Breakthrough Ideas In Clean Energy Are Very Rare

At the rate of about a dozen a week, I’m approached with ideas in clean energy/transportation. Here’s a rough breakdown of my perception of  the concepts I’ve received over the last three years:

2%: Crackpots. An attempt to raise money to build a prototype of something that is theoretically impossible, where the principal (I think) actually believes it to be possible. I speak (briefly) with people fairly frequently who are trying to convince me that their idea is the very one that has successfully violated the First or Second Law of Thermodynamics.

3%: Fraud. Same as above, except that the “inventor” doesn’t believe his own story.  It’s a not-too-cleverly disguised attempt to bilk investors out of money to build a prototype of some that the principal knows very well to be theoretically impossible. 3%, 1 out of 33, may sound like a big number given the magnitude of the accusation I’m making, but I think that’s about right.  I’ve warned a few people: If you pursue this, you’re very likely to wind up in prison.  I’ve found that this is a quick way to make friends.  Just kidding; I just wanted to make sure you were paying attention.  It’s (obviously) the end of the conversation, but it’s something I feel I should say in certain obvious cases.

75%: Bad ideas. Not frauds or crackpots — just ideas that are theoretically possible, but extremely unlikely to succeed, given the idea itself, the market conditions, the environment for financing, the lack of a barrier to competitive entry, an unseasoned team, weak IP protection, etc. Here’s one: a high efficiency electric motor for EVs. The problem is that the efficiency of the motor is almost completely inconsequential to the success of electric transportation. You could show me a motor that was free, whose efficiency was 1.0, and I’d still yawn.

18%: Ideas that I can’t call “bad” but I can’t get excited about, either. Here’s an example: http://et3.com/; it’s a futuristic concept for transportation whose cost/adoption curve is impossible to evaluate.

2%: Really strong ideas. (Represented here

 

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One comment on “Breakthrough Ideas In Clean Energy Are Very Rare
  1. Bob says:

    One company that can mass produce all parts of their system with a new blade-less turbine has lower cost solar thermal (and biomass) technology that can be built for the value of the tax credits. IE: Buyers gain free ownership. General description here: powertaxcredit.com