Energy efficiency to shine in 2010
Jan 25 - McClatchy-Tribune Regional News - Dana Hull San Jose Mercury
News, Calif.
Solar and wind power may get the headlines and attention, but green-tech
experts say 2010 will be dominated by energy efficiency, the mundane but
critical process of cutting the amount of gas and electricity that homes
and offices use.
Energy Secretary Steven Chu regularly describes himself as an
"energy-efficiency nut." Sixteen states, including California and New
York, have passed legislation enabling homeowners to finance
energy-efficiency upgrades through their property taxes. President
Barack Obama even declared insulation "sexy" at a Home Depot last month.
Then there are the sheer numbers. Venture capital investment in energy
efficiency hit a record in 2009: at least 115 deals worth nearly $1
billion, according to a preliminary tally by the Cleantech Group and
Deloitte. That's up 39 percent from 2008. Meanwhile, solar, which had 84
deals worth about $1.2 billion, was down 64 percent from 2008, and
there's increasing talk about solar being "overfunded."
"In 2009, there was a pullback and realization by investors that because
of the capital intensity of solar, there may be safer places to put
their money," said Scott Smith, U.S. cleantech leader for Deloitte.
Energy efficiency generally refers to a wide range of
technologies designed to cut energy use such as improved lighting,
greener building materials and sophisticated software that monitors
power consumption.
And it's increasingly seen as an effective way to create desperately
needed jobs, save struggling consumers money, wean America from its
dependence on foreign oil and reduce carbon emissions -- all at the same
time.
Home energy use accounts for 21 percent of the nation's carbon footprint
-- roughly twice the carbon emissions of passenger cars, according to
the Pew Center on Global Climate Change. There are 100 million homes in
America, and energy-saving measures like insulation, caulking, and
heating and cooling system upgrades can reduce household energy
consumption by 10 percent to 40 percent, according to a memo by the
President's Economic Recovery Advisory Board. And saving energy saves
money: Californians pay an average of $84 a month for electricity,
according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.
Kevin Surace has seen the shift firsthand. For years, the CEO of Serious
Materials, which makes energy-saving windows and drywall, was the only
energy-efficiency executive at industry conferences.
"I remember standing with a piece of drywall at the Cleantech Forum in
2006," he said. "Every other company was solar, wind and biofuel. People
were like: What are you doing at our conference?"
Now Surace is the keynote speaker at many of the conferences he attends.
"All the cleantech conferences are efficiency, efficiency, efficiency,"
said Surace. "When you really break it down, every dollar spent on
energy efficiency pays back the investment four or five times. It saves
people money and creates jobs. And it has bipartisan support."
Another Bay Area company riding the surge of interest in energy
efficiency is San Francisco-based Recurve, which provides detailed home
energy audits and green energy remodeling to Bay Area homeowners.
"Five or six years ago, energy efficiency was such a backwater," said
president and co-founder Matt Golden, who remembers the days of being
met with blank stares when he would talk about insulation and duct
system leakage. "Everyone was like: There's no money in energy
efficiency."
The company, which had 12 employees in 2007, has grown to 65. It is
creating customized software that it plans to license to other
contractors in the energy retrofit industry and is actively hiring
software engineers. Golden, 35, is so sought after as a public policy
leader that he spends much of his time in Washington these days.
Recurve, which raised a first round of venture funding in September
2008, is backed by RockPort Capital and Shasta Ventures.
"Energy efficiency is very capital-efficient," said Rob Coneybeer of
Shasta Ventures. "We like the idea of people using IT to measure,
monitor and improve their energy usage. We felt like Recurve had done a
really good job, and we really liked the founders -- that's a big reason
why we invested in them."
Contact Dana Hull at 408-920-2706.
(c) 2009,
McClatchy-Tribune Information Services
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