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Growing Renewable Energy Companies in Western New York

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About Renewable Energy Network of Entrepreneurs in Western New York RENEW NY ... Kleiner Perkins, Draper Fisher Jurvetson, NEA, etc. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Growing Renewable Energy Companies in Western New York


1
Growing Renewable Energy Companies in Western New
York
RENEW NY
Larry Simpson lsimpson_at_renew-ny.org 585-239-6016
2
Agenda
  • About Renewable Energy Network of Entrepreneurs
    in Western New York RENEW NY
  • Renewable Energy Overview
  • Power Generation
  • Transportation fuels
  • Global Renewable Energy
  • United States Renewable Energy
  • New York State Renewable Energy
  • Western New York startups
  • Summary

3
About RENEW NY
  • Renewable Energy Network of Entrepreneurs in
    Western New York
  • Virtual Incubator serving NY west of Utica
  • Stimulate business formation and growth of
    renewable energy companies
  • Companies lt 5 years old
  • Initiated by NYSERDA 5/1/04 with 150,000, 3-year
    funding.
  • Recent 1 year extension
  • Partners
  • High Tech Rochester (HTR)
  • Greater Rochester Enterprise (GRE)
  • Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT)

4
Power Generation
  • Electric power to homes, business,
  • and government
  • - Primarily centralized, transmitting and
  • distributing power over the electric grid
  • - Limited distributed (onsite) energy.
  • Solar photovoltaic (PV) examples.
  • - Renewables include wind, solar,
  • biomass, geothermal, hydro,
  • landfill gas, etc.
  • - Wind farms competitive (cost and
  • scale) with traditional plants.

5
Power Generation Technology Overview
Retail rate .12/kWh in NYS
6
Biofuels
Ethanol - Aka moonshine (grain alcohol) -
US production primarily corn feedstocks today -
Moving to cellulosic feedstocks to increase
production towards 20-40 of transportation
fuels over the next few decades Corn
stover, wood chips and waste, energy
crops (e.g. willow), etc. - Mixes with
gasoline To boost octane levels (versus
MTBE) E85 (85 ethanol) in flex-fuel
vehicles (5MM cars on the road today
and growing) Biodiesel - Mixes with (e.g. B2,
B5, B20), or replaces petroleum
diesel Future - Algae feedstocks, butanol,
etc.
7
RE - World
  • 2006 60 billion vs. 40 billion
  • in 2005
  • Wind power grew 43 in 2005
  • and 32 in 2006 to 23 billion
  • Constrained by turbines
  • Solar PV grew 34 in 2005
  • and 58 in 2006 to 19 billion
  • Constrained by polysilicon
  • US Ethanol production growing
  • 3B gallons capacity/year

8
RE United States
  • lt 5 penetration in renewables, yet
  • 1 in ethanol production (passed Brazil in 2005)
  • 1 in new wind installations in 2005 and 2006
  • 1 in geothermal
  • 3 in new solar PV installations in 2005
  • 7 world total vs. Germany 57 and Japan 20.
  • Federal Policy
  • Energy Policy Act of 2005 (EPAct 2005)
  • 19 dedicated to renewable energy
  • Presidents Advanced Energy Initiative
  • Includes additional wind, solar, and biofuels
    research funding
  • 2007 State of Union 20 in 10 20
    bio-transportation fuels in 10 years
  • Senate and House Renewable Energy Energy
    Efficiency Caucus bipartisan with over 250
    members
  • 25 States with renewable portfolio standards
  • Mandated percentage of electricity from
    renewables

9
Energy Policy Act 2005
  • 2005 Energy Policy Act (Electric)
  • 19 (2.77 billion) tax credits dedicated to
    Renewable Energy
  • Production tax credit (.019/kWh over 10 years)
  • Wind Farms
  • Biomass (50 if crops not dedicated to
    electricity production)
  • Geothermal
  • Landfill gas (aka methane)
  • 30 investment tax credit for solar PV (10 after
    2007)
  • 2005 Energy Policy Act (Biofuels)
  • Renewable Fuels Standard - Mandate of 7.5 billion
    gallons by 2012
  • Ethanol and biodiesel

10
US Renewable Portfolio Standards (RPS)
11
Challenge of National RPS
12
New York State Assets
  • NYSERDA
  • Annual budget 200MM
  • Cited by DOE among the best research
    organizations in North America
  • NYS Renewable Portfolio Standard (RPS) 25 by
    2013
  • Governor Pataki (no Spitzer RE news. 15X15
    Energy Portfolio Standard)
  • Initiated the RPS, and NYSERDA budget increased
    from 25MM to 200M
  • Executive Order 111 Purchase of Renewable
    Energy by State Entities
  • 10 by 2005 20 by 2010
  • Executive Order 142 Purchase of biodiesel by
    State Entities
  • 10 in vehicles by 2012 5 in heating by 2012
  • 20MM for development of a pilot cellulosic
    ethanol plant (Mascoma Genencor in Greece)
  • Directed Thruway Authority to install E85 pumps
    at all rest stops
  • Senator Clinton
  • Helping brand Rochester area as hotbed for
    renewable energy
  • Brought Senior Management from Fortune 500
    companies and Investors to
  • Support for RIT renewable energy and fuel cell
    efforts

13
Western NY companies
  • 51 early-stage companies
  • 20 companies pre-revenue.
  • 1-70 employees per company
  • 300 current jobs with significant growth
    potential
  • Teed up for gt 400 by year end 2007
  • gt 40 patents (granted pending)
  • Investment
  • Local entrepreneurs closed gt 275MM in equity and
    debt in 2006
  • Northeast Biofuels (ethanol)
  • Western NY Energy (ethanol)
  • NextGen Fuels (biodiesel). Sold lt 2-year company
    for 21MM.
  • Northern Biodiesel (biodiesel)
  • SolarSentry (Pittsford) and Cerion (Rochester)
    each closed gt 1MM this year
  • 2000-2008 could surpass gt 1 billion cumulative
    regional RE investments (including established
    companies)
  • E.g. New Ethanol refineries, Wind farms, landfill
    gas, etc.

14
Western NY companies
  • 18 Biofuel and biomass
  • 5 ethanol
  • 8 biodiesel
  • 5 biomass (biofuel for Power Generation
    application)
  • 5 Fuel cell, hydrogen, and components
  • 5 Photovoltaic and Solar
  • 3 PhotoVoltaic
  • 1 Solar heating
  • 1 other (solar panel and string performance
    monitoring)
  • 10 Services (e.g. solar/wind installation)
  • 4 Wind
  • 2 Geothermal
  • 3 Developers of renewable energy (e.g. wind,
    landfill gas, biomass)
  • 4 other (Anaerobic Digester, Soy insulation, and
    diesel fuel catalyst)

15
Clusters
Biofuels Fuel Cell Solar/PV Wind Service
/ Installation Other
Finger Lakes 24
North Country 3
Central 6
Buffalo Niagara 11
Southern Tier (Ithaca) 3
16
Ethanol plants
NDA Beaver Falls 100MM gal/yr.
Catalyst Renewables Lyonsdale .13MM gal/yr.
Northeast Biofuels Fulton 114MM gal/yr.
Mascoma Greece .5MM gal/yr.
Western NY Energy Shelby 55MM gal/yr.
RiverWright Energy Buffalo 110MM gal/yr.
Empire Biofuels Romulus 50MM gal/yr.
Cilion Caledonia 60MM gal/yr.
Funded and permitted
Not yet funded and/or permitted
Cellulosic demonstration plant
17
Resource Matching
  • Angel investors (e.g. Rochester Angel Network,
    Insyte Consulting)
  • Economic development incentives
  • GRE, ESD, County IDAs, etc.
  • Venture Capital
  • Local, Strategic (e.g. DTE), Energy (e.g.
    Enertech, Rockport, etc.)
  • Project Financing (gt 20MM)
  • GE, US Renewables Group, etc.
  • Grant email alerts
  • NYSERDA, Federal Government (e.g. DOE, EPA, SBIR,
    etc.), Private sector
  • Grant Writers
  • University Research Partners
  • Clarkson, Cornell, Rochester Institute of
    Technology, SUNY Environmental School of
    Forestry, University of Rochester
  • Center Of Excellence in Energy Environmental
    Systems
  • Volunteers

18
Summary
  • Renewable energy can be categorized broadly into
    transportation biofuels and power generation.
  • Renewable energy is a big (60 billion in 2007)
    market, mostly sold out, and growing rapidly
  • Continuing in the foreseeable future due to
    bipartisan Global, Federal, and state policy
  • Mainstream investment moving into renewable
    energy
  • No silver bullet for powergen or transportation
    fuels. It will remain a mix of technologies
    depending on local resources.
  • Potential for breakthrough technology to bring
    costs down
  • Biofuels (dedicated energy feedstocks including
    algae)
  • Solar PV
  • Other?
  • Tremendous amount of activity in startup
    renewable energy companies in our region. (51
    known today)
  • gt 1 billion regional investment 2000-2008
    including larger companies and startups

19
Growing Renewable Energy Companies in Western New
York
www.renew-ny.org 585-239-6016 lsimpson_at_renew-ny.or
g
20
Positive Global Trends
  • Governmental Policy
  • European Union (EU) goal of 12 (22 electric)
    renewable energy by 2010
  • China Renewable Energy Law (1/2006)
  • 60,000 MW of new renewable energy by 2010 and
    120,000 MW by 2020
  • Brazil 20 of transportation fuel from ethanol
  • 29,000 E85 gas stations, 70 of new cars
    flex-fuel
  • Kyoto Protocol (carbon emission caps) driving
    Europe, Canada, and Japan renewable energy growth
  • Fossil fuel price increase and variability
  • Prognostications of peak oil as early as now or
    2010
  • Energy Security
  • Acute concerns in countries with high imports
  • Plentiful growth opportunity
  • Renewable energy lt 10 of world consumption
  • Significant private sector investment

21
Global Investors
  • Worlds largest energy companies in renewables
  • GE Ecomagination tagline
  • Wind business 3.6 billion in 2006 (from 200MM
    in 2002)
  • Siemens, Mitsubishi, Sharp, BP, Chevron, Shell,
    FPL, etc.
  • Ford and GM flex fuel (E85) vehicle marketing
  • Personal high-profile investors
  • Richard Branson, Bill Gates, Vinod Khosla, Larry
    Page, Bill Clinton, etc.
  • Bankers and Wall Street
  • Goldman Sachs, Credit Suisse, Chase, etc.
  • 3 of the largest U.S. 2005 initial public
    offerings were in solar energy
  • 400 million offering for China-based Suntech
    Power (made a new billionaire of the Chinese
    founder)
  • Venture Capital
  • Number of dedicated clean technology (cleantech)
    firms growing
  • Premier venture capital firms expanding into
    cleantech
  • Kleiner Perkins, Draper Fisher Jurvetson, NEA,
    etc.
  • total venture capital dedicated to cleantech
    from .5 in 1996 to 5 in 2006

22
Electricity vs. fuel
0.05/kW-hr
Europe
Brazil
  • Modern gas and coal electricity generation
    30-40 efficient.
  • Additional 7 losses over transmission and
    distribution grid.
  • Internal combustion engine 20-30 efficient.
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