Efficiency and waste to drive green tech sector
Reuters 4th September 2009
* Wave and tidal still years away from commercialisation
* Interest growing in household energy efficiency gadgets
* Biofuels, composting technology promising
By Victoria Bryan and Ben Deighton
LONDON, Sept 4 (Reuters) - European investors are returning to green technology stocks after switching to safer investments earlier in the recession, and companies involved in energy efficiency and biofuel production show the most potential.
Interest in the clean technology sector is running high as governments set emissions targets and unveil subsidies for technologies to combat climate change, and as companies work on generating power from wind, waves and whisky leftovers.
"What are the game changing possibilities? You're looking at wave, tidal, second-generation biofuels," said Bruce Jenkyn-Jones, Managing Director of listed equity funds at Impax, a specialist environmental investment company.
Just this week, U.S.-based Khosla Ventures raised more than $1 billion for renewable energy and clean technology funds, the largest clean-tech dedicated fundraising by a single venture capital firm since 2007.
Impax has also seen money start to come in again from the beginning of the second quarter, though this has not yet returned to the levels it was seeing in 2007.
Analyst Jean-Marc Bunce at Nomura Code says the trick is to determine which firms are on the verge of commercialising their technology and which will fall by the wayside as investors lose patience.
"They will be increasingly polarised between the ones who are delivering in terms of commercial roll-out and in terms of revenue and cash generation, and those will be increasingly in favour. And then we will continue to see a fall out of those that have not delivered in terms of technology," he said.
Among fuel-cell makers, Bunce believes Ceres Power
Companies that help people easily improve the energy efficiency of homes and offices are also gaining steam, such as BGlobal
In this sector, broker Brewin Dolphin has a "buy" rating on Eaga
"I think that most of technology that will likely come to commercialisation will be energy efficiency technology, rather than power generation technology, said David Cunningham, analyst at brokerage Arbuthnot.
MAKING WAVES
In terms of technologies that can really revolutionise the way power is generated, Impax's Jenkyn-Jones is "cautiously optimistic" about long-term prospects for wave and tidal power generation, pointing to privately held Pelamis, which produces power from a machine that looks like a floating snake.
Cunningham sees potential in a buoy device developed by Renewable Energy Holdings
Cunningham believes largescale commercialisation of wave power, which has promised clean energy for decades, is unlikely for the next 10 years, given it has yet to show consistent, cost-effective performance under harsh offshore conditions.
"Fund managers and investors should be investing in traditional businesses that have proven reliable sources of power generation, not in R&D shops that may never get out of the laboratory," he said.
BUGS & BINS
Next generation biofuels, which can use bugs and chemical reactions to turn plant material into fuel, are starting to deliver useable technology, however.
Jenkyn-Jones picked out Danish enzyme giant Novozymes
In Brazil, the largest producer and exporter of renewable sugar cane-based ethanol, the market has stalled in 2009 as a result of lower demand and recent over-investment, but biofuels investor Clean Energy Brazil
"Long-term, there's a lot of excitement, and it's really the most efficient fuel we can get," the firm's finance director John Koutras told Reuters.
Elsewhere, shares in Helius Energy
Generating power from household waste is another promising technology, with water company Pennon
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