- There Be Giants> Don Quixote wasn't so crazy afterall .:. http://bit.ly/1az294
- Quantum Leaps> Until jet engines, icebergs were a major threat to intercontinental travel, just ask the Titanic .:. http://bit.ly/dqmia
- Vinyl records are to coal as CDs are to...> How technology progress could enable energy-source transition .:. http://bit.ly/JwzKQ
- Forget petroleum, we're living in the Age of Methane.:. http://bit.ly/16KLVj
- Future of Energy> Decarbonization and other megatrends driving energy industry.:. http://bit.ly/4h96tL
- The Age of Petroleum, Act 2> Natural gas will be energy's star in the coming decades.:. http://bit.ly/OCBw0
- Oil Independence Talk = Demagoguery> Saudi prince writes op-ed in Foreign Policy magazine.:. http://bit.ly/ihEFT
TexasTriangle Twitter Feed
Wednesday
Thoughts on the Energy Economy
Posted by editor at 2.9.09 0 comments
Labels: cleantech, climatechange, energy
Tuesday
Tilting at Wind Energy
Clean power production in the Great North
Everyday wind energy grows and expands. Everybody wants in, witness Oklahoma's recent pitch in Europe, but only a few are going to be real players. Right now Texas and Minnesota/South Dakota appear to have to have a head start with two world leading efforts: T. Boone Pickins' giant planned West Texas wind farm - weighing in at 4,000 MW capacity, and the even bigger 5,050MW British Petroleum Titan project in South Dakota.
I had the opportunity to watch the development of a wind energy industry cluster in Minnesota first hand. Driving back and forth between Minneapolis-Saint Paul, where I lived for many years, and eastern South Dakota, where relatives lived, I saw the emergence of Lake Benton, Minnesota, as the "Original Wind Power Capital of the Midwest." (CNN did a story on Lake Benton and midwest wind energy efforts back in 2000.)

Starting with a few multi-story wind turbines on farmland in the 1990s, Lake Benton plans to have 200 such wind mills working when all is said and done. The area around Lake Benton, pop. 700, is called Buffalo Ridge and is mostly farmland. What makes wind energy popular among the locals, primarily farmers, is that by giving over a small fraction of their land to wind harvesting, they can generate about $2,000 per wind mill. (Sidenote: Interestingly, John Deere set up a wind power division recently.)
Lake Benton was one of the first areas in Minnesota to get wind energy fever. And big visions have emerged since. The North Star state wants to become a net exporter of wind-derived electricity by 2030. The state look to rally efforts to become the "Saudi Arabia" of wind energy. It even had a trade group called Energy Alley. (Energy Alley has since been aborbed into a larger initiative called the Minnesota Environmental Initiative.) The name of this group harkened back to Medical Alley, the association for Minnesota's most successful industry cluster--medical devices. (Medical Alley has since changed its name to LifeScience Alley, after merging with MNBio, the trades association for local biotech companies.)
Minnesota, primarily the Twin Cities, has one of the most developed industry clusters in the country, apart from Silicon Valley for information technology and New York for financial services, thanks to major players, like Medtronic, BostonScientific, St. Jude Medical, and Guidant. In fact, Michael Porter, strategy guru from Harvard University, used Minnesota's device cluster as an example when introducing the concept of industry clusters back in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Proponents of developing a renewable energy industry in Minnesota, therefore, had an excellent template to follow.
Although other regions of the country are better known for their connections to energy, primarily Houston, Texas, Minnesota does have some potential. In addition to wind energy in places like Lake Benton, the state's economy is strongly tied to agriculture, especially corn and soy beans. (It's no coincidence that agribusiness giant Cargill, one of the largest privately owned companies in the world is based in a Minneapolis suburb.)
Corn is useful for providing biomass-based fuels like ethanol, another renewable energy source. Before the recent financial meltdown, over in Western Minnesota and Eastern South Dakota, about an hour from Lake Benton, extensive development was taking place in the ethanol fuel industry via companies like VeraSun Energy and Fagen Inc. Also thanks to a joint venture between Cargill and Dow, biotechnology is being used to create plastic out of corn. (Aside: I own a corn-based plastic blanket, and it works just fine.)
Another reason renewable energy may succeed in Minnesota, a primarily democrat state, is that politically speaking everybody can get behind clean/green energy. Along those lines, the University of Minnesota has launched the Initiative for Renewable Energy and the Environment (IREE) to coordinate research efforts into alternative energy technology. (BTW, I don't know if the allusion to Bob Marley is intentional here, but we are talking about a bunch of university students.)
Minnesota is hoping that with wind, ethanol, and, possibly, hydrogen technologies, the next big thing for the state, could be the energy that will power America in the future. [P.S. The Economist recently annointed North Dakota (Minnesota's and South Dakota's neighbor) with the appellation of "energy producer."] .:.
Monday
Power to the People
Energizing the 21st century grid
U.S. cities are already burning plenty of midnight oil--showing up as some of the most widely illuminated places on Earth. But that output is only bound to intensify over the coming decades.
Over the next 30+ years, the population of the U.S. is expected to increase by over 100 million persons. (By comparison, Europe and Japan will lose 15 million people.) Not coincidentally, the majority of that population growth (~66%) will be in the 20 megapolitan areas identified by Dr. Robert Lang.
According to International Energy Agency the U.S. electrical grid generated about 4,148 terawatt-hours (TWh) in 2004. By 2030, total U.S. output will rise more than 42% to 5,913 TWh. That's a lot of juice.
The Wall Street Journal ran an article on March 12, 2007, describing how renewable energy, specifically wind energy, will play into that. The newspaper ran the following breakdown:
Energy Source .....2004 .....2030
Coal .....50% .....53%
Nuclear .....20% ..... 16%
Gas ..... 18% ..... 16%
Hyrdo .....7% ..... 5%
Oil .....3% ..... 2%
Renewable .....2% (14% wind) .....8% (44% wind)
See that last line. That's a huge increase in the amount of wind energy generation capacity over the next two and half decades. Big energy companies are looking to get in on this surge, and wind energy is becoming big business, witness the American Wind Energy Association in D.C. .:.
Tuesday
St. Patrick's Architects
Mapping "green" commercial real estate in the Texaplex
In honor of St. Patty's Day, presented here is a list of the more than 300 commercial buildings in the Texas Triangle that have achieved Energy Star ratings.
Not included here are government buildings, K-12 institutions, and supermarkets. HEB has more than 187 Energy Star grocery stores across the 66 counties of the Texaplex, plus another 55 throughout the remainder of the state.
There are more than 6,000 buildings in the United States named on EnergyStar.gov site. Recently, Houston and Dallas were highlighted for being two of the top five cities by number of green buildings. .:.
Posted by editor at 17.3.09 0 comments
Labels: cleantech, commercial real estate, economy, metros, urban ecology
Wednesday
Not So Sunny Solar Power Forecast
National solar power study forecasts meager growth in Texas
In the last decade or so, energy has gone from being a ho-hum industry where nothing ever changes to being front page news - outside of Texas. Not since the anti-nuclear movement of the 1980s has the energy stirred such emotions - outside of Texas. Within Texas, of course, energy has been front and center for more than a century (Spindletop's oil was discovered January 10, 1901).
Energy's bandwagon fans are hard at work these days trying to make the economic case for any and all sorts of energy feed stocks, except oil and gas.
The latest study comes from the Solar Energy Research & Education Foundation (SEREF), a 501(c)(3) run by the Solar Energy Industries Association, that commissioned an 8-year study to look into solar energy's impact on the economy. The big conclusions:
...[T]he solar industry will create 440,000 permanent jobs, and capture more than $230 billion in new investment by 2016 with passage of an 8-year solar investment tax credit (ITC) by Congress. The report also found that an 8-year extension of the ITC would triple solar energy production from 9,000 to 28,000 gigawatts by 2016.Texas' share of this bonanza... 0.227%. Yes, that decimal is in the right place. According to the report, other states will do far better, e.g., Florida should add 22,000 jobs and New Jersey 10,000.
The foundation does provide some pretty nifty visuals, including a U.S. solar jobs map in Google Earth (requires download of a free Google Earth viewer) and state-by-state analyses of potential job creation. Texas' fact sheet can be downloaded from here as a PDF, and includes 17 manufacturers, 128 installers and project developers, and 7 organizations. .:.
Posted by editor at 11.3.09 0 comments
Labels: cleantech, clusters, energy, ExoTex, Texas Triangle
Thursday
Shock and Awe>Houston and Dallas Top 5 for Green Buildings
Texas comes away big winner in ranking of Top 10 cities for green buildings, which focuses on commercial and industrial buildings that cut down on greenhouse gases and energy requirements. Such structures can account for 45% of the country's greenhouse gas emissions and 50% of energy use. .:.
read more | digg story
Posted by editor at 5.3.09 0 comments
Labels: cleantech, commercial real estate, economy, metros, urban ecology
Sunday
Innovation Clusters - UPDATED
Non-Energy Clusters
- Austin Technology Incubator
- Biotech Initiative
- Houston Technology Center
- IC2 Institute [Austin]
- Metroplex Technology Business Council
- Music Industry [Statewide, Portal]
- Nanotechnology Initiative [Statewide, Portal]
- New Media Consortium [Austin, Portal]
- Rural Alliance for Renewable Energy (RARE)
- Social Media Club [Austin]
- Telecom Corridor [Richardson; Portal]
Clean Tech & Energy
- National Algae Association
- Energy Corridor [Houston]
- SEED Coalition (Sustainable Energy and Economic Development)
- Solar San Antonio (SSA)
- Solar Energy Society (TXSES)
- Solar Energy [Austin, Portal]
- Renewable Energy, Texas Land Office [portal]
- Renewable Energy Industry Association [TX; Portal]
- Renewable Energy Association of Central Texas (REACT)
- Metropolitan Partnership for Energy [San Antonio]
- Infinite Power of Texas [renewables]
- Houston Renewable Energy Group
- El Paso Solar Energy Association (EPSEA)
- Clean Energy Incubator [Austin]
- Alternative Energy Institute
Industry Studies
- Aerospace & Defense [TX; PDF]
- Automotive Manufacturing [TX; PDF]
- Aviation & Aerospace [TX; PDF]
- Biotechnology [TX; PDF]
- Energy Production [Energy Information Agency]
- Energy Report [comprehensive; TX Comptroller; 2008]
- Nanotechnology [TX; PDF]
- Renewable Energy [Energy Conservation Office; 2008]
- Semiconductors [TX; PDF]
Information Infrastructure
- Media - All Cities, All Media
- Media - Statewide
- Power - Daily Wholesale Market Data [2004-]
- Power - Market Directories [multiple lists]
- Power - State of the Market Reports
- Telecom - Area Codes [map]
- Telecom - Cable Providers [list]
- Telecom - Competitive LECs [list]
- Telecom - Incumbenet LECs [list]
- Telecom - Long Distance Carriers [list]
- Telecom - Municipal Providers
- Telecom - Payphone Providers [list]
Transportation Infrastructure
- Texas Railroads [AAR.org]
- National Bridge Inventory [FHWA.dot.gov]
- Ports Directory [TexasPorts.org]
- 2008 Texas Transportation Report [BTS.gov]
- Texas Energy Production Report [EIA.gov]
- Texas Ports - map [WorldPortSource.com]
Regional Focus
- Atlanta [Council on Competitiveness, report]
- Biobusiness Alliance [Minnesota]
- Cambridge Investment Research [Cambridge, England]
- Great North Alliance [Minneapolis-St. Paul]
- Indiana Business Research Center [Kelley School of Business; good comparative data v. other states]
- MBBNet [Minnesota, biomedical portal]
- Minneapolis-St. Paul [biotech & biomedical]
- Pittsburgh [Council on Competitiveness, report]
- Research Triangle [Council on Competitiveness, report]
- San Diego [Council on Competitiveness, report]
- Wichita [Council on Competitiveness, report]
- World Financial Centers, Top 50 [PDF]
- Demography of Clusters [overview of cluster iniatives, PDF]
- Clusters of Innovation Initiative: Regional Foundations of U.S. Competitiveness [Council on Competitiveness, report]
- Clusters of Innovation Initiative [multiple MSAs]
- U.S. Clusters [4MB+ PDF]
- The Cluster Initiative Greenbook [how-to, 2MB PDF, free registration req.]
- Harvard Clusters Database [833 worldwide clusters, PDF]
- America 2050 Project [megas, national]
- Brookings Institution [business location]
- Council on Competitivness [international, regional and local]
- Cyberstates [clusters, high technology]
- Harvard Institute for Strategy and Competitiveness [industry clusters]
- Metropolitan Institute at Virginia Tech [megas, national & international]
- Milken Institute [regional economics]
- The Citistates Group [regional biz thinktank]
Monday
Updates for Week of 02/01-02/06
Happenings in the Texas Triangle, the megapolitan region consisting of Houston, DFW, Austin and San Antonio.
- Energy> Texas companies galore mentioned in The Deal's take on state of the oil & gas and alt energy <http://tinyurl.com/txtriangle0926>
- Capital> UTIMCO's fund performance <http://tinyurl.com/txtriangle0925>
- Dude... Chairman of UTIMCO board Robert Rowling resigns during state senate hearing, PEHub has the video <http://tinyurl.com/txtriangle0924>
- Energy> Author Peter Schwartz says cleantech VCs don't GET energy and don't know what they're doing <http://tinyurl.com/txtriangle0923>
- Face2Face> Tech-related Networking Groups [Austin ] <http://www.austinstartup.com/resources/>
- Dealipedia> Viverae [Dallas] raises $6.5M from Frontier Capital [Charlotte, NC] <http://tinyurl.com/txtriangle0922>
- Dealipedia> HomeAway [Austin] buys French Homelidays SAS based <http://tinyurl.com/algers>
- DealFlow> Texas Pacific Group [Fort Worth] ends 2 yr. talks with sov fund/pension funds to buy stakes <http://tinyurl.com/txtriangle0921>
- Dealipedia> IDC Westinghouse [Fort Worth] acquired by Sorenson Capital <http://tinyurl.com/txtriangle0919>
- Honchos> NY Times catching Dell fever from Wall Street Journal <http://tinyurl.com/txtriangle0917>
- Honchos> Mark Cuban [DFW] pursues offense as his best defense <http://tinyurl.com/txtriangle0916>
- Honchos> The many faces of Michael S. Dell... tech visionary... philanthropist... VEGETABLE CAPITALIST <http://1link.in/texastriangle-mnyce>.:.
Posted by editor at 16.2.09 0 comments
Labels: Austin, cleantech, clusters, DFW, energy, Honchos, mergers, private equity
Thursday
The Waterman Cometh
T. Boone Pickens making waves with new water pipeline
Bloomberg News reported on November 6 that T. Boone Pickens "may have engineered one of his shrewdest takeovers yet." The octogenarian chairman of BP Capital LLC, Dallas, has devised a way to create a water district on eight acres of land outside Amarillo. Pickens hopes to use the land to condemn property and sell tax-exempt bonds to build an expansive water pipeline.
The financial news service reports that Pickens' plan includes a 328-mile, $2.2 billion pipeline to move water from the panhandle, which is home to the 174,000-square-mile Ogallala Aquifer, to the suburbs of Dallas and San Antonio. Best known for his dealings in oil, Pickens' Mesa Water Inc. has acquired 200,000 acres of Texas water rights and may seek to double that amount.
In addition to the multi-billion dollar pipepline, Pickens' vision includes piggybacking windpower farms on the surrounding ranchland and feeding their electricity into to the grid through a transmission network built along the water pipeline's right-of-way. The amibitious project could cost upwards of $10 billion altogether, however the idea is meeting with some resistance that could hamper plans.
Salon.com ran an article on the subject "High noon at Ogallala aquifer" in Feb. 2001. .:.
Image: Ogallala Aquifer, USGS
Posted by editor at 15.11.07 0 comments
Labels: cleantech, Honchos, hydro-economy, windpower
One that Got Away
Former Austin start-up nets big money
Originally founded in Austin in 2002 with backing from Sevin Rosen and ARCH Ventures, Innovalight Inc. has just raised $28 million to bring its new clean energy technology to market. In early 2005, the company moved from Austin to Minneapolis, Minn., stayed a year, and moved to Santa Clara, Calif. (close to home for the firm's CEO Conrad Burke), and is finally making settling in Sunnyvale, Calif.
The company originally hoped its technology could lead to a nanotechnology-based light bulb that would never wear out. That technology has since been applied to a create thin-film silicon solar technology. VentureWire reports that Innovalight is one of the first companies that is moving into the manufacturing stage with its thin-film solar cells, which will be funded by the latest round of investment.
The irony in the constant moving for Innovalight is that Austin is turning out to be a hotspot for clean energy technology, and has been judged a better place to start such companies than places like Silicon Valley. .:.
Posted by editor at 15.11.07 0 comments
Labels: cleantech
Clean and Mean
Austin CEO named E&Y's Entrepreneur of the Year for region
TechTurn is a poster child for Austin's developing clean technology cluster. The Wall Street Journal reported that Austin even outpaces the vaunted Silicon Valley in this burgeoning area. So TechTurn's success seems particularly appropos.
Posted by editor at 15.11.07 0 comments
Friday
Capitals of Clean
Regions vie for clean tech crown
Several months after The New York Times ran its piece , on May 24th, the Wall Street Journal offered its own take on Silicon Valley's drive to become the clean technology capital.
Although not news anymore, WSJ writers Pui-Wing Tam and Jim Carlton authored a more balanced piece on the subject.
NYT slanted its piece as if Silicon Valley's dominance is a foregone conclusion, but WSJ clearly spelled out the Valley has plenty of competition: particularly from Austin, Texas. Even citing a study by an independent research firm, SustainLane, in San Francisco ranking Silicon Valley, gasp, #2 behind Austin. (Click here for Google Map.)
The story was also more detailed, honing in on San Jose (the 1M person capital of Silicon Valley) and its efforts to lure a start-up solar power company called Nanosolar, Inc. Salient points: San Jose city officials scouted sites for a 647,000 s.f. building to save Nanosolar on real estate broker fees, offered expedited permits, and provided a $1.5 million grant to be used to retrain local workers. All of that to attract a facility that will create 200 jobs, which will hopefully grow.
Still, the article points out that San Jose is an expensive place to startup a business: average salaries are twice the national average ($66,200 v. $37,870) and other items, such as electricity costs, are high. However, there's plenty of money thanks to VC-extraordinaire John Doerr of KleinerPerkins, who's pushing clean tech. (Check out the excellent new Portfolio magazine for a profile of Doerr's efforts. Money quote: “When you get into energy, you’re going up against Exxon and Chevron and cattlemen and corn.”) And local techies like Google co-founders Sergey Brin and Larry Page are putting their own money into outfits, such as Nanosolar (which has raised $100M to date).
So far, reports the article, San Jose has 22 firms involved in researching and producing clean tech, an 83% jump from last year. One of which, SunPower Corp., has 300 employees and plans to double that workforce by the end of 2007. Austin, however, claims 50 such companies.
Other top spots for clean tech, according to SustainLane, include: Berkely, CA; Pasadena, CA; Boston, MA; and runners-up San Francisco, New York, Seattle, San Diego, and Houston. GEO
Posted by editor at 25.5.07 0 comments
Labels: cleantech, clusters, energy, entrepreneurs, ExoTex, innovation, megas, metros
Clusters, Clusters Everywhere
Regions jockey for their place in the gravy train
The New York Times recently reported that energy is now the new new thing in Silicon Valley. This is news that other regions around the country, who are looking for a niche in the $1 trillion domestic energy sector, can't ignore. The big brains out on the West Coast don't always succeed, but they nearly always change the game.
This highlights the dynamics of regional economic competitiveness emphasized by Michael Porter. What we're seeing shape up is a renewable energy value chain. In that chain will be raw material providers, processors, refiners, distributors, application providers, and the support services needed to support each link in the chain.
Minnesota hopes to establish itself as a renewable energy producer, which in the jargon of the oil and gas industry, the Big Kahuna of the energy sector, would make it an upstream player. Silicon Valley wants to get into renewables, too, however because the Valley's will look to capitalize on its existing knowledge base, placing it upstream, midstream and downstream.
Semiconductors are related to solar cell technology to produce electricity. Biotechnology can be applied to the processing and refining links by making biomass energy production more efficient. And the Valley's high-tech device base enables it excel in applications, such as Tesla Motors, the maker of the first electric powered sports car that is garnering plenty of attention.
The buzzword around Silicon Valley is "clean tech," which is related to but different than "green" technologies. "Clean" tech is still meant to save the world, but it plans to do it on the back of technology. "Green" carries with it political and social connotations, and also has a tinge of Luddism to it anathema to techie-geek types.
Undoubtedly other areas of the U.S. are ramping up their own alternative energy clusters and looking to build on existing specialized knowledge bases within local industry, universities, and, even, government (witness the biotech cluster in Maryland, next door to the National Institutes of Health). Although the outcome will bellcurve, regions must try. Economic development failures like Detroit give them the incentive to press on. GEO
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.:. The Big Picture
-
General Reference
- Texas Almanac [by Dallas Morning News]
- Texas Gazetter
- The Handbook of Texas Online
- Cities (6k+ residents)
- Cities (1k-6k residents)
- School Profiles
- Neighborhoods
-
Economic Outlook
- State of TX Biz Portal
- TX Secretary of State
- TX Economy [State Comptroller]
- TX Economy & Growth Database
- Energy in Texas [May 2008]
- Dallas Beige Book [11th District Economic Outlook]
- Houston Business [Dallas Fed Quarterly]
- Economic & Technology Outlook [Austin]
- Federal Reserve-Dallas
.:.Lone Star Enterprises
.:. Square Feet
- Houston -Emporis.com [886 bldgs]
- Dallas - Emporis.com [500 bldgs]
- Austin - Emporis.com [441 bldgs]
- San Antonio - Emporis.com [230 bldgs]
- Fort Worth - Emporis.com [150 bldgs]
- Irving - Emporis.com [69 bldgs]
- Galveston - Emporis.com [64 bldgs]
- Arlington - Emporis.com [31 bldgs]
- Richardson - Emporis.com [18 bldgs]
- Plano - Emporis.com [9 bldgs]
.:.Business Media Sources
- 210 - All Media
- 210 ... Business South Texas Magazine
- 210 ... San Antonio Business Journal
- 210 ... SanAntonioStartups.com
- 214 - All Media
- 214 - Dallas CEO Magazine
- 214 ... Dallas Business Journal
- 214 ... DallasStartups.com
- 325 ... AbileneStartups.com
- 512 - All Media
- 512 ... Austin Business District Magazine
- 512 ... Austin Business Journal
- 512 ... AustinStartup.com
- 512 ... Texas: The McCombs School of Business Magazine
- 713 - All Media
- 713 ... 002 Magazine
- 713 ... H Texas Magazine
- 713 ... Houston Business Journal
- 713 ... StartupHouston
- 817 ... Fort Worth Business Press
- 817 ... FortWorthStartups.com
- 972 ... Collin County Business Press
- Texas Magazine
- Texas Monthly
- TexasStartupBlog.com
- TexasTechPulse.com
- TexasTriangle.biz