Clean Technology = Big Business

Just as Al Gore has proclaimed far and wide, making and using clean technology is not only good for the environment, it is also good for the economy, as indicated by its adoption by big businesses around the globe.

The following is an extensive excerpt from a recent market news article:

Clean tech becomes big business By Leonard Anderson
Fri Aug 3, 10:07 PM ET

Clean technology is evolving from environmental issue to big business, opening a world of opportunities for companies, entrepreneurs and investors who see a chance to -- yes -- clean up, says a new book.

"Clean technology is everywhere," write Ron Pernick and Clint Wilder in "The Clean Tech Revolution: The Next Big Growth and Investment Opportunity" (Collins, $26.95).

They describe clean tech as "any product, service, or process that delivers value using limited or zero nonrenewable resources and/or creates significantly less waste than conventional offerings."

The main force pushing clean tech from "utopian dreams" to new Silicon Valleys and Wall Street is simple economics: "Clean-energy costs are falling as the costs of fossil fuel energy are going up," the authors write.

Alternative energy and building technologies are expanding, but in centers that haven't had the cachet of California's Silicon Valley, the launch pad for personal computers, the Internet and biotech.

Emerging clean tech cities include Copenhagen, where wind power generates 20 percent of Denmark's electricity, and Chicago, a leader in "green" buildings saving energy and heating and cooling costs, the authors say.

"Clean tech has roots in the Birkenstocks-back-to-the-earth alternatives in the 1970s," Pernick, co-founder of the Clean Edge research and publishing firm, said in an interview.

"But the alternatives are now becoming very mainstream because corporations from General Electric to Toyota to Sharp to Wal-Mart are embedding new technologies into their current and future growth strategies," he said.

Pernick and Wilder break down clean tech into four main sectors -- energy, transportation, water, and materials -- and examine business and investment opportunities.

Solar energy companies, for example, are competing for a projected $69 billion in sales by 2016, up from $16 billion last year, while wind power growth is put at $61 billion in 2016, compared with $17.9 billion in 2006.

WHERE TO GO

Surging demand for energy in China and India also is driving clean-energy, transportation, building and water-delivery technologies.

Along with Copenhagen and Chicago, the top-10 roster of new Silicon Valleys includes Austin, Texas; Freiburg, Germany; New York; Vancouver, British Columbia; Hyderabad, India; Portland, Oregon; San Francisco; and Shanghai.

Eight sectors with the strongest growth opportunities include solar energy, wind power, biofuels and biomaterials, green buildings, personal transportation, smart electric grid, mobile applications like portable fuel cells, and water filtration, the authors say.

But they don't tout specific stocks or securities. They prefer to lay out a blueprint of opportunities, technologies, companies and trends that may build successful businesses and strengthen economies.

Short sidebars on "breakthrough opportunities" -- for example, integrating solar power into everything from portable electronic gadgets to roof tiles to glass; filtering out pollutants from water with the aid of nanomaterial membranes -- are sprinkled through each chapter.

There are also "10 to watch" lists of one-paragraph briefs on promising clean tech companies, such as Southwest Windpower in Flagstaff, Arizona, which is targeting small single turbines for residences.


I fully embrace the idea,

I fully embrace the idea, after all the great industrial revolution brought us in this spot. I really hope that the future business trends will be aware of the environmental impacts and act accordingly. I think we need a new educational system for new entrepreneurs and for new investors.
SBA Loans


An exerpt from a post I made elsewhere ... concerning motivation

Reverend Wally's picture

The price of oil and/or petroleum based products is high for the purpose of those who are invoved in the oil market can make a klling from it. Guess who is in the oil business.

Also, with the advent of the Federal Reserve, and the fact that our currency, the dollar, is no longer based on the gold standard and is actually backed by a deal which was struck with the oil producing nations that all oil be purchased excclusively with American dollars, makes our American dollar's value based on oil, gives the fascists a reason to want to control the oil market and the world's oil reserves.

One of the reasons that Saddam Hussein and Hugo Chavez are targeted by the US is that they would not go along with the deal of dollars equal oil. That is why the war in Iraq is. Period. Who else is not going along with this program? Iraq's neighboring country ... Iran. I wonder why we are being told that we need to make war on them ... DUH ... !

If someone would get into office and do away with the Fed Reserve, which by the way is not Federal, but is a private banking group, and return our dollar to the gold standard, we would then see a whole new attitude as far as fossil fuels.

This whole world is so deeply corrupted by the greed of the neo conservatives in this country and England, that it will be a miracle if anyone can ever truly bring peace and logical reasoning back into play again. Hence, we are under the control and rule of some very dangerous criminals that make Hitler look like a choir boy.

The Bush family is a crime family from way back, and Cheney only escaped possible criminal indictments by becoming G W Bush's running mate in 2000.

Some intense research will verify everything I am saying here.

I also feel that the main reason why Al Gore MIGHT NOT run is not because of what he is doing, but because of what he knows to be true. And that, paradoxically, is why we need him so desperately to run.

Now ... go do some searches and you will see that I am right.

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Reverend Wally say's, "Talk only works when someone listens" ... Click Here to see where


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