortune and Green Wombat has relocated to the magazine's site. Please go here to read Green Wombat and sign up for RSS feeds. (Sorry, the RSS feed is not active yet but will be soon.) The email subscription feature is not yet active and until it is I'll continue to post at the old Green Wombat site as well. Cheers.

Report: California leads green innovation [Green Wombat]

Friday, November 16th, 2007

Next_10_1 Just how green is California? Deep green. Very deep green, according to a new California Green Innovation Index compiled by Silicon Valley venture capitalist F. Noel Perry's non-profit Next 10 foundation.

That might be taken as so much environmental chest-thumping by Golden State partisans, but the report -- the product of Next 10 and public-interest consultants Collaborative Economics -- offers some persuasive statistics about the role green innovation has played in California's fortunes.

"The index analyzes key economic and environmental indicators," writes Perry, "including energy consumption and efficiency, economic growth and carbon emissions, to help us better understand the role green innovation plays in achieving two goals critical to California’s future: 1) reducing the absolute level of the greenhouse gas emissions that cause global warming, and 2) increasing the state’s gross domestic product, which is the basis for our economic vitality "

The conclusion echoes one repeatedly championed by green tech proponents, from Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to Silicon Valley venture capitalists: environmental innovation and economic prosperity go hand in hand.

Here's some interesting data points from the report:

  • "If California’s annual statewide electricity bill was the same fraction of GDP as Texas...Californians would be paying almost $25 billion more for electricity."
  • California holds  44% of United States patents in solar technologies and 37% in wind.
  • The Golden State has 36 percent of the U.S.'s  green tech venture capital investment.
  • "California utility efficiency programs....reduced the need for 24 power plants between 1975 and 2003....The California Energy Commission estimates that building and appliance standards alone have saved residents and businesses $56 billion through 2003 and are projected to save another $23 billion by 2013."
  • "More Californians recycle than vote" (More than 50 percent of Californians recycle.)
  • "Per capita CO2 emissions in Texas are double those of California. Per capita emissions levels in California today are slightly lower than they were 15 years ago."
  • California has about 90 percent of the market for energy-efficient dishwasher and about 50 percent of the market for energy-efficient refrigerators and washing machines

Concludes Next 10: "The growing distance between the trend lines of GDP rising and emissions dropping represent the delinking of GHG emissions from economic growth."

Down in the Bunker [Netly News]

Thursday, November 15th, 2007

Bunker
I headed up to the bunker the other night, supposedly to play cards and meet Baby G's brother—a user-interface designer who was visiting from Brooklyn. Baby G likes to assemble some of the tech dudes who live in and around Mill Valley for special occasions like that, and I get to tag along if I promise to behave and ask some, but not too many, questions. I also agreed to bring the beer, and Wolfenstein, a serial entrepreneur who lives in Sausalito, emailed that he'd swing by Pizza Antica to pick up a couple of Pepperoni and Mushrooms. But a half hour *before* we were supposed to head up the mountain to the bunker, the brother from Brooklyn Reply-ed All:

"Gentlemen...sorry to say I will not be joining you this evening in the bunker as I am off to LA."

"Still on?" I emailed Baby G, thinking he might want to bag it.

He replied: "Of course!"

I picked up Wen en route and we climbed the windy road, already dark and hopelessly twisted (the road, that is), to baby G's house, which sits perched like a golden eagle, overlooking all of Mill Valley and further beyond, San Francisco. G's place has to be the sweetest rental in town. I'm guessing 5,000 square feet and it has a pool house and one of those infinity pools, with the no-edge that bleeds off into space. Stone steps descend from the pool to a large, mirrored room beneath it: This is the legendary bunker.

Bunker1

The mirrors were there, supposedly, because the owner built the bunker so his wife could use it as her dance studio. (You can see where the barre was once screwed into the wall.) I am sure if she came back to see the place today, she would be appalled. Neat, draftsman-like words and numbers and flow charts, handwritten in black Sharpie, covered the mirrors from the ceiling to the floor. It was a fever dream of notes that looked, to the uninitiated at least, like the  ravings of a Dr. Bronner's Peppermint Soap label. A Startup Guy, of course, would instantly recognize it for what it was: The Next Big Thing.

The bunker is where G had launched his latest company, one of the many hot, bit factories that are zipping along in Facebook's draft. Every day, a half dozen other dudes would crowd in around a circular table and hack away, on Macbook Pros, until the wee hours. The startup's only a few months old, but G raised a few million in record time, and the thing's  already pulling in decent money. "We made $25,000 today," said G.

"That's pretty great," I said, and G shrugged.

Given the good daily receipts, he looked like shit and had dark rings under his eyes and slumped in his chair. Wen, who also closed a round of financing this week for his new gaming company, looked only a little better. Startup life takes a toll. The only thing more constant than the burn rate is the competition and that comes suddenly from nowhere. It's total war and you almost never get to see the enemy. These guys, of course, are addicted to it. I mean, who wouldn't be?

Bunker2

Waterlog has moved [Waterlog]

Wednesday, November 14th, 2007

Waterlog has remodeled. No ads, no intrusive branding: waterlog.typepad.com. Stop by.

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The future of TV [Netly News]

Tuesday, November 13th, 2007

home-logo-revised.png

By Josh Quittner

[Productivity alert! If you expect to get anything done for the next few hours, please read no further.]

[Still reading? Yeah. Slacker.]

I have seen the future of television and it's an application called called Miro. The app makes it super easy to find and watch Internet TV. It handles HD feeds and seamlessly staples together BitTorrent streams. A free, open-source download, Miro goes into its 1.0 public release today, here.

I never realized that finding and watching video online was a problem. But it is. With the steady proliferation of Net TV shows—not to mention all the things you might want to track on YouTube—organizing your video feeds is increasingly painful. From BoingBoing, to Wired Science, to The Onion, everyone is doing video, and a lot of it is getting fun. Miro gives you a way to subscribe to and organize it all. Since it solves a problem you didn't know you had, it's one of those programs you have to use to appreciate.

After installing it, you're taken through a quick setup that let's you browse the Miro Guide, and subscribe to any of 2,714 of freely available channels and programs. You can add as many channels as you want, or simply add videos you find on the Web (all the major video portals are represented here, incuding YouTube, BlogDigger, Google Video, Yahoo!, Revver, Daily Motion, Blip.tv and Mefeedia), to a playlist. You can also auto download programs as they become available on the channels.

For instance, I have become enamored lately of a YouTube auteur, jdarks, whose passion is teaching guitar hacks how to play like Jerry Garcia (one of my many sordid fantasies.) With Miro, I simply created a channel for jdarks.  Now, I have all his videos organized, and can quickly download and watch whichever clips I want. Miro automatically deletes the files after 5 days, so you don't chew up your hard drive, but you can elect to save your favorites.

Over the past few years,  a half dozen folks  in Worcester, Mass. affiliated with the Participatory Culture Foundation have been hacking away on Miro. "From a consumer point of view, it's just a really great experience—it's a trivially easy way to subscribe to and consume high definition content," says John Lilly, who, besides being the COO of the non-profit Mozilla Foundation, is a PCF board member. "It breaks out of the little video box we're all used to in the browser. Mostly I love it because it just works—no other video on the web is like that."

Users can rate videos and get recommendations of the "if you like this, then you might like that" variety. Likewise, you can post videos to digg, de.licio.us, or reddit. Nicholas Reville, executive director of the project, says that even more social web functionality will be added as the application matures: "We are planning an extension system for version 2.0 that will open up a lot more of these types of opportunities."

Maybe Marc Andreessen is right. Perhaps, with the writer's strike and all that talent walking the picket line on the one hand, and on the other, all this terrific, cheap technology for distributing, organizing and watching Net TV, television is about to be reinvented. Something big is going on. GigaOm's first conference on Reinventing TV, is sold out tomorrow. Luckily, I got a ticket. Now, if only I can tear myself away from learning this Dark Hollow lick...

Fiji underwater hotel still a definite … maybe! [Waterlog]

Tuesday, November 13th, 2007

Underseahotel Reporter Alex Pulaski at the Oregonian has a detailed update on Bruce Jones' quixotic fantasy to  to build "Poseidon" -- a 24-room underwater hotel on a small island in Fiji. Jones says he's leased 25,000 sq. ft of space for manufacturing facilities in Portland, which has convenient port facilities and a logical home base from which finished modules would be shipped to Fiji.  But no contracts have been signed, and one potential contractor that runs a ship-repair yard says he hasn't heard from Jones in months. No word, of course, on who exactly who -- if anyone -- is bootstrapping the venture.

More here.