A host of new alternative energy companies have emerged and raised funding.

Here’s a roundup of the latest action, including news at Zeachem, a cellulosic ethanol company; Catilin, a biodiesel company, Range Fuels, another cellulosic company; Sopogy, a solar thermal company; and finally, a note on Greenvolts, a solar company, and a setback at Greenfuel, an algae-biofuel company.

zeachem.jpgZeachem — The company, of Menlo Park, Calif. has developed new way to create cellulosic ethanol, which is one of the more promising alternative fuels for reducing harmful greenhouse emissions. Its claim to fame is to process materials that are used for the cellulosic process in a way that reduces the amount of corn and other valuable sources needed for it. It is still in the lab, however each of the individual steps of the process have been adequately tested, so that the company will see a testing plant in 2008 and delivery to market in 2009, says Erik Straser, investor at Mohr Davidow. His firm led a $4 million investment into the company. Firelake Capital participated.

No company has reached full production phase. Iogen in Canada is furthest along; it is building a 40 million gallon plant. Next is Range Fuels, which we’ll get to below.

Zeachem claims it is more efficient, however, by combining two processes together that avoid any carbon being lost. (Other processes lose up to a third of the carbon in the conversion process.) The first step is to convert the sugars of biomass into a chemical intermediate called acetic acid. By taking the intermediate step, there’s no CO2 produced in the process — which saves greenhouse emissions being produced as a byproduct. It then takes the lignen left in the biomass, and uses gassification to covert it into hydrogen. This is combined with the acetic acid, and then converted into ethanol. Chief executive Dan Verser said he was “surprised but pleased” that no other company had come up with the idea. The process is patented. Wood chips other non-food sources of biomass can be used.

catalin.jpgCatilin — The Ames, Iowa company, is a biodiesel company that also uses a more efficient method, which avoids some of the toxic processes used by other biodiesel companies that require substantial cleanup. It has raised $3 million in a first round of funding, also led by venture firm Mohr Davidow.

It works on a broad range of feedstocks – from soybean oil to animal fats. The company is building a pilot production facility. It uses a nano-technology catalyst that essentially functions as a teabag, allowing undesirable products to be kept in the bag and avoiding them having to be washed out in a cleaning process, which wastes water. It is run by Larry Leinhart, a former “Entrepreneur in Residence” at Mohr Davidow. The company is a spin out of the Iowa State University, and needed an operator like Leinhart to run the business, said MDV’s Straser.

sopogy.jpgSopogy — The Honolulu solar thermal concentrator company had already raised $3 million in financing. The company has now just received $10 million more in a revenue bond from Hawaii’s governor to help construct a thermal plant there.

rangefuels.jpgRange Fuels — The Broomfield, Colo. company, says it has received a permit to construct the nation’s first commercial cellulosic ethanol plant, in Georgia – with groundbreaking to happen this summer. It received a $76 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy. It will produce 100 million gallons per year of cellulosic ethanol — using wood waste from Georgia’s forests. A first phase will be completed next year with limited production.

http://venturebeat.com/2006/10/10/greenvolts-raises-250000-for-solar-concentration/

greenvolts.jpgGreenvolts — The San Francisco company recently raised $1.5 million from undisclosed investors (we did not previously cover), said Wednesday it will build a 2-megawatt solar electric power plant for PG&E based on its “concentrator” photovoltaic technology. The facility’s ultimate purpose will be to deliver power to customers during peak energy times, but at a lower cost to PG&E.

According to GreenVolts, its “photovoltaic system concentrates 625 suns of energy onto a highly efficient solar cell and can deliver energy at a competitive cost. The size and flexibility of the company’s system allow it to be placed nearer to the demand than other alternatives, helping utility companies avoid constructing costly transmission lines or having to upgrade existing power grids.” GreenVolts’ facility will be on a farm outside Tracy, Calif., and will be finished in 2009. (PG&E signed another, larger deal with Cleantech America, also based in San Francisco. As part of their agreement, Cleantech America will build a 5-megawatt solar plant near Fresno, Calif. The company said that when the facility is finished in 2009, it will be California’s largest solar plant.) GreenVolts also recently signed a deal with Spokane, Wash.-based utility company Avista to build a prototype power plant.

greenfuel.jpgGreenfuel — Unanticipated setbacks with GreenFuel Technologies, a bioreactor system company, has led to layoffs of half the Cambridge, Mass. company’s 50-person staff. Bob Buderi has the scoop at his new blog, Xconomy. The company seeks to use algae to convert carbon dioxide emissions into biofuel, but it turns out to be twice as expensive as expected. Bob Metcalfe has been appointed interim CEO, and he’s frantically raising some cash — to last six months, and from current investors.

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  1. July 2nd, 2007
    1:53 am

    University Update - Iowa State University - Alternative energy companies keep coming: Zeachem, Catilin, Range Fuels, Sopogy said:

    [...] of Texas Link to Article iowa state university Alternative energy companies keep coming: Zeachem, Catilin, [...]

  2. An A to Z of the Biofuel Economy « Earth2Tech said:

    [...] Zeachem, a Menlo Park, Calif. company which raised $4 million in Series A funding last month, has developed new way to create cellulosic ethanol. The process converts lignin and other [...]

  3. VentureBeat » Greenvolts, solar power concentrator, raises cash said:

    [...] million in a first round of venture financing. We’ve covered the company twice before (see here and here), when it raised about $1.5 million in seed [...]

  4. VentureBeat » ZeaChem’s cellulosic ethanol process ready to leave the lab, enter pilot testing said:

    [...] first mentioned ZeaChem just a few months ago, when the company received an initial $6 million venture investment. Like a number of other [...]

  5. VentureBeat » ZeaChem’s cellulosic ethanol process ready to leave the lab, enter pilot testing said:

    [...] first mentioned ZeaChem just a few months ago, when the company received an initial $6 million venture [...]

  6. ZeaChem Tapping Trees for Ethanol « Earth2Tech said:

    [...] on the plant has started and ZeaChem has been raising money to foot the bill. ZeaChem received $4 million in funding last summer from Mohr Davidow Ventures, who tells us that the company successfully produced its [...]

  7. March 15th, 2008
    11:43 pm

    GreenFuel to take up to $92M for European algae plant » VentureBeat said:

    [...] The company has been around longer than some of its peers, which has given it time to run into some problems particular to using algae for biofuel. It last year shut down a production greenhouse in Arizona due to an imbalance in the algae’s output and ended up laying off half its workforce. [...]

2 Comments

  1. July 2nd, 2007
    1:26 pm

    wen said:

    There’s nothing unanticipated about greenfuel’s imminent collapse for anyone with any knowledge whatsoever about the energy business, which unfortunately, does not include silicon valley vc’s. The company has no, none, zero innovative technology, and the idea is so ridiculous as to be an obvious non-starter.

  2. July 5th, 2007
    11:27 pm

    Krassen Dimitrov said:

    Wen,
    you are right about GreenFuel and I have been predicting this for months at my blog:
    http://algae-thermodynamics.blogspot.com/

    However, it is not nice to sterotype all Silicon Valley VCs. For starters, Polaris Ventures is not even in the Silicon Valley, it is in Boston.

    As for the other firm involved, DFJ, they have a very capable guy, named Raj Atluru, with a M.S. degree in Civil/Environmental Engineering from Stanford, who has done several very smart bets in energy, most notably in Concentrated Solar (BrightSource Energy), which is probably the most promising alternative energy tech.

    DFJ’s problem with GreenFuel is that it was done by Mrs. Jennifer Fonstad (MBA from Harvard, same as our beloved President), who is scientifically illiterate and allergic to any scientific/technical argumentation. I know this from experience.

    Cheers

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