Venture Catalyst Expanding at UC Davis

Venture Catalyst Expanding at UC Davis

Janine Elliott was our guest on October 12 for a Perspectives podcast, explaining her new role.  She comes to us from 6 years at VentureWell in Amherst, MA, one of the best- funded and most complete tech incubators, and from the Los Angeles CleanTech Incubator, which we know well.  She has a Green MBA from the Dominican University of California and a BA in Environmental Policy from Colby College.   She also contributed a chapter chapter on navigating the entrepreneurial ecosystem for a best selling book on “How to Commercialize Chemical Technologies for a Sustainable Future”.  

Janine now works with our friend Ryan Sharp, as the Associate Director for Physical Sciences and Engineering, in tandem with Mike Lemcke who has a parallel role with Life Sciences.  She is part of significant expansion in UCD’s commitment to nurturing and supporting new ventures, primarily coming from research on campus, but also available to anyone in the wider community.

As you may know, Venture Catalyst provides resources through 4 programs 

  • Science Translation and Innovative Research (STAIR) Grants—funding Proof-of-Concept for innovations
  • Smart Toolkit for Accelerated Research Translation (START)—Equipping entrepreneurs with the tools, resources, and services they need to form and grow prosperous companies 
  • Economic Engagement Economic Engagement and Community Outreach (EECO) Systems–facilitating connections between startups and the regional innovation and economic development ecosystem
  • Distributed Research Incubation and Venture Engine (DRIVE) Network–offering early-stage startups access to shared office and technical research and developmental space through a Distributed Incubator Network

Things you maybe didn’t know are that they provide a Knowledge Exchange Speakers Series where they bring in experts for webinars or in-person presentations, and those are available in their YouTube channel along with recordings of the training sessions done for the Big Bang.

And talking about the Big Bang, the kickoff meeting is November 15, likely a virtual meeting, so watch for more details.

Some of you may recall that this greater commitment to supporting new ventures at UCD began with the arrival of Linda Katehi as the new chancellor and then the addition of Dushyant Pathak as the spearhead of Venture Catalyst, both of which have now moved to other pastures.  It is impressive to see how much since then the program has grown in depth and breadth.  Janine included a couple of slides on the complete venture support network at UCD.   It is a resource you all should lean on.  Lots of good stuff going on.  Welcome, Janine.  You bring a wealth of experience from which we are sure to benefit.  Drop in our events whenever you can.

 

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: 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