CleanStart Perspectives: UCD Venture Catalyst and Davis Ecosystem

CleanStart Perspectives: UCD Venture Catalyst and Davis Ecosystem

Meet Janine Elliot, who recently joined the team at UC Davis Venture Catalyst, as we explore the Davis innovation ecosystem.

Join us as we talk with Janine Elliot, Assistant Director of UC Davis Venture Catalyst. Janine recently joined the team and is passionate about supporting the innovators and institutions who address real, tough, social and environmental problems through market-oriented approaches.

CleanStart Perspectives are short online conversations to connect the greater Sacramento clean tech entrepreneurship community and share insights, experiences, and outlooks. Join us as we welcome our featured guests to share their perspective on what entrepreneurs and innovators can do to thrive and grow.

Register and we’ll send you the Zoom login information prior to the meeting time.

CleanStart Perspectives are recorded through Zoom.

CleanTech Meetup: Grid Tech taking us to Carbon Neutral

CleanTech Meetup: Grid Tech taking us to Carbon Neutral

At this month’s meetup, we will explore Grid Tech and how is it helping us move to Carbon Neutrality. Renewables are intermittent and electrification is changing ratepayer energy demand. To move to Zero Carbon the Grid must adapt. SMUDs 2030 goal is counting on Virtual Power Plants, Distributed Energy Resources, and Demand Response. Across the country there is a push for transmission backbones to connect Wind and Solar in the Mid-West with coastal regions.

Presenters

  • James Frasher, Sr. Strategic Business Planner, Energy Storage and DER Operation at SMUD
  • Timothy Barat , Co-Founder & CEO at Gridware
Is it time to focus more on water supply?

Is it time to focus more on water supply?

The recent suggestion by a Democratic candidate in the recall election, Kevin Pallfrath, to build a huge freshwater pipeline from the Mississippi River to California reminded me that there hasn’t been an announcement of new technologies for increasing freshwater supplies on the front page in a long time.  That’s why a recent article in a professional journal from some researchers in Korea stood out.  These researchers discovered a clever way to make a membrane to distill seawater faster and cheaper.  

Clearly, climate change is going to mess up the distribution of water supplies around the globe, especially creating extended droughts in areas that formerly had a decent water supply—like California.  That will create a push to “do something”, and building a 2000-mile pipeline is probably not the right idea.  Lots of steel, lots of pumping stations, lots of right-of-way.  Water conservation and stopping leaks  have gotten lots of attention, but that is different for actions to increase the supply.

What does make sense is to come up with better ways to desalinate seawater.  Most of the populations affected by the new severe, recurring droughts are within 100 miles of a seacoast.   Desalination costs have been improving, slowly, mostly for the high-pressure reverse osmosis technologies.  The best prices I have seen put the cost of fresh water from the sea at $2.50 to $3 per thousand gallons from the dozens of desalination plants now installed worldwide. See this article for details.  That is a far cry from the $50/acre-foot (15 cents per thousand gallons) for water from the State Water Project—when it is available.  Water from Federal projects is even cheaper when it exists.   The complications of western water law prevent the price of water from being rationalized in a market, so buyers are stuck paying wildly different prices for it and fighting bitterly over the cheap supplies.  The hope has been that desalination costs would fall below $1 per thousand gallons and narrow the differential.   

While incremental improvements continue, there has not been the dramatic ten-fold reductions in costs that have occurred with solar panels, wind turbines, and batteries.  (See this great recent “deep dive” from CleanEdge on these trends.)  Some of the lesser success might be due to lack of sustained attention, since rain begins to fall every once in a while and people quickly ignore the persistent problem.  Every year we take more from rivers and underground aquifers than can be sustained and now more frequent and severe droughts compound the problem.  Are we not spending enough on R&D?  Maybe.  Are we not providing subsidies to incentivize innovation?  Maybe.  The increasing global water shortage may force more of these kinds of actions and create some breakthroughs.  It is a field relatively wide open to creative minds, but getting much less government attention than renewable energy.  Look for that to change as the seriousness grows and look for government to throw a lot more money at this.

Thomas Hall

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

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

CleanStart Sponsors

Weintraub | TobinBlueTech Valley, Revrnt, 

Moss AdamsPowerSoft.biz, Greenberg Traurig, Momentum,

College of Engineering & Computer Science at Sacramento State

CleanStart Perspectives: New Vision Aviation

CleanStart Perspectives: New Vision Aviation

New Vision Aviation promotes aviation education with a focus on communities of color in the San Joaquin Valley using all-electric aircraft.

Join us as we talk with Joseph Oldham, the founder of New Vision Aviation . New Vision Aviation, a 501c3 charitable non-profit corporation, was formed in 2018 to promote aviation education with a specific focus on communities of color within the San Joaquin Valley. NVA’s mission is to open the doors for aviation careers to young people that previously would not have considered this path due to cost barriers. NVA manages the four Pipistrel Alpha Electro all-electric trainers owned by the City of Reedley and City of Mendota as part of the Sustainable Aviation Project funded by Fresno County Transportation Authority.

CleanStart Perspectives are short online conversations to connect the greater Sacramento clean tech entrepreneurship community and share insights, experiences, and outlooks. Join us as we welcome our featured guests to share their perspective on what entrepreneurs and innovators can do to thrive and grow.

Register and we’ll send you the Zoom login information prior to the meeting time.

CleanStart Perspectives are recorded through Zoom.

Some Big Advances in Lithium Ion Battery Recycling

Some Big Advances in Lithium Ion Battery Recycling

Recycling batteries in EVs and consumer electronics is a “must” if these technologies are going to be sustainable.  So far it has been neither easy nor inexpensive to do this, so batteries largely have just been accumulating.  The big wave of spent batteries which may have a 10+ year life from EVs has not yet arrived, but it is coming.  

We have been watching several teams and companies that are working on the problem, and there is no shortage of them.  We sort of lost count after two dozen.  We have been waiting to see if any emerge from the pack and show momentum toward commercial viability.  Now two have made some big moves to raise enough money to get to scale and drive down costs:  Li-Cycle out of Canada raised $580 million through a SPAC and is now a public company (NYSE: LICY), and Redwood Materials based in Carson City and led by Tesla co-founder JB Straubel raised $700 million in private equity.  These events are a big deal because it is a signal these companies believe they can do the job profitably—if not immediately, then soon enough to convince some big investors.

Why is recycling so expensive?  Basically, the materials are difficult to deal with and the batteries themselves are not designed with recycling in mind so they are expensive to tear apart.  There is some hope the latter problem will be reduced with a redesign at some point.  The former problem will change over time as other materials replace lithium.  Right now, the processes recyclers use are basically: (1) breaking up the old batteries by chopping them and/or physically delaminating them, (2) converting the contents to a neutral form either by applying heat or dissolving them with acids (or both like Redwood Materials does), and finally separating the component elements by chemical means.  The end result is a variety of oxide and carbonate powders, metal ingots, and carbon, all much like the virgin materials that now are used.  Recovery rates of 80-95% have been claimed. The logistics of gathering the old batteries is an issue as well, since almost all of the batteries are designated hazardous materials.  However, it is likely a gathering system like what is used now for lead-acid batteries will emerge.

What does all this mean?  First, the case for reusing old batteries has been diminished if recycling becomes markedly cheaper.  Second, even with increased recycling, there will not be enough recovered material to cut the need for virgin material much.  The recovered material is coming from mostly from the fleet of EVs from a decade ago.  As the number of EVs sold per year increases dramatically this will not change much.  When EV sales are a relatively stable number per year, then recycling will become a much larger source of material for new production.  In the near term, the increasing draw on virgin sources is likely to drive up their cost, improving the profitability of recycling.  Third, there is still room for innovation, particularly to improve the details of the steps in the recovery process.  Companies will be eager to take advantage of any new ways to cut costs.  At the same time, it is probably not a good plan to create an all-new vertically-integrated recycling company.  The emergence of market leaders gives them a huge financial advantage, but also positions them as good strategic partners and customers.  Fourth, it will be no surprise if states or the federal government impose a disposal charge on used EV batteries to provide more revenue to recyclers to make their operations commercially viable.  The interest in solving the recycling problem urgently is strong and lawmakers are likely to be impatient.

If you want to track this sector yourself, the second tier of competitors comprises companies like Lithion Recycling, Battery Resources, the ReCell Center in DOE, and the dedicated recycling ventures of Ford (“Ion Park”) and GM.  Then there is another cluster of earlier-stage ventures and university lab teams (for example, the Faraday Institution in the UK).  

Thomas Hall

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

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

CleanStart Sponsors

Weintraub | TobinBlueTech Valley, Revrnt, 

Moss AdamsPowerSoft.biz, Greenberg Traurig, Momentum,

College of Engineering & Computer Science at Sacramento State