SolFocus, a solar PV concentrator developer that was incubated at Xerox PARC announced they have taken in $25mm of an anticipated $32mm Series A. This comes very soon after the company's seed round back in February, which is a sign of how hot and heavy VC interest is in solar right now. Funders in this Series A include NEA, NGEN, and Yellowstone Partners. SolFocus has also recently posted listings to hire a Product Champion for their Gen One concentrator product.
Source : cleantechvc.blogspot.com
The Palo Alto Research Center, the Xerox subsidiary simply known as PARC, announced today that it is contributing core patents and long-term development support to SolFocus Inc. in exchange for equity in SolFocus and royalties from its commercial products.
SolFocus's concentrator photovoltaic technology creates electricity "using precision optical components such as lenses and mirrors to direct and 'concentrate' sunlight onto high-efficiency solar cells," according to PARC. "SolFocus's prototype solar panels are smaller, cheaper, and easier to manufacture than the flat-plate photovoltaic panels that currently dominate the market."
How much better? SolFocus CEO Gary Conley says the company's second-gen panels with PARC technology will produce electricity for half or less than the $7 per watt typically associated with flat-plate PV systems. In fact, Conley has given presentations regarding SolFocus's goal of reaching $1-per-watt for solar.
"Among the advantages of the new module: it does not use scarce silicon, it has no moving parts that could lead to mechanical failure, it has minimal components, and assembly technology is automated. Together, these features have yielded breakthrough improvements in cost, size, durability, and scalability," according to the companies.
This is all part of PARC's new clean technologies initiative, through which a research team identifies cleantech market opportunities and aggressively goes after them with a multidisciplinary approach. Joel Makower has an interesting take on PARC's move beyond the computer world to the cleantech arena. "It's a watershed moment of sorts: the birthplace of today's user-friendly computing wants to be the birthplace of tomorrow's clean and green innovations."
Reminds me of a recent interview I had with Ian MacLellan, vice-chairman and CEO of Arise Technologies Corp. in Kitchener, Ontario. Arise, with help from the University of Toronto, claims to have figured out a new lower-cost manufacturing process for solar cells based on many of the same processes used in disk drive manufacturing. The result is 18-per-cent efficient solar cells produced for less cost than a 14-per-cent efficient cell, and the company says it has already sold two years worth of product -- about 20 megawatts worth -- before the first cell has even come off the production line.
MacLellan, who in a former professional life worked in the computer industry, draws clear comparisons between the computing and solar worlds.The solar industry today, he says, "reminds me of the personal computer industry in 1982, and we're just seeing the beginning of what I think will be a multi-decade boom."
"The reason is that energy is the largest business on this planet, and we're going through a fundamental shift in energy. You have these big oil refineries, big nuclear plants, coal plants -- it's all big plants. This all reminds me of big mainframe computers, and solar is the personal computer of the energy world. We're going to go through a fundamental shift to solar, and eventually we're going to see solar farms in the desert, which will be like server farms made up of 100 of PCs."
The comparison is solid. And we all know how much things improved between 1982 and 2006. In other words, we ain't seen nothing yet.
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