• Friday, November 20, 2009 Latest Update: 4:41PM
Rob Day | November 4, 2009 at 5:02 PM 2 Comments

Conventional wisdom and cleantech venture capital

I had the pleasure of speaking as part of a panel this morning at the Mid-Atlantic Capital Alliance's conference in Philadelphia.  Here's a taste of what I told them:

1.  Cleantech only happens in Silicon Valley and MIT.  If you look at the dollars flowing into cleantech from venture capitalists, and read the sunday NYT, that's the natural conclusion you would draw.  So my apologies to everyone in Philly (or the rest of the country outside of northern California and Boston), there's clearly very little good entrepreneurial activity in cleantech in your region.

2.  Cleantech is really only solar, "smart grid", biofuels and electric vehicles. 

3.  Cleantech is really only about capital intensive business models. 

4.  Cleantech startups are only for whiz-bang PhD researchers who have earth-shattering innovations.  Business models like energy efficiency services, and other implementation efforts, need not apply.

5.  The only good cleantech startups are those backed by VCs.  The fact that only 1% of startups get their initial capital from VCs simply means that 99% of new businesses are bad ideas.

I was supposed to describe what I like about being an investor in this market right now.  And I told them that what I like about this market is that many people actually do believe the above points.

Comments [2]

  • Jeff 11/5/09 11:59 AM

    It is true that there is a lot of cleantech from MIT and plenty of companies that migrate to Silicon Valley. But where do you think First Solar came from? Where is the large scale battery manufacturing being setup? Where are wind turbines manufactured? Cleantech is not biofuels because there are no success stories there yet and none that are close. electric vehicles? We still have to see if anyone will actually buy any plug-ins. What about wind? Or energy storage? Energy efficiency i.e. LEDs? I think there are plenty of whiz bang PhDs from MIT that would disagree with energy efficiency not being substantial. Some of the best cleantech thus far has come out of large corporations i.e. GE.

    Reply
  • Ed 11/5/09 11:26 PM

    Rob,  be more accurate to say, many people believed in those 5 notions “BO” Before Obama.
    As you know, CT is so unbounded today -— that if one enlisted all the Oprah followers on Twitter to filter the tsunami of green ideas, products and business models –- you’d still need an Ark to navigate with.

    Reply

Cleantech Investing

Rob Day is a Boston-based cleantech venture capital investor and entrepreneur, and is also the President of the Renewable Energy Business Network (REBN). The views expressed on this blog are those of Rob and his friends and colleagues, not necessarily the views of REBN or Greentech Media or any other group. Contact Rob Day at: (JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)

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