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Posts Tagged ‘solar power’

Cleantech, powered by solar, grabs 13 percent more money from VCs

Friday, April 8th, 2011

solar panelsSAN FRANCISCO- Investments in cleantech, particularly solar, rose by 13 percent over last year’s numbers to $2.57 billion in the first quarter 2011. That’s a trend continuing into the second quarter, if the number of cleantech financings we report is any guide. The first quarter numbers represent the most money invested in cleantech since the third quarter in 2008.

So says a report from San Francisco-based Cleantech Group, a consulting company.

Although the amount invested in cleantech was larger, it went to fewer firms, so venture capitalists are doing fewer but larger deals.

In a conference call, Sheeraz Haji, CEO of the Cleantech Group, said the sector is setting a pace to raise more money this year than at any time since it began tracking the investments in 2002. He said succuessful IPOs by cleantech firms such ast Telsa Motors helps.

Brightsource Energy Inc., which develops solar fields, was the largest single recipient of the $641 million that went to solar firms during the quarter. BrightSource may go for an IPO later this year.

Electric vehicle firms took the next largest slice of the pie: $311 million.

The most active investors in the space were: Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, Khosla Ventures, Vantage Point Venture Partners, and the Google and GE venture capital arms.

 

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U.S. poised to become the focus of global solar power industry, report says

Wednesday, February 16th, 2011

EnfinityATLANTA – Despite constituting less than six percent of worldwide installations in 2010, the United States is well positioned to become the focus of the global photovoltaic (PV) industry in the coming year, according to a whitepaper released today by international solar power developer Enfinity.

Titled “The U.S. PV Market in 2011“, the report, produced in partnership with GTM Research, analyzes the key market drivers in the U.S. solar PV industry and predicts that 2011 will be a vital growth year for the country’s solar market.

“All eyes are on the U.S. PV market in 2011,” said Rafael Dobrzynski, Enfinity’s CEO in the Americas. “Being active in Europe as well as the Americas, we continually get questions—from both sides—about the U.S. market’s potential, demand ramp-up, and the reality of a national Feed-in-Tariff. Our white paper addresses these key issues as we delve into all these areas and provide valuable insights with hard numbers attached.”

Enfinity’s white paper identifies three factors that provide the United States with enormous, long-term potential for sustainable PV market growth:

  • The United States is home to an excellent photovoltaic resource. While the Southwest provides the highest insolation, or exposure to the sun’s rays, even northeastern states offer insolation that is, at a minimum, equal to or greater than the resources of Germany.
  • There is ample availability of land for PV development. The western states, in particular, have large tracts of open land that could support large PV installations.
  • Electricity demand in the United States is the highest in the world. Electricity consumption in the United States is roughly 7.2 times the total in Germany and nearly 15 times as much as Spain. In 2010, U.S. PV installations more than doubled to an estimated 820 MW, up from 435 MW in 2009. While other markets such as Spain, Germany and the Czech Republic have faced drastic shifts, the United States has seen steady, if incremental, year-over-year growth

Shayle Kann, managing director of solar at GTM Research, said, “It is difficult not to be bullish about the U.S. PV market. The economics have never made more sense. As PV system costs fall, electricity prices rise, and project finance returns to the table, the U.S. market is inching closer to reaching its potential as the center of global PV demand.”

Download: “The U.S. PV Market in 2011″ white paper.

TechJournal South is a TechMedia company. TechMedia presents the annual conferences:

SoutheastVentureConference: www.seventure.org

Internet Summit: www.internetsummit.com

Digital East: www.digitaleast.com

Digital Summit: www.digitalsummit.com