Sustainnovation


Solar’s largest potential market? The 1.6 billion worldwide without access to electricity

The solar industry is booming, yet its leaders have completely bypassed their largest potential market: the 1.6 billion people without access to electricity worldwide. I had the pleasure of meeting Michael Eckhart at Solar Power International in LA last week, at a panel on emerging markets with the Alliance for Rural Electrification, SolarWorld, and the American Council for Renewable Energy. When asked about the industry’s ignorance of emerging markets, Eckhart replied, “This is a scandal for our industry”. Less than one percent of global production of solar panels are installed in developing countries, yet the potential markets here could prove to be the world’s largest solar markets by 2020.



Change we can believe in: Obama Mandates a Sustainability Director for Every Federal Agency
November 2, 2009, 6:51 am
Filed under: climate change, sustainable products, technology | Tags: ,

Early October, Obama signed an executive order mandating a sustainability officer for each federal agency. Last week, he visited the country’s largest solar power installation in Florida, and declared that 3.4 billion would be invested in updating our national electricity grid. All I can say is it’s about time.



Design for the Developing World: We never said it’d be easy

How do you design a product for the developing world? Leave all assumptions at home. Seattle-based design group Artefact reinforces the fact that the only way to successfully design for a community is to get out in the field.



Industry Giants join Eco-Patent Commons

Several new patents have been added to the Eco-Patent Commons, an open-source project of the WBCSD dedicated to sustainable technology transfer. Since its launch in 2008, over ten companies from a variety of industries have publicly shared proprietary sustainable innovation for common use: Bosch, Dow, DuPont, Fuji Xerox, IBM, Nokia, Pitney Bowes, Ricoh, Sony, Taisei and Xerox.



Emerging Markets: Best Place to Incubate Clean Technology?

Cornell’s Stuart Hart claims that ‘disruptive innovations are best incubated outside of the mainstream market’. Hart feels that underserved markets, where the infrastructure has not been built out, offer a clean slate and ideal testing ground for companies to develop  “disruptive” clean technologies. A new solar infrastructure, for instance, would disrupt the coal mining industry and coal-fired power plants.

By driving innovation from the underserved spaces at the base of the pyramid, companies can avoid the inertia, stranded assets, and customer un-learning problems they face in developed markets. With over two billion people in the world without access to electricity, what better markets to launch distributed generation and renewable energy industries?

“If we are really successful with this, eventually the sustainable innovations that take root in the BoP will trickle up to the top of the pyramid.”



Mid-Recession, Cleantech investing overtakes it and biotech

Cleantech investing is at an all-time high this fall, at 1.59 billion over the last three months, overtaking IT and biotech for the first time in history. More info at WBCSD on Deloitte’s survey of VC investing across Europe, the US, China, and India.