Tesla Backs Corridor Of Electric Car Charging Stations In California

September 22, 2009

A series of four electric-car charging stations is being planned for the 380-mile route between San Francisco and Los Angeles in California.

The stations, planned by solar installer, SolarCity and regional bank Rabobank, are being built with the cooperation of Telsa Motors, the electric car manufacturer.

The stations are planned for Hwy 101 by SolarCity and Rabobank

The stations are planned for Hwy 101 by SolarCity and Rabobank

According to a press release, the stations will enable an electric car to complete a trip between the two cities. They will draw some of their power from solar panels and are being billed as providing a fast charge.

The stations will be located along Hwy 101 in Atascadero, Santa Maria and Goleta and Salinas, and built at Rabobank branches. No details were available on construction schedules, expected charge times or consumer costs.

SolarCity says it has installed more than 100 home charging stations for Tesla owners.


Data Center Energy Pressures Could Ease Next Year

September 22, 2009

Data centers are a necessity of the modern 21st Century economy. They keep companies from Google to Procter & Gamble in business.

Starting next year, servers designed to sit at the center of these giant info-warehouses will begin to show some dramatic reductions in energy use.

The result could be big gains in the energy efficiency of data centers. Of course this means replacing computers already in use with new models, something most firms will not do. But overtime as these energy efficient units find their into use spiraling energy costs could for the first time decline.

A Samsung laboratory experiment found that servers expected on the market next year will burn 38 percent less energy than those available today. Part of the reason is the adoption of DDR3 memory chips made with a new generation 40-nanometer manufacturing equipment. The smaller circuitry requires less power. (Samsung is a manufacturer of the chips.)

But the machines also are expected to adopt Energy Star guidelines released by the EPA in May. The guidelines suggest that 30 percent energy savings are possible.

Sylvie Kadivar, an associate director of strategic marketing at Samsung, said Tuesday that a reduction in server energy use is expected. “We obviously believe it will be dramatic,” she said,

The poser savings from a 2GB 40-nanometer DDR3 memory chip could by itself be 73 percent, she said.

How much energy will be saved worldwide from this new generation of server? It is hard to calculate since adoption rates and market growth are hard to predict. But the development does suggest a change in the trend line is possible.


Solar Installer Sungevity Gets $6 Million In Financing

September 22, 2009

Solar installer Sungevity said Tuesday it raised $6 million in series B funding as it prepares to double it sales force and expand into three new markets by the end of the year.

Sungevity says demand remains strong in rooftop solar

Sungevity says demand remains strong in rooftop solar

The Berkeley company lets homeowners order rooftop solar panels on the Internet, saving them time and money.

The financing, which closed this month, brings to $8.7 million the money the startup has raised. The most recent round was led by Greener Capital, a new venture firm, and joined by angels who were previous investors. Greener Capital Managing Partner Charles Finnie will join the company’s board.

Sungevity co-founder Danny Kennedy said the company is putting the money to work by adding several new executives to its management ranks, including CFO Charles Ferer, who came from solar installer SolarCity.

He added that market demand remains strong with August the biggest sales month in the company’s history. Sungevity has 220 customers.

The company meanwhile is preparing to offer leasing terms to customers starting in 2010, Kennedy said.


Oracle CEO: We Never Compete With MySQL; Will Not Spin It Off… Ever! (video)

September 22, 2009
Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison before an un-scripted conversation with Eddy Zander, former Motorola CEO

Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison before an "un-scripted" conversation with "Eddy" Zander, former Motorola CEO

In a conversation with former Motorola CEO Ed Zander – hosted by the Churchill Club – last night, Oracle CEO Larry Ellison said loud and clear that it will not spin off or kill MySQL, no matter what the European Union says about his deal to acquire Sun Microsystems.

“We never compete with MySQL… We’re not going to spin it off. The U.S. government cleared this. We think the Europeans are going to clear this,” pounded Ellison.

I’m sure that’ll please the bureaucrats in Brussels that are “thoroughly” reviewing the deal over some mussels and crispy triply-fried (Belgian) fries :-)


Hot Smart Grid And Power Savings Startups

September 21, 2009

One of the hottest areas of clean-tech investing is the smart grid – where companies hope to bring new energy efficiencies to the electric power grid.

There is no shortage of startups in this expanding space. The Cleantech Group highlighted 10 in its Cleantech 100, a list of private firms expected to grow rapidly. Seven are located in the United States, three from Europe.

Seven of the startups are from the US, including GridPoint, and three are from Europe

Seven of the startups are from the US, including GridPoint, and three are from Europe

The companies offer energy management systems and hardware to reduce power usage.

The entire Cleantech 100 covers nine market segments and highlights 55 companies from the United States, 13 from the United Kingdom, 10 from Germany, five from Israel and three from India.

Here are the smart grid and power savings companies.

GridPoint, Arlington, Virginia
Silver Springs Networks, Redwood City, California
SmartSynch, Jackson, Mississippi
CPower, New York, New York
eMeter, San Mateo, California
EPS , Costa Mesa, California
Nujira, Cambridge, United Kingdom
PowerPlus Communications, Manheim, Germany
Ubidyne, Ulm, Germany
Verdiem, Seattle, Washington


California Energy Plan Could Bring Higher Prices

September 21, 2009

California’s second great global warming experiment began earlier this week when Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger signed an order requiring 33 percent of the state’s electricity to come from renewable sources by 2020.

Most observers believe the plan is a well-intentioned attempt to reduce the greenhouse gases beginning to disrupt the Earth’s climate. But can the goal be met? There are many reasons to say no.

Solar farms are expectec to go a long way toward helping California reach its nenewables target

Solar farms are expectec to go a long way toward helping California reach its nenewables target

Perhaps the greatest reason for skepticism is that the state’s first renewables target of 20 percent by 2010 looks unlikely to be met. San Diego Gas and Electric, the laggard of the state’s utilities, only gets about 10 percent of its juice from renewables one year away from the deadline.

Even if the ambitious 33 percent mark is achieved, it won’t be without pain. First, it will require piles of money for new plants, transmission lines and energy storage facilities – an area of the modern energy infrastructure where technology is still at an infant stage. The state also will need to become much more aggressive at siting plants over local objections, a process requiring a strength of will not typical of Sacramento.

Finally, consumers will have to become comfortable with paying higher prices. After all, there are reasons why renewable power – solar, wind and geothermal – isn’t finding its way into the market as quickly as California would like. Those reasons boil down to cost.

It is true “this target cannot be hit without some drastic action,” says Eric Corey Freed, principal at green building designer organicARCHITECT. “A fierce political will would need to be sent down from up high in Sacramento.”

Experts say solar and wind power are likely to be the two biggest beneficiaries of the state’s initiative – an effort that reminds some of the nation’s rush to increase manufacturing in advance of World War II. It is hard to know how big a factor geothermal will play. A final source of clean power – hydro electric – is already widely used in California and won’t be easily expanded.

Wind energy could be a big winner in California since the technology is more mature

Wind energy could be a big winner in California since the technology is more mature

The impact on consumer prices is perhaps the greatest unknown. Some estimates show about $6 billion will be needed for new transmission lines and improvements to existing facilities. But that will be a drop in the bucket compared with the cost of building new plants and striking long-term power contracts. Schwarzenegger’s order allows power to be bought from out of state. So some infrastructure may not be needed.

The costs could be moderated if a majority of the numerous solar and wind plants proposals before the state are quickly approved – and if they are built near population areas to eliminate the need for long transmission lines.

“Given project time lines from 2 to 12 years, this means the level of development activity will have to increase dramatically in the very short term,” says Abe Yokell, a principal at RockPort Capital.

But based on past experience, this seems hard to fathom. Some observers estimate that obtaining approvals for new wind plants could take ten years.

Yokell calculates that given the relative maturity of wind power, it will make up the largest share of the renewable power generation. Photovoltaic and solar-thermal technologies will account for relatively smaller portions, he says.

Expect higher prices: if renewables were cost competitives they would be replacing fossil fuel plants today

Expect higher prices: if renewables were cost competitives they would be replacing fossil fuel plants today

Others disagree. Danny Kennedy, co-founder of Sungevity, a Berkeley based installer of solar panels, believes solar will make up the lion’s share. But he disputes the conventional wisdom that most will come from big utility-scale solar thermal farms out in the desert. Permitting issues and transmission costs could get in the way.

“The normal estimate is (photo voltaic panels) will be about half the solar-thermal total, but that ratio may end up being very different,” he says. When people consider the transmission costs, “the cheapest, easiest place to build and interconnect a solar power plant is over their head (i.e.: their roof!).”

Of course, installing overhead panels is Sungevity’s business. It does seems clear that solar farms will shoulder a substantial share of the burden, especially with some of the large farms under consideration.

California’s grand experiment is a welcome sign that some public policy goals are well worth stretching to reach. But don’t be surprised if the dollars and cents – especially as utilities rush to sign long-term power contracts that they don’t take the time to properly review – will be greater than first projected.


The 10 Greenest Companies Start With Hewlett-Packard

September 21, 2009

Drum roll, please,

The new HP Way includes environmentalism, according to Newsweek

The new HP Way includes environmentalism, according to Newsweek

The ten greenest companies in the United States are an unsurprising lot. Five are high-tech manufacturers, most are household names. Starbucks made the cut.

Perhaps the most unexpected twist in Newsweek’s greenest companies list is the top entry: Hewlett-Packard, the Silicon Valley computer, printer and services firm that pioneered the HP Way of decentralized, paternalistic management.

The company has certainly turned itself around since being hit with an EPA fine in 1998. It ranks well for controlling toxic releases and promoting recycling. But number one?

Newsweek says it examined the 500 largest American corporations to arrive at its ranking. Each firm’s greenhouse gas emissions, toxic waste emissions, use of natural resources, policies, regulatory compliance and approach to climate change were compared.

Here are the top ten:

Hewlett-Packard
Dell
Johnson & Johnson
Intel
IBM
State Street Corp.
Nike
Bristol-Myers Squibb
Applied Materials
Starbucks


Algae Scientist With Google Grant Gets Millions From NASA

September 21, 2009

NASA has decided to pony up millions of dollars for a scientist’s schme to grow algae in plastic bags floating in the ocean to harvest biofuel and treat sewage.

The scientist, Jonathan Trent, declined to say exactly how much NASA has earmarked for the project. But he said on Saturday that the last minute funding came after he pitched his plan to big name venture capitalists Vinod Kholsa of Khosla Ventures and Steve Jurvetson of Draper Fisher Jurvetson.

Jonathan Trent pitched his project to Vinod Khosla and Steve Jurvetson

Jonathan Trent pitched his project to VCs Vinod Khosla and Steve Jurvetson

Both had turned him down, though Trent did receive a $62,000 early funding grant from Google.

The ambitious – and still experimental – proposal has a remarkable pair of environment benefits. It has the ability to produce a high quality fuel to replace gasoline and at the same time as cleansing municipal wastewater normally dumped in the ocean. And it does so without transferring farm fields from food production, as other biofuels initiatives require.

Trent, who developed the proposal while working at NASA, says the algae will sequester the greenhouse gas CO2 from the atmosphere while producing a useful by product: agricultural fertilizer. The ocean will regulate the temperature of the algae cultures without using fossil fuel energy and waves will tackle the necessary task of stirring the mixture.

By using plastic bags with a semi-permeable membrane, cleaned water will flow on into the ocean, leaving behind a concentrated mixture of algae and fuel.

Trent says the project isn’t yet financially competitive with the price of oil, but notes it is at an early stage. He says he is working to design the right plastic bag and on a system to protect the bags from storms at sea, perhaps by sinking them below the agitated surface currents.

Because he is using freshwater algae, a project disaster would have little consequence. If the algae were to escape the plastic bag, the salt of the ocean would kill them.

The project is named OMEGA, an acronym for offshore membrane enclosures for growing algae.


DEMOfall To Honour 15 Tech Stars

September 20, 2009
For the very first time, Demo will honour some of its previous presenters that became Tech stars

For the very first time, DEMO organisers will honour 15 of its previous presenters that subsequently became some of the biggest success in Tech

For the first time this year, the DEMO award ceremony will be held during the lunch’s dessert – instead of the usual dinner ceremony – , followed by the Lifetime Achievement awards given to some high-power individuals, including (I wonder how many of them will actually show up?):

  1. Shai Agassi, Founder, TopTier Software, currently Founder and CEO, Better Place
  2. Marc Benioff, Chairman and CEO, salesforce.com
  3. Donna Dubinsky, Founder, CEO & Board Chair, Numenta
  4. Jeff Hawkins, Founder, Numenta
  5. Subrah Iyar, Founder and former CEO, WebEx
  6. Keng Lim, Founder, Chairman and CEO, NextLabs
  7. Kevin Lynch, Chief Technology Officer, Senior Vice President, Experience & Technology Organization, Adobe Systems
  8. Andy Rubin, Co-founder, Danger Inc., currently Vice President, Engineering, Google
  9. Mike Cassidy, Co-founder, Xfire, currently Co-founder & CEO, Ruba.com
  10. Diane Greene, Co-founder, VMware
  11. Colin Angle, Chairman, CEO and Co-founder, iRobot
  12. Helen Greiner, Co-founder, iRobot, currently Founder, The Droid Works
  13. Teresa Meng, Founder, Atheros Communications, currently Reid Weaver Dennis Professor of Electrical Engineering at Stanford University
  14. Ben Trott, Founder & CTO, Six Apart
  15. Mena Trott, Founder & President, Six Apart

DEMOfall 56 Presenters Revealed

September 19, 2009

This year, there will be only 56 DEMOfall demonstrators, down from 72 last year.

No doubt DEMOfall 2009 will be a much smaller event, which explains why the conference actually ends early, in the afternoon of the second day. A disappointment, for those – like me! – that got used to DEMO’s farewell dinner when the final DEMOgods awards are being distributed.

The presenting companies are:

  1. 80legs; Houston, TX;
  2. Anaplan, Inc.; Redwood City, CA;
  3. Answers Corp.; New York, NY;
  4. Armorize Technologies, Inc.; Santa Clara, CA;
  5. Article One Partners, LLC; New York, NY;
  6. Burt AB; Gothenburg, Sweden; www.burtcorp.com
  7. CallSpark!, Inc.; San Francisco, CA; www.callspark.com
  8. Cazoodle, Champaign, IL; www.cazoodle.com
  9. Cortera, Inc., Boca Raton, FL; www.cortera.com
  10. Digitrad Communications, Paris, France; www.organip.com
  11. dotSyntax, LLC; Rochester, NY; http://www.digsby.com
  12. Emo Labs, Inc., Waltham, MA; www.emolabs.com
  13. Enthusem.com; Tampa, FL; http://www.enthusem.com
  14. ePulze; Petaling Jaya, Malaysia; www.epulze.net
  15. Faculte; San Bruno, CA; www.faculte.com
  16. Freeddom Tecnologia e Servicos S/A; Sao Paulo, Brazil; www.freeddom.com
  17. Fuze Box, Inc.; San Francisco, CA; www.fuzebox.com
  18. Glam Media, Inc.; Brisbane, CA; www.glammedia.com
  19. Gogrok Technology Corp.; Alhambra, CA; www.gogrok.com
  20. Hand Eye Technologies, Inc.; San Francisco, CA; www.handeyetech.com
  21. Hashwork; New York, NY; www.hashwork.com
  22. Hevva, LLC; Madison, WI; www.localdirt.com
  23. Hewlett-Packard Co.; Cupertino, CA; www.hp.com
  24. I.ndigo, LLC; Sao Paulo, Brazil; www.i.ndigo.com.br
  25. Intelius, Inc.; Bellevue, WA ; www.intelius.com
  26. Kryon Systems, Ltd.; Tel Aviv, Israel; www.kryonsystems.com
  27. LeapFILE, Inc.; Newark, CA; www.leapfile.com
  28. Liaise, Inc.; Sunnyvale, CA ; www.liaise.com
  29. Lunchster, LLC; San Francisco, CA; www.lunchster.com
  30. Micello, Inc.; Sunnyvale, CA; www.micello.com
  31. MicroAssist, Inc.; Austin, TX; www.ethicsed.com
  32. MoLo Rewards, Inc.; Sanford, FL; www.molorewards.com
  33. MyOwnRealEstate.com Corp.; San Jose, CA; www.myownrealestate.com
  34. MyVocal Holdings, Inc.; Paris, France; www.myvocal.com
  35. NativeTung, LLC.; Los Angeles, CA; www.nativetung.com
  36. Piryx, Inc.; Austin, TX ; www.piryx.com
  37. Point of Wealth Systems, Inc.; Portland, OR; www.thepowr.com
  38. Rseven Mobile, Inc.; Dublin, CA; www.rseven.com
  39. RumbaFish Technologies, Inc.; Palo Alto, CA ; www.rumbafish.com
  40. Scientific Media, Inc.; New York, NY; www.dotgo.com
  41. Symform, Inc.; Seattle, WA; www.symform.com
  42. Third Iris Corp.; Campbell, CA; www.viaas.com
  43. TotalTrainer, LLC; Laguna Niguel, CA ; www.gototaltrainer.com
  44. Traackr, Inc.; Boston, MA; http://traackr.com
  45. TravelTrac, LLC; Irvine, CA ; http://www.traveltrac.com
  46. TuneWiki, Inc.; Milpitas, CA ; www.tunewiki.com
  47. Tungle Corp.; Montreal, Canada; http://www.tungle.com
  48. Twirl TV, LLC; Los Altos Hills, CA; www.twirltv.com
  49. VicMan Software, Inc.; Alexandria, VA; http://pho.to/
  50. Waze, Inc.; Ra’anana, Israel; www.waze.com
  51. Webroot; Boulder, CO; www.webroot.com
  52. Weels Corp.; Milton, MA; www.weelscorp.com
  53. WhoDoYouKnowAt, LLC; Dallas, TX; www.whodoyouknowat.com
  54. YiqYaq, LLC; Redwood City, CA; http://radioweave.com
  55. Zorap, Inc.; Falmouth, ME; www.zorap.com
  56. Zuora; Redwood City, CA; www.zuora.com

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