A123’s IPO Already Bringing Hope to Other Cleantech Startups

A123’s IPO Already Bringing Hope to Other Cleantech Startups

By Chris Morrison | Sep 24, 2009

Hours ahead of battery maker A123 Systems‘ initial public offering, optimism is already running high that the company will crack open a stagnant market and convince investors that they should also buy into other stock offerings.

A123 made an 11th-hour call yesterday to raise the price its opening price by 23 percent, to a range of $10 to $11.50. If the company gets traction it will bring in about $250 million. That’s not bad, for a firm that lost $40.7 million in the first half of the year. Its revenue was only slightly higher, at $42.9 million.

But A123 is well positioned. It started off selling batteries into the power tool market. That led to electric cars — which are not yet common on the road, by any means. The expectation is that electric vehicles will multiply rapidly in coming years; even if they don’t, A123 is also starting to make batteries for utilities, to store excess capacity from solar or wind power farms.

Battery technology also takes a long time to perfect, meaning newer competitors could take years to catch up to A123, offering some stability. So as startups go, it’s a good company to attract attention from the stock markets during a protracted downturn. The question is whether others can follow in A123’s footsteps.

I’d say “yes”, and here’s why: Investors seem to be wising up to what actually works in cleantech. When A123 first filed for an IPO last year, it was in a group of other renewable energy companies, including Imperium Renewables, a biodiesel maker. That company burned through a massive amount of cash very quickly, and is now in no position to have an IPO, or do much of anything else.

Ditto for dozens of other biofuel companies, including corn ethanol busts that did go public, like Verasun and Pacific Ethanol. But, as with the internet boom, all this simply meant that investors were still getting their bearings. It wasn’t yet evident which areas of cleantech would make for the best bets.

Now the picture is becoming clearer, and companies like A123 are offering growth prospects that are based on more than just hype.

There’s also a line of other companies that have met with some success, and are just waiting for the chance to go public. There are some obvious candidates here. Tesla Motors, the electric car maker, is working on its second model and would probably be thrilled to go public. Silver Spring Networks, a smart grid equipment maker, has inked dozens of deals, and will need cash to expand.

First Wind, a wind developer that filed around the same time last year as A123, is probably still waiting for its chance. And then there are the solar companies who have more or less proven their technology and already drawn in lots of private financing: Solyndra, Nanosolar, BrightSource and some smaller ones like Sopogy.

It takes a while to complete an IPO application, but chances are some of the above (and some not mentioned) are already hard at work. Others will probably join in once the results from A123 come back. Next year will be one to watch.

Original Story at: Bnet.Com

Sopogy Receives Plant Engineering Gold Product of the Year

Sopogy wins Product of the Year

Sopogy wins Product of the Year

Charleston, SC— Sopogy, Inc. MicroCSP™ Solar Collector “SopoNova 4.0™” won Gold in the Plant Engineering Product of the Year 2008 in the category of Electrical Power. The Plant Engineering Product of the Year Awards honor the most innovative and useful products introduced to the industrial plant engineering market each year. The Gold, Silver, and Bronze Awards in each category were presented at the Plant Engineering Manufacturing Summit Gala on Monday March 30, 2009 in Charleston, South Carolina.

The Product of the Year 2008 Gold Award marks continuing recognition for SopoNova 4.0™’s excellence in the industry. SopoNova 4.0™ combines the reliable performance of conventional concentrating parabolic trough technologies with several novel and revolutionary features that include the world’s first 270 degree MicroCSP tracker, integrated stands, automatic operation, and custom controls. The modular, versatile, and scalable solar collector uses mirrors and lenses to concentrate the sun’s rays and generate solar electricity, process heating, and solar cooling. The technology captures cost efficiencies by operating in lower temperatures which enable general contractor installation and low cost thermal energy storage.

“We are delighted and honored to receive Gold Award for Product of the Year 2008,” said Sopogy CEO and President, Darren Kimura. “This award not only encompasses prestige, but is a symbol of quality and innovation in the industry. We would like to thank the editors and staff at Plant Engineering, as well as all the readers who voted for SopoNova 4.0™.”

The Plant Engineering Product of the Year Awards are the premier honor for new products and among the most sought-after distinctions by manufacturers when establishing new products in the plant engineering industry. One hundred and fifty finalists in sixteen categories were selected by a panel of judges consisting of plant engineers for publication in Plant Engineering Magazine. Subscribers and readers then voted on their choices for the best products using an online ballot.

About Sopogy
Sopogy specializes in MicroCSP solar technologies that bring the economics of large solar energy systems to the industrial, commercial and utility sectors in a smaller, robust and more cost effective package. Sopogy’s goals include to create solar solutions that improve the quality of life for all human kind and to bring order and simplicity to the chaos which is the current solar power business. Please visit www.sopogy.com for more information.

Scoops: Who’s moving, buying, opening, changing, winning

Pacific Business News (Honolulu) – by PBN Staff
Renewable energy energizes retired HECO executive

T. Michael May, who retired Aug. 1 as CEO of Hawaiian Electric Co., has teamed up with local entrepreneurs to find renewable energy sources for Hawaii.

May, 62, has equity ownership and is a board member of Sopogy, which specializes in solar power collectors. He also has equity ownership in Natural Power Concepts, an alternative energy technology incubator. And, he is involved in at least two other soon-to-be-named tech firms run by entrepreneurs in their 30s.

“It’s invigorating to be with people who have a passion for what they are doing and using their experiences and skills to quickly launch new dreams in products,” May said, adding that most of his time this year will be spent capitalizing on new ventures, and taking the ideas to market.

His wife, Carol Ai May, vice president of City Mill, thought he would take it easy during retirement.

Sopogy’s Al Yuen Speaks at San José’s CleanTech Legislative Summit

San José’s CleanTech Legislative Summit, hosted by Mayor Chuck Reed and Carl Guardino, President and CEO Silicon Valley Leadership Group brought together experts from the Clean Tech sector and representatives from the local, state, and federal government to talk about how to maintain growth and expansion within the industry.

Al Yuen PhD, Director of Corporate Development at Sopogy served as a Panelist.

Sopogy Soaks Up More VC Financing

11 December 2008, 15:08
by Justin Moresco

Sopogy, the Honolulu company makes a “micro” version of concentrated solar power systems, which traditionally have been used on larger, utility-scale projects. Sopogy’s proprietary technology uses large metal troughs with mirrors that reflect sunlight onto a tube filled with fluid.

That solar energy is transferred to the fluid, an oil, and used to drive electrical turbines, adsorption air conditioning and steam creation. Sopogy’s software helps these troughs, or collectors, to rotate up to 270 degrees to follow the sun’s path.

The solar startup is trying to set itself apart from others by packaging this emerging solar technology in a smaller scale. The company sees a market niche for commercial and industrial customers, such as hospitals and hotels, that need between 1 and 20 megawatts of power and factories that need that power plus heat.

Initially focused on Hawaii and later California, Sopogy has turned its sights toward opportunities in Europe and Asia. The new financing, added to the $60 million in debt and equity already raised, will help the startup hire more staff and put more emphasis on those markets, where incentives like feed-in tariffs are especially attractive, Mr. Kimura said.

Hawaiian Electric, the island state’s largest utility, has ordered a 10 MW facility using Sopogy’s technology. Other projects, like one for the Natural Energy Laboratory of Hawaii, are in the 1 MW range.

Each Sopogy collector generates 500 watts and can be strung together for larger generation. Mr. Kimura said they have been designed to be installed by local contractors without specialty training and can be transported flat, which keeps costs lower.

But cost is still an issue. Mr. Kimura said his systems can produce electricity over their lifetime at about 17 cents per kilowatt-hour. While this is cheaper power than that from solar photovoltaic systems, which run higher than 25 cents/kwh, it’s still more expensive than conventional electricity generated from fossil fuel sources.

Still, companies have reason to look to clean energy systems. Their costs, free from fossil fuel volatility, are more predictable over the long run, and with the right government incentives are competitive with the electric grid.

The large scale concentrated solar power companies, such as Israel’s Solel and Palo Alto, Calif.-based Ausra, so far appear focused on massive projects. That’s good news for Sopogy. But Geortina Venezetti, an analyst with Frost & Sullivan, said waste-to-energy technology is still the most popular renewable energy source for commercial and industrial markets, and its costs are coming down.

Agricultural outfits, breweries, and paper and pulp factories, for example, can use their own waste as feedstock to run co-generation systems that produce electricity and heat. And unlike solar power, these systems run around the clock and on cloudy days.

Sopogy Holiday Green Giving Options

Darren Kimura Christmas Tree

Darren Kimura Christmas Tree

Darren Kimura Sopogy Christmas Party

Darren Kimura Sopogy Christmas Party

Darren Kimura Christmas SopoWine

Darren Kimura Christmas SopoWine


Sopogy Attends Platts Global Energy Awards in New York

Sopogy Named Finalist for “Sustainable Technology Innovation of the Year”

Sopogy wins Product of the Year

Sopogy wins Product of the Year

Darren Kimura Platts Energy Awards

Darren Kimura Platts Energy Awards

Darren Kimura Explains Sopogy at Energy Awards

Darren Kimura Explains Sopogy at Energy Awards

Mele Kalikimaka Sopogy

Merry Christmas from Hawaiian Airlines Carolers

Sopogy and Hawaiian Airlines

Sopogy and Hawaiian Airlines