PG&E Story Gets Interesting. One year ago I wrote that the PG&E bankruptcy was a political move by the monopoly that would try to back the newly inaugurated Governor into a corner. Yesterday, while the company was in bankruptcy court, the Governor found his voice and said that the monopoly either comes out a different company focused on being the safest, cleanest and cost effective utility of the future or the State would take over. About damn time and good for him! This is an opportunity to build a better utility, a monopoly is a gift by the consumers and it’s time it aligns its goals and execution with where the State wants to go.
The Climate Tech Era. I don’t think that Axios’ reporter Dan Primack is off directionally that VCs are still hesitant when pitched by clean tech companies. There is a shift in the weather though, climate tech is now a thing in Silicon Valley. It’s being talked about at the biggest venture firms, on Kara Swisher’s podcasts and in angel investing networks. Investors are also seeing capital being raised by startups and investors like TJ Rodgers and John Doerr being successful with their investments in recent times. Founders that were successful in non-climate startups are coming into the investment space with a focus on climate tech.
24/7 Renewables. Corporate PPAs are largely disconnected from the geography or use profile of the company. You can imagine corporate renewables in a 3 phase approach. Step 1 is buying enough RECs or actually contracting for the same amount of electricity that you are consuming on a cumulative basis without regard to where or when you are using the energy. Step 2 is procuring those credits within the same transmission system as the energy consumption, i.e. in the same geography. The last step is actually matching the geography and the timing of consumption, where and when it is being used. If you can’t colocate the consumption with the generation, this is the ultimate step in corporate procurement.
Don’t Hate The Game. I have’t gotten into the details of the Tesla earnings but I have some thoughts on the polarization of the company/Elon. First, the stock was training up about $70 from where it closed after hours, nearing $650 per share, well over $100billion in valuation. Second, no matter what you think of Elon, the company is mission aligned with my goals in the solar space. Building electric vehicles and using the scale of battery manufacturing to also scale battery storage in their solar unit. Without much marketing, from what I can tell, Tesla installed over 50MW last quarter. So maybe you can hate the player but don’t hate the game.
- San Francisco Chronicle: Newsom says PG&E ‘no longer exists,’ doubles down on state takeover
- Axios: Venture capitalists have yet to join Corporate America in tackling climate change
- Greentech Media: Daimler Signs Corporate Renewables Deal Covering All of Its German Power Needs in Real Time
- PV-Magazine: A record-breaking quarter for Tesla energy storage and an improvement in solar
- PV-Tech: China-based solar manufacturers set to post big profit gains in 2019
- Lexington Herald-Leader: New solar panel owners would get 10-year rate reprieve under Kentucky House bill
- GreenBiz: New solar panel owners would get 10-year rate reprieve under Kentucky House bill
- Bloomberg: Solar and Wind Gain Steam in U.S. as Coal’s Decline Accelerates
Opinion
Best, Yann
The post This is your SolarWakeup for January 30th, 2020 appeared first on SolarWakeup.com.
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