Profile: Box Power

Profile: Box Power

UPDATE: Box Power CEO, Anglos Campus named to Forbes 30 under 30 list! 

What started as a project at Princeton University, in response to the Port au Prince Earthquake in Haiti has evolved into an emerging business with the goal of bringing clean, affordable energy to energy consumers worldwide. BoxPower was established in 2016 by Angelo Campus, a Princeton University undergraduate. By taking advantage of lowering solar panel prices and advancements in battery technology, BoxPower has developed a business model that allows  them to cost effectively bring resilient and off-grid, clean energy solutions to rural sites. BoxPower’s systems are rapidly deployable solar generators shipped in and structured around 20ft shipping containers. The container allows it to be transported efficiently nearly anywhere in the world by truck, train, or ship. The systems that BoxPower provides include options for batteries, back-up combustion  generators and linked containers for a multi box microgrid solution that can be used as a temporary or a permanent energy solution.

BoxPower is currently penetrating the market of disaster preparedness, rural utilities like Alaska, and off-grid homesteads with plans for international deployments in the next year. With a modular system that is capable of withstanding 180 Mph winds, extreme weather, and includes multiple generation sources, BoxPower is able to offer 100% reliability and rapid installation in less than a day. BoxPower’s products also come with a smart energy management system that will integrate deployable load scheduling and predictive energy storage based on future meteorological conditions, maximizing energy output and storage. With such a total packaged energy alternative, BoxPower can provide an energy solution for areas where diesel generators are the expensive status quo.  

We where excited to hear from Anderson Barkow, VP of Finance, at our September Cleantech Meetup on Solar. He also represented BoxPower as a Finalist at the 2018 Innovation Awards.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

CleanStart has a new face supporting the region’s Entrepreneurs.  Renonedo Williams is a CSU Sacramento Mechanical Engineering Student who is the newest intern at CleanStart.   He is entering his final semester at Sac State and is looking forward to connecting with as many clean tech startups as possible and understanding each of their value propositions, to connect his enthusiasm of building things to his goal of being his own boss. Renonedo has a background in design and material selection

Helios Altas Hits New Milestones

Helios Altas Hits New Milestones

Remember sitting outside at EcoFitness (on one of the hottest days of the year) hearing Mike Carroll talking about his Powerball small hydro technology at our June 21 MeetUp?  remember his excitement about being close to having a microgrid going operational in the Philippines with one of his units and some solar in a hybrid configuration? Well he did it!   It is all operational now.  You can learn more about the system that has provided first power to 150 people here: https://biofriendlyplanet.com/green-alternatives/solar/installation-of-the-firsthybrid-solar-micro-hydro-grid-project-in-the-philippines-is-complete/.  Mike adds, “With this system we have changed the architecture of the Powerball’s take off system which increased the power output of each of the units from 300 watts up to over 500 watts from the same water flow. This has enabled the village to expand the power usage well beyond what was originally intended. In the next phase of this project the Hydrofarm will be expanded by adding more PowerBall™ units and the battery storage will be doubled in size. The local electric co-op is expected to purchase the system to meet some of its RE credit requirements and also as a means for extending its supply grid to far flung areas of the Philippines such as Balingasag.” Mike also got an investor commitment to proceed with his 100-times larger capacity unit.  “We plan on this being the largest size unit we will manufacture,” Mike says. “This generator is approximately 2 meters in diameter, so it can be shipped in containers standing vertically. It will be able to produce up to 30 kW of power and multiple units can be installed in the same PowerWheel™ to produce more power.” While most of his attention has been focused overseas on rural areas without access to grid power, Helios also has a commitment from the Nevada Irrigation District to purchase 10 o fhte larger units when they are ready.   The next big milestone will be in putting together the $13 million in funding he is seeking to stay on track for over $200 million in sales in the next five years.   Great stuff!
Thomas Hall
ABOUT THE AUTHOR Gary Simon is the Chair of CleanStarts Board. A seasoned energy executive and entrepreneur with 45 years of experience in business, government, and non-profits.
Profile: SPIN – Kinetic Storage

Profile: SPIN – Kinetic Storage

Storing electricity has always been a huge problem and one now that is commanding a great deal of attention as more and more of the power available on the grid from renewable sources is hard to control.  There are two ways to store energy. Chemical and kinetic. Most of the excitement today has been around chemical storage like lithium-ion batteries. But with a fourth-generation design, a small company that has been working on a very new design that could put flywheels back in the race using kinetic energy storage.  SPIN Storage Systems off Del Paso Road has spent 7 years and $5 million to perfect a design for a 30 kWh storage device and is ready to launch its product to the market. Put power in and the system acts like a motor to spin up a heavy wheel. Connect it to a load, and the spinning wheel becomes the rotor in a generator.  It’s reversible just like a battery.

Two decades ago, before the breakthroughs in battery technology, there was a lot of attention on storing energy in flywheels.  At the time, it looked like flywheels were going to be vastly superior to batteries in the amount of energy they could store, in how compact they were, and how little degradation they had over tens of thousands of charging cycles.   At least five companies pursued flywheel based systems. Only one has survived, and that one only barely. Active Power Systems was purchased by Piller Power Systems in 2016, after formerly NASDAQ-listed Active Power saw its sales and stock price falter.   

The primary problem was in taming the tendency for the flywheel to distort at high speeds make its center of rotation wobble. The amount of kinetic energy in a rotating flywheel is a function of the square of the velocity.  So there is a strong incentive to make the wheel spin as fast as possible. But the faster the rate of spin, the greater the forces trying to pull the flywheel apart, leading to the distortion. To have the flywheel as strong as possible, stronger-than-steel fiberglass composites were often used, but the distortion continued.  All manner of solutions were tried to keep the axle of the flywheel from wobbling, from using magnetic bearings to using high-strength, oil-cooled mechanical bearings. None worked well enough to allow speeds up to the 60,000 rpm originally desired. As a result, speeds in composite flywheels were limited to 25,000 rpm. Adding complex bearings and reducing the speed upped the cost per kWh substantially. Active Power took the approach of using a cheap steel flywheel limited to 10,000 rpm in an effort to keep costs low, but the reduced capacity at the slower speed meant the cost per kWh was still high.

 

Over the same period, there were a number of breakthroughs in battery capacity and life.  The cost of storing a kWh in a battery plunged. The result was that flywheel systems were no longer economic.  

It is against this backdrop that SPIN has come up with some clever–even brilliant–solutions to the problems that have bedeviled others.   As SPIN CTO John Garber says, “Companies have been very good making speedy spinny things that break apart spectacularly.” He and SPIN think they have solved this problem with a “Virtual Axis”–they eliminate the axle altogether.  SPIN magnetically levitates its carbon fiber wheel between two magnets and lets the wheel find its own natural center of rotation. Subtle magnetic adjustments nudge the wheel to keep the wander in its center of rotation fairly small.  This innovation alone cuts costs dramatically.

But SPIN has gone further.  One other issue with using composites in the flywheel is that they usually “out-gas”–they leak vapors from the glue that holds them together.  To spin a wheel at high speed requires the wheel be in a vacuum to avoid drag that would sap energy. Because of the out-gassing in most composites, a vacuum pump is need to get rid of the vapors that could slow the wheel down.  SPIN has solved this problem by using a carbon fiber composite that out-gasses so little that no vacuum pump is needed. This breakthrough comes as a part of its collaboration with Spencer Composites, a long-time NASA and military contractor in Sacramento.  The result is another big cost savings, and a reduction in complexity.

After many years of testing and design, SPIN is now ready to launch its first product that can store 30 kWh and deliver 6 kW of power.  It will be about the size of a washing machine, storing enough energy to run a home for a full day. And have only one moving part, a rotor spinning in a vacuum, suspended on magnets. With no physical contact, there will be no wear, so it can run for a projected 30 year life with full power.   

This model can be used for small installations, or grouped for larger projects. Eventually they will offer additional products tailored for market segments that may require more power or storage..  Their target Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) would be more than 50% lower than the cost of a system that uses new lithium batteries today. They believe this is a significant advantage over batteries, but in cost, and in the improvement in operational efficiency.

owever, it is still a race between chemistry and physics, between electrochemical energy storage and kinetic energy storage.  Several companies are pursuing battery-based products that have the identical cost-cutting target in view. Flywheels have a great advantage in their projected lack of degradation in each charging cycle.  But that may not be a permanent advantage. There are teams now showing battery systems with over 10,000-cycle lifetimes, up from just a few thousand ten years ago. The lead in the race has been shifting back and forth.  SPIN has made some dramatic process that may give them lasting slice of the market. The challenge is to the battery companies to match their strides.

SPIN is a world-class leader in this technology and has a great horse in the race.  A great company right in our backyard.

A great company right in our backyard.

Thomas Hall

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Thomas is the Executive Director of CleanStart. Thomas has a strong background in supporting small businesses, leadership, financial management and is proficient in working with nonprofits. He has a BS in Finance and a BA in Economics from California State University, Chico. Thomas has a passion for sustainability and a commitment to supporting non-profits in the region.

Sponsors

SMUD
CMC
RiverCity Bank

Weintraub | Tobin, Revrnt, Moss Adams, PowerSoft.biz, Greenberg Traurig

Thomas Hall

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Gary Simon is the Chair of CleanStarts Board. A seasoned energy executive and entrepreneur with 45 years of experience in business, government, and non-profits.

Renerage Developing Renewable Energy Storage

Renerage Developing Renewable Energy Storage

A brand new startup in Davis is looking to lower the costs of battery storage devices dramatically by using second-life used lithium-ion batteries from electric vehicles.  The idea of giving electric car batteries a second life in stationary storage products is not new, but Renerage has new angle on it. UCD Engineering Professor Jae Wan Park and his 3-person team want to focus solely on batteries from the Nissan Leaf because of several advantages:  They are passively air-cooled (most others use active liquid cooling), they use a “flat pack” battery (rather than spiral-wound ones like in the Tesla that look like oversize AA batteries) so they save space, and they can be swapped-out easily. You can see the product in a short YouTube video here.

Dr. Park has designed a module to repackage the used batteries, designed more sophisticated battery management software,  and come up with strategies to extend battery life. He is targeting larger systems where there may be economies of scale, not residential systems.  He is looking to have a standard 1 Megawatt-hour system in a 20-foot ISO shipping container as the lead product, providing peak shaving, peak-shifting, and load management services.  They project costs one-third to one-half those of the Tesla Powerwall.

Dr. Park’s work has been supported by $8 million in research contracts so far  He is looking to raise funding to formally launch Renerage soon. His next step is to install  newly developed prototypes in the microgrid on campus to validate performance in a real setting.

The target price is between one-third and one-half the cost for an equivalent Tesla Powerwall system

Thomas Hall

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Gary Simon is the Chair of CleanStarts Board. A seasoned energy executive and entrepreneur with 45 years of experience in business, government, and non-profits.

Energy Storage of The Future

Energy Storage of The Future

        Empower Energy is a new venture just established in Davis, but with roots in Australia.  It is an energy solution company aimed at pursuing the energy storage market, but also targeting an emerging need for micro grid management. It was founded in 2010 by Ezra Beeman, a professional in the energy industry with close to 20 years’ of experience in the electricity supply industry, and a native son of Yolo County. Over the years Beeman recognized inefficiencies in the grid that could be solved by strategically placed storage. The inefficiencies come from losses and low utilization of assets like transformers and power lines. Transmitting and generating power is roughly only 40% of the cost of power, while distribution poles and wire infrastructure make up the rest. Beeman has been able to identify where storage could make the biggest difference in avoiding costs to expand or replace parts of the distribution grid.  Avoiding these costs can actually be worth more than using storage. The trick to capturing these grid savings is in having a device which can interact with the grid and be managed directly or through price signals to provide support to the grid at the right times. All this can be done thanks to Empower Energy’s patented “smart” energy storage device, the ElektroBank. The ElektroBank is a 7 kWh lithium-ion battery-based energy storage device that includes a hybrid inverter, capable of powering rooftop solar PV panels.

        The challenge for the business model is in getting the utilities to pay for these avoided costs in order to pay much of the cost of the ElektroBank.  The structure is in-place for utilities to do this in Australia now, and Beeman is targeting his first sales there to prove the concept. Empower Energy is partnered with Kokem co. Ltd, a South Korean company that provides Empower Energy with lithium-ion batteries that enable the ElektroBank to discharge and recharge double the number of times as most storage devices currently on the market. The patented storage device also makes a separate solar inverter unnecessary, saving customers who install solar a portion of their costs.

        Ultimately, Empower sees units of this type as an essential backbone device to managing power flows in, out, and within micro grids.  Ezra sees the future of the utility as the manager of roadways between a collection of traditional distribution system, a concept much talked about in the US, but not yet implemented.  Empower believes its timing will be good to prove its product’s value in Australia and then to introduce it into evolving markets here in California and select other states such as New York as they adopt third party access approaches comparable to Australia’s.  

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

CleanStart has a new face supporting the region’s Entrepreneurs.  Renonedo Williams is a CSU Sacramento Mechanical Engineering Student who is the newest intern at CleanStart.   He is entering his final semester at Sac State and is looking forward to connecting with as many clean tech startups as possible and understanding each of their value propositions, to connect his enthusiasm of building things to his goal of being his own boss. Renonedo has a background in design and material selection

From Waste to Clean Energy For Thousands

From Waste to Clean Energy For Thousands

Energy 2001 Inc. is a relatively small business with an outsize impact in Placer County. It is led by Laura Rasmussen, a successful entrepreneur and business attorney who has taken a lead in moving her community to a sustainable tomorrow. Its base business is to take the landfill gas from the adjacent waste site and turn it into electricity, paying the landfill a royalty for the gas. They feed the gas to six large Caterpillar 3516 engines, each capable of producing 5 MW of power. They have produced more than 183,175 megawatt-hours of electricity since 2004, which is sold to Marin Clean Energy.

Beyond this base business, Laura and her company are very much involved in the Lincoln community and have teamed up with the local students and professors at Sierra College to install solar panels at Energy 2001’s power generation site. By doing so, the students were able to gain the necessary experience to earn certification in commercial solar installation. The collaboration project also helped to progress Energy 2001 one step closer to its goal of a completing a 1 megawatt solar system array. In addition, they have been doing outreach to students in the local schools to educate them on clean energy. The small company of three employees and a motivated leader is doing big things to help impact the local regions energy sustainability with education, community service, and local development of clean technology solutions.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

CleanStart has a new face supporting the region’s Entrepreneurs.  Renonedo Williams is a CSU Sacramento Mechanical Engineering Student who is the newest intern at CleanStart.   He is entering his final semester at Sac State and is looking forward to connecting with as many clean tech startups as possible and understanding each of their value propositions, to connect his enthusiasm of building things to his goal of being his own boss. Renonedo has a background in design and material selection

Charging Up The Sacramento Area

Charging Up The Sacramento Area

 

ClipperCreek is Auburn’s hidden gem that plays a huge role in providing the electric vehicle market with high-quality UL-Certified, SAE-J1772 compliant Level 2 electric vehicle charging stations. The locally grown company is also one of the top distributors of portable Level 1 cord sets to the battery electric and plug-in electric market. ClipperCreek is led by sole owner Jason France, an entrepreneur with a background in computer engineering. The company has been in the electric vehicle charging Industry for close to 30 years now, providing charging solutions to both businesses and individual electric vehicle owners. The ability to produce quality, reliable products coupled with 30 years of experience has allowed ClipperCreek to reach the market of both electric vehicle fleet owners and individuals who simply desire a reliable American-made charging solution. The result is that ClipperCreek has become a top US manufacturer of EV charging solutions, allowing them to maintain a hold on a decent size percentage of the market share.

By working in commercial, residential, workplace, and fleet segments ClipperCreek has kept pace with exponential demand growth for electric vehicle charging products, maintaining a leading market share in North America. ClipperCreek works closely with and in partnership with many companies and public entities such as SMUD, Tesla, BMW, Ford, and GM, in support of their vehicle development and EV charging solutions. ClipperCreek’s close work with many automotive manufacturers has made them a tier 2 automotive supplier, providing the “core electronics modules” for portable cord sets delivered with plug in vehicles from many major automotive OEM’s.  They are able to produce a number of units per day that enables them to maintain their share in the market and stay competitive. ClipperCreek also designs and provides a variety of pedestal mounting solutions that are delivered directly to the open market. The company is growing at a pace matching the current electric vehicle sales trends, giving them the opportunity do their part to help further the growth of the EV market and charging infrastructure that will allow the population of EV owners to continue to grow.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

CleanStart has a new face supporting the region’s Entrepreneurs.  Renonedo Williams is a CSU Sacramento Mechanical Engineering Student who is the newest intern at CleanStart.   He is entering his final semester at Sac State and is looking forward to connecting with as many clean tech startups as possible and understanding each of their value propositions, to connect his enthusiasm of building things to his goal of being his own boss. Renonedo has a background in design and material selection

What company is combining Swagger with Clean Tech?

What company is combining Swagger with Clean Tech?

Sacramento’s Startup scene just got a little cooler with the introduction of a vintage take on new technology.  Kacy Marrs is building the coolest motorcycle on the market at his startup Marrs Cycles.

Marrs Cycles started when Kacy made a personal electric cruiser bike for himself.  He put pictures of it online and people started knocking down his door asking to buy one. He went into business building his now famous Marrs Cruiser and received recognition for his skills in fabricating and designing high quality electric bikes, He was even featured on Miller Welders Channel and is often compared to Harley Davidsons.  What really inspires and motivates Kacy though is to create a electric motorcycle for the masses. One that is easy to ride, practical, fun, and above all, cool!

Kacy isn’t new to entrepreneurship or fabricating bikes, he cut his teeth building electric assist bikes in Orange County. In fact, Metallica frontman James Hetfield bought one of the Marrs Cruiser bikes Kacy created. The good range, speed, and vintage style of his designs created a lot of excitement, but Kacy wanted to break out of the niche market and do something bigger. So, he brought Marrs Cycles back to his home town in the Sierra Foothills to work on building an electric motorcycle for the masses.

Currently, Kacy has modeled and is working on fabricating the first concept. To make his ideal bike Kacy has new ideas like incorroperating a liquid cooled of battery pack and a DOT approved systems.  The design has a shorter wheel base, a hub motor, and ergonomic design to make it easy to ride. With the hub motor, Kacy envisions the bike could hold up to a 20 kwh battery giving it unprecedented range and could double as a power supply for the home. With a vintage beach cruiser style, the motorcycle will attract a new younger crowd to the market. With an electric bike that fits what the Millennial and Gen X markets demand, Kacy is creating his own lane for a new take on the style of motorcycles.

Thomas Hall

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Thomas is the Executive Director of CleanStart. Thomas has a strong background in supporting small businesses, leadership, financial management and is proficient in working with nonprofits. He has a BS in Finance and a BA in Economics from California State University, Chico. Thomas has a passion for sustainability and a commitment to supporting non-profits in the region.

Sponsors

SMUD
CMC
RiverCity Bank

Weintraub | Tobin, Revrnt, Moss Adams, PowerSoft.biz, Greenberg Traurig

Profile: Sac Startup Improves Hotel Efficiency Drastically

Profile: Sac Startup Improves Hotel Efficiency Drastically

What Cleantech company in moving up?  GridRabbit. This year they expect to double their sales.

GridRabbit is real-time hardware and software Smart Room Building IoT System. The GridRabbit System is built with the ability to grow, adapt and integrate new technologies into the platform. The customer can begin experiencing the GridRabbit system just with one type of device, like a thermostat, a year later the same customer can add an in-wall smart switch, voice control device or an EV Charger. All integrated in the same IoT platform. The GridRabbit team is constantly monitoring and adding new features and devices to the GridRabbit system.

In 2010 Smart Grid Billing, Inc. started developing the GridRabbit system and since then installed multiple GridRabbit Smart Rooms all over the over the world. In 2015, Smart Grid Billing, Inc.  in partnership with SMUD installed the GridRabbit solution at two Sacramento Hotels, one of which is the Hyatt Regency Sacramento. Allowing for the hotel to control the energy use in rooms when guests leave. The end-to-end hardware and software solution gives facilities managers more control over a building energy uses. In 2017 Hyatt Regency also installed 26 Electric Vehicle chargers that are integrated with the GridRabbitsolution, allowing even more energy control for Hyatt Regency. These Electric Vehicle chargers can be automatically adjusted in 5 different levels by the GridRabbit solution, increasing the potential real-time energy control from 500 kW to 900kW.This year they are extending that control having installed a 120 kWh Lithium Titanate SCiB battery solution at the Sacramento Hyatt enabling them to flatten out the duck curve even further.  The Hyatt now buys energy from SMUD at night when it is less expensive, reduces energy use when guest leave, and is nearing a flat energy usage curve.

From a Utilities perspective, like that of SMUD, this is big. Smart Grid Billing, Inc. has proved GridRabbit can be used to reduce energy usage during peak times, flatten the duck curve, and integrate battery storage. This is key to incorporating renewable energy and battery storage into the grid.

GridRabbit platform manages power usage with automated rules that can manage blocks of rooms, individual rooms, and even individual light switches and outlets. This enables hotels to not only reduce usage but also help improve visitor satisfaction, because it is more than just turning off lights when people leave.  Often, after a hotel starts working with GridRabbit, problem areas, hurting customer satisfaction, can be identified. For example, problem AC Units or expired lighting all hurt the visitor experience and GridRabbit can identify these issues in real-time and before a hotel takes hit to its reputation. Some of the GridRabbit hotels have more than 5000 GridRabbit Smart devices installed.  Hotels and companies using GridRabbit are experiencing a 30% reduction in energy usage from the controlled loads.

GridRabbit is an official Trademark of SmartGrid Billing.

Thomas Hall

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Thomas is the Executive Director of CleanStart. Thomas has a strong background in supporting small businesses, leadership, financial management and is proficient in working with nonprofits. He has a BS in Finance and a BA in Economics from California State University, Chico. Thomas has a passion for sustainability and a commitment to supporting non-profits in the region.

Sponsors

SMUD
CMC
RiverCity Bank

Weintraub | Tobin, Revrnt, Moss Adams, PowerSoft.biz, Greenberg Traurig

Helios Altas Hits New Milestones

Welcome Back, HeliosAltas!

After a three-year hiatus to step back to rethink its product and markets, Helios Altas is preparing to introduce a new and improved PowerBall and PowerWheel to the market. Mike Carroll, CEO, and his team have been working hard to unlock the potential for this technology and come up with several clever new designs. Helios, headquartered in Roseville, California is an early-stage CleanTech startup that builds micro hydroelectric generators for distributed power grids. The company’s flagship products, PowerBall and PowerWheel are waterwheels that drive generators to produce clean electricity. They use water flowing in canals, rivers, tides  and the base of dams day and night. No impediment is needed. During high-flow times or when a lot of deris is in the water, the unit lifts itself up to avoid being submerged or damaged. Helios is currently developing a range of PowerBall units from 100w to 4kW and PowerWheel units from 5kW to 40kW. They have a proprietary generator self contained in the water wheel allowing their wheels to generate sufficient energy in low flow areas to make them economical even in smaller units.  This adds up to Helio’s products having a comparative advantage by being 1) easy to install, 2) self-contained, 3) scalable, and 4) compact when compared to other systems. On top of all that Helios’ units generate over 3 x the energy of similarly rated wind and solar generators when the water is flowing 24/7.   They are targeting developing countries, especially rural areas far from the grid.  They see a niche market of $700 million in sales. They are not envisioning much of a market in the US.  Helio has placed its prototypes in California and the Philippines and is constantly collecting data for improvement. Mike envisions a mass deployment of their technology in the developing countries particularly concentrated in South East Asia and India.  They have a number of development agency prospects in the pipeline for situations where wind and solar are not suitable. Their model is to sell the equipment, and manufacture it in low cost the countries near where it will be installed. More information can be found here.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Qidong is a CleanStart Associate who follows new technologies that can connect with his passion for sustainability, education and economic empowerment. Helping CleanStart and clean tech startups in the Sacramento Region, he is looking to help positively impact the world. He recently graduated from UC San Diego and has a B.S. in Managerial Economics. His multicultural background helps companies approach problems from new perspective.in the region.