Showing posts with label cleantech. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cleantech. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Conference Alert: GTM's Networked Grid 2011

Greentech Media (GTM) is a company and a site to which you want to be paying regular attention, whether you're a cyber security wonk or a solar powered baseball cap-wearing, wind turbine hugging, bio-fuel brewing, HAN programming, Leaf driving cleantech acolyte  ... or something in between.

Sorry to put you through all that, but it just came out that way.  Anyway, let's get on with (details of) the conference I'm trying to announce:

Conference link: HERE
Venue: Mission Bay Conference Ctr at UC San Francisco
Dates: May 3 and 4, 2011

Security track info:
  • Title: The Current and Future State of Smart Grid Security
  • Day/time: May 4, 1:15 pm- 2:15 pm
  • Description: The nature of smart grid technology advancement (two-way communications networks, vastly increased number of intelligent endpoints, distributed intelligence throughout the grid infrastructure, etc.) lends itself to potential security risk and network-wide proliferation. With that said, extremely high-speed, distributed, complex networks have been built, scaled and are highly secure, so there is little technical reason these techniques won't apply to smarter grids. Smart grid security remains a top priority and along with that comes a plethora of concerns, sometimes slowing down the necessary security standards to move deployments forward. This session will cover the various physical and cyber security issues that threaten large-scale smart grid deployments and the solutions that are being developed to address them.
  • I'll be the moderator, but here are the bios of the 3 panelists:
Last year's event was great. This one should only be bigger/better. Hope you can make it.

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Renewables Grid Giga-boost: Google and Friends Commit to Fund Undersea Wind Power

Not just offshore, mind you, but offshore and under water.  We're talking high voltage transmission lines in the deep blue sea off the USA's east coast mid section. If you're thinking this is another green jobs initiative from the current administration, you're wrong. It's the private sector doing what it does best: seeing a problem, doing some analysis, realizing it's an opportunity, and putting some skin in the game despite known and quantified risks.

Covered in all the major news outlets today, including the WSJ, this is great clean tech news as well as energy security news. Here's why:

  • It's a win for renewables as it'll now be much easier and cheaper (and therefore, much less risky) to deploy big offshore wind turbines 
  • It's a win for energy security as one of the most congested parts of the national grid will have more pathways and options for routing electricity, especially in the NY/NJ region
  • This should help the perpetually stalled Cape Wind project get out of the blocks. If folks down south can pull off a wind infrastructure project of this magnitude, how come forward looking, business minded, PhD-educated, renewables friendly northerners have been arguing about this modest first step for 10+ years with nothing to show for it? Wind energy in Massachusetts is in danger of being OBE - overcome by current events

For me, the second point on energy security is also a boost for Smart Grid security. Absent hostile submarines with cable cutter-enabled frog men, this transmission addition will give grid operators more room to breath, even as it makes it more likely they'll be figuring out how to best manage gigawatts of new intermittent power over the next several years. We'll be relying on more technology to handle this challenge of course - here's to ensuring it's developed and deployed with security in mind: up front, built in, and by design.

Friday, October 2, 2009

Smart Money on the Smart Grid?


The Venture Capital business is a brutal one. The process can appear to be like Darwinian Natural Selection on speed, as venture dollars drive multiple entrants into an emerging space in hopes that as the weak are weeded out, their own investments will survive and thrive. At worst, there is cold comfort in the fact that the compressed timeframes will help them to identify their own latent failures more quickly so that they can cut their losses.

I was discussing this mechanism of investment acceleration yesterday with a colleague who does some later stage (profitable stable companies) cleantech investing, and he was remarking on the Klondike Gold Rush-like movement by some Venture firms into cleantech, and into Smart Grid startups particularly. The Smart Grid boom, in his view, is the first and closest child of the Internet boom. Biotech (another area of large investment) has been a very different model, with its long lead-times and eight or nine digit price tags. I had to agree. So much of the Smart Grid is looking like Soft Grid, and successful startups are bringing in management software, efficiency software, upgraded infrastructure and communications. It really does feel like the early days of the Internet, where technology startups faced relatively low costs to enter into a new market, where the existing infrastructure needed evolutionary enhancements pretty regularly, and where the established players were unlikely to step outside of the box to make those changes happen. In the Internet era it was telecommunications companies who provided both the enabling backbone and the lack of groundbreaking higher-level innovation that created the opportunity for entrepreneurs. Now it is the utilities' turn.

In sheer numbers, the investment is amazing. The Cleantech Group reported yesterday that the cleantech sector accounted for 27% of venture investing in the second quarter, which shows how enormous this wave is, totaling over $1.5B for that period. They also reported that many of the largest investments went to firms which were also leveraging Government funding dollars. So, what does this foretell?

It foretells a glut of new technologies, advancements, approaches, and failures. Larger organizations will be able to invest their own time and money on comprehending and capitalizing on the meaty part of the wave, while these new entrants stay at the crest, and either find the ride or the rocks as the industry approaches the first winnowing stages. Ordinarily, this kind of furious growth yields rapid progress, and markets and nations benefit from the rapid determination of good and stable solutions. Whether this will work for the Smart Grid is yet to be seen. The nature of power, and the economics of traditional utility finances can make this tumult and its turbulence a disaster.

Venture investors expect to see failures, their models assume them. The Government investors expect to see, well, whatever. The government is funding policy through technology.

Power providers and customers, however, can not be tolerant of too much instability, and so we hope that adoption of these technologies will remain proactive but prudent, regardless of the "energy" that all this investment may put into the grid.


Image courtesy of flickr :