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06/12/2009 12:00 PM     print story email story  

Weekly Investor Round Up

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Cleantech news was relatively slow this week, although solar stocks made a significant rally midweek on higher crude oil prices, an improved financing environment and the possibility of a feed-in tariff for photovoltaics in China. Suntech Power Holdings (NYSE: STP), LDK Solar (NYSE: LDK) and Evergreen Solar (Nasdaq: ESLR) saw there shares surge by as much as 19% on Wednesday. 

The biggest announcement of the week came from power company Duke Energy (NYSE: DUK) and Cisco Systems (Nasdaq: CSCO). The companies intend to work together to fast-track development of a smart-gird in Duke's service territories. The companies said the architecture of the system will be based on internet protocol-based open standards, which will allow for software-based upgrades as technologies evolve in the years ahead.The two companies will jointly evaluate a smart grid hardware and software, and oversee installation and testing. Duke plans to begin its smart grid development in Indiana and Ohio and eventually in North Carolina, South Carolina and Kentucky.

In other smart-grid news, Commonwealth Edison Company (ComEd) announced that GE Energy (NYSE: GE) and Silver Spring Networks will be the recommended technology and information partners for its smart grid pilot program. ComEd is a unit of Chicago-based Exelon Corporation (NYSE: EXC), which is one of the nation's largest electric utilities. ComEd intends to roll out 141,000 smart meters in Chicago and surrounding suburbs. GE will provide the smart meters and Silver Spring Networks will provide the operating software and support services.

U.S. solar company SunPower Corp. (Nasdaq: SPWRA; SPWRB)  signed a multi-year agreement with Jabil Circuit, Inc. (NYSE: JBL) to begin maufacturing solar panels in Mexico in the second half of 2009. Financial terms and quantities of the deal were not disclosed. SunPower said the agreement is part of long-term strategy to cut costs and that it is also evaluating establishing localized manufacturing facilities in large solar markets in the U.S.

California utility Pacific Gas and Electric Company (NYSE: PCG) signed a contract for 230 megawatts (MW) of photovoltaic power to be supplied by AV Solar Ranch 1, which is a subsidiary of NextLight Renewable Power. The power will be supplied--beginning in 2011--by a new solar farm being built in Antelope Valley, California. This is the third major solar contract signed this year by PG&E, which recently topped utility rankings published by the Solar Electric Power Association (SEPA).

San Francisco-based algae company Solazyme announced that it has surpassed $76 million in funding, which includes a $57 million Series C financing round that just closed. Solazyme uses microalgae biotechnology to produce renewable fuels, green chemicals, edible oils and health and wellness products. In addition to the renewable diesel and jet fuel, which has brought the company a lot of attention, Solazyme also says its process its the first to take non-food carbohydrates and industrial waste streams and turn them into edible oils, by feeding them to algae.

Boulder, Colorado-based Tendril raised $30 million in Series C Funding for its open-platform energy management system for smart meters.The investment was led by VantagePoint Venture Partners and includes Good Energies, RRE Ventures, Vista Ventures and Appian Ventures.

Norwegian oil and gas company StatoilHydro (NYSE: STO) said it plans to begin building a full-scale, floating wind turbine off the coast of Norway this fall. The design is based on floating concrete platforms the company uses in oil drilling operations in the North Sea. The floating element will have a draft of 100 meters below sea level and will be moored to the seabed using three anchor points. StatoilHydro said it expects to deploy the turbines waters ranging from 120 meters to 700 meters in depth. The wind turbine itself will be made by Siemens (NYSE: SI).



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