
English: Blue-green algae cultured in specific media. Blue-green algae can be helpful in agriculture as they have the capability to fix atmospheric nitrogen to soil. This nitrogen is helpful to the crops. Blue-green algae is used as a bio-fertilizer. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
“The problem with a lot of clean-tech deals is that they have been about the way you make things in high volume or in production, which means you can’t prove out the ideas unless you build factories and actually make things in volume,”
STARTING when they became friends in freshman year at Emory University in Atlanta, Jonathan S. Wolfson and Harrison F. Dillon would take off into the mountains of Wyoming and Colorado for weeks at time. They spent their days hiking in the wilderness and their nights drinking bourbon by the campfire, talking big about how one day they would build a company that would help preserve the environment they both loved.
They graduated, and the backpacking trips grew shorter and further between. Mr. Dillon went on to earn a Ph.D. in genetics and a law degree, and ended up working as a biotech patent lawyer in Silicon Valley. Mr. Wolfson received law and business degrees from New York University and eventually started a software business. But the two still got together every year. And they kept talking about the company that, they imagined as time went on, would use biotechnology to create renewable energy.
“These were delusional rantings of kids,” said Mr. Wolfson, who, like Mr. Dillon, is now 42.
Then Mr. Dillon found microalgae, and delusional became real. Microalgae, a large and diverse group of single-celled plants, produce a variety of substances, including oils, and are thought to be responsible for most of the fossilized oil deposits in the earth. These, it seemed, were micro-organisms with potential. With prodding, they could be re-engineered to make fuel.
So in 2003, Mr. Wolfson packed up and moved from New York to Palo Alto, Calif., where Mr. Dillon lived. They started a company called Solazyme. In mythical Valley tradition, they worked in Mr. Dillon’s garage, growing algae in test tubes. And they found a small knot of investors attracted by the prospect of compressing a multimillion-year process into a matter of days.
Now, a decade later, they have released into the marketplace their very first algae-derived oil produced at a commercial scale. Yet the destination for this oil — pale, odorless and dispensed from a small matte-gold bottle with an eyedropper — is not gas tanks, but the faces of women worried about their aging skin.
Sold under the brand name Algenist, the product, costing $79 for a one-ounce bottle, would seem to have nothing in common with oil refineries and transportation fuel. But along with other niche products that the company can sell at a premium, it may be just the thing that lets Solazyme coast past the point where so many other clean-tech companies have run out of gas: the so-called Valley of Death, where young businesses stall trying to shift to commercial-scale production.
For years, policy makers, environmentalists and entrepreneurs have trumpeted the promise of harnessing the power of the sun, wind, waves, municipal solid waste or, now, algae. There has been some success. Since 2007, United States energy consumption from renewable sources has grown nearly 35 percent, and now accounts for about 9 percent of the total, according to the Energy Information Administration.
But the gains have been punctuated with prominent failures. Once-promising clean-tech ventures that attracted hundreds of millions in federal support — like the solar panel maker Solyndra, the cellulosic ethanol maker Range Fuels and the battery supplier A123 Systems — have failed. While ethanol, derived from crops like corn and sugar cane, has become a multibillion-dollar industry, it threatens to drive up the price of those plants for food and cannot yet replace conventional fuel. The next generation of biofuels, based on nonfood plants, is still struggling to take off.
Venture capital, which once gushed to renewable-energy start-ups like crude from an oil well, has slowed. In contrast to software-based companies like Instagram or Facebook, these new energy businesses burn through staggering amounts of capital over many years for research and early-stage equipment before even demonstrating their promise, much less turning a profit. Worldwide in 2012, venture capital investing in clean technologies fell by almost one-fourth, to $7.4 billion, from $9.61 billion in 2011, according to the Cleantech Group’s i3 Platform, a proprietary database.
“These are very high-innovation, capital-intensive, long-term businesses, and new-energy technology is a very new field,” said David Danielson, a former venture capitalist who is assistant secretary for energy efficiency and renewable energy at the Energy Department. “We need a new model for how these projects are going to get financed and commercialized.”
In other words, clean-energy companies can’t rely only on the classic venture-capital approach in which investors demand a fat, fast return. Mr. Danielson said that to succeed, companies need a combination of government research-and-development grants, industrial partnerships and a willingness to pursue higher-value product lines en route to entering larger, but lower-margin markets.
The Latest Bing News on:
Renewable energy projects
- Business Council has 'growing concerns' with clean energy policieson October 1, 2023 at 5:57 pm
ALBANY — The Business Council of New York State recently announced a campaign for changes in clean energy goals to address what is says are potential “significant unintended consequences” of current ...
- Renewable energy developers pinning hopes on land cost optimisation to cut costson October 1, 2023 at 5:31 pm
Land cost optimisation in solar projects in India involves a combination of factors, including site selection, efficient land utilisation, regulatory compliance, and strategic planning ...
- East Ayrshire Council's £24.5m renewable energy project in 'unaffordable'on October 1, 2023 at 9:50 am
East Ayrshire Council’s flagship £24.5m CoRE renewable energy project is ‘unaffordable’ as it stands. The impact of the pandemic, Brexit and inflation has hit the project hard, forcing the council ...
- Their future depends on renewable energy projects like offshore wind, but some young people remain opposedon September 30, 2023 at 12:12 pm
Offshore wind zones are being established right around Australia, but some communities say there are too many unknown risks.
- Here’s the surprising state getting a boost from Amazon.com’s renewable-energy projectson September 29, 2023 at 11:26 am
Ohio, the political battleground state that voted red in the 2020 presidential election, mulls a green-energy future with a boost from Amazon.
- Renewable Energy Is Reckoning With Its Perception in Rural Americaon September 29, 2023 at 9:34 am
Local opposition to solar and wind projects is causing headaches for the energy transition. New research shows some opportunities to move forward.
- BLM releases strategy to prioritize, reduce conflicts in Idaho's renewable energy projectson September 29, 2023 at 8:51 am
When Lava Ridge Wind Project was proposed in 2018, it was the first of its kind for public lands in Idaho. Now the BLM is processing 14 renewable energy applications in the state.
- UK Fast-Tracks A Unique Renewable Energy Projecton September 29, 2023 at 12:30 am
The UK government has designated a project that will import wind and solar energy from Morocco as being of “national significance”, which should fast-track its development.
- Don’t Miss the Boom: 3 Renewable Energy Stocks Set to Explode Higheron September 28, 2023 at 3:28 pm
InvestorPlace - Stock Market News, Stock Advice & Trading Tips Renewable energy is the future. Solar capacity across the world will grow by ...
- Brookfield enters second renewable energy joint venture with Axis Energyon September 28, 2023 at 7:07 am
Canada's Brookfield Asset Management has entered its second joint venture with Axis Energy Ventures to establish a renewable energy development platform targeting growth in India, the companies said ...
The Latest Google Headlines on:
Renewable energy projects
[google_news title=”” keyword=”renewable energy projects” num_posts=”10″ blurb_length=”0″ show_thumb=”left”]
The Latest Bing News on:
Solazyme
- 5 Stocks Under $10 Set to Soar: Diana Shipping, Solazyme and Moreon September 29, 2023 at 5:00 pm
If you take a glance at the chart for Solazyme, you'll notice that this stock has been downtrending badly for the last six months, with shares falling sharply from over $10 a share to its new 52 ...
- Computer Programs And Systems (NASDAQ: CPSI)on September 29, 2023 at 9:00 am
Computer Programs & Systems, Inc. provides healthcare information technology solutions and services. It operates through the following segments: RCM, EHR, and Patient Engagement. The RCM segment ...
- ECONOMY & MARKETSon September 28, 2023 at 1:21 pm
The top price for Kenyan benchmark grade AA coffee jumped to $630 per 50-kg bag at Tuesday's auction from $514 at the last sale two weeks ago, the Nairobi Coffee Exchange said. Africa's biggest ...
- Dunaliella Market: Future Growing Trends and Forecast from 2023 to 2030on September 25, 2023 at 1:25 am
Additionally, the report focuses on a thorough analysis of key players, including [ Plankton Australia Pty Ltd, Nutra-Kol, Solazyme Inc., Pond Biofuels Incorporated, Sapphire Energy Inc., etc.
- Second Generation Biofuels Market to See Revolutionary Growth |Inbicon, Solazyme, Algenol Biofuelson September 20, 2023 at 2:25 am
If you are a Second Generation Biofuels manufacturer and would like to check or understand the policy and regulatory proposals, designing clear explanations of the stakes, potential winners and ...
- Solazyme IPO: 5 Burning Questionson September 11, 2023 at 5:00 pm
Solazyme is the latest biofuel IPO coming to market with buzz, but the long-term profits are less certain than a short-term IPO bump. Solazyme is the latest biofuel IPO coming to market with buzz ...
- CRISPR and Genome Editing – News and Featureson August 20, 2023 at 5:38 am
Solazyme--the company that produces oil for cosmetics, industrial equipment and airplanes from genetically modified algae force-fed on sugar--held its IPO today and so far it's doing well. Ceres Inc., ...
- CRISPR and Genome Editing – News and Featureson August 20, 2023 at 4:52 am
Solazyme--the company that produces oil for cosmetics, industrial equipment and airplanes from genetically modified algae force-fed on sugar--held its IPO today and so far it's doing well. Ceres Inc., ...
- $52 Million for Solazyme, $25 Million for Nanosys, $7.5 Million for WePay, & More Bay Area Biztech Newson August 15, 2023 at 5:00 pm
—Bruce analyzed the second part of a CB Insights demographic study of startup founders, which found, if you believe the numbers, that Massachusetts has a far higher proportion of women founders ...
- Sponsored Video: See How Solazyme Is Using Algae and Biotechnology to Produce a New Source of Renewable Oilson September 15, 2021 at 8:53 pm
When Solazyme discovered how to produce renewable oils, at large scale and in a matter of days, they turned to Goldman Sachs for financing and expertise to help fund their research and growth.
The Latest Google Headlines on:
Solazyme
[google_news title=”” keyword=”Solazyme” num_posts=”10″ blurb_length=”0″ show_thumb=”left”]