GE pledges $10m in search for next big (low carbon) thing

The world’s largest supplier to the energy industry, GE, is teaming up with five local venture capital funds to identify and help fund breakthrough ideas from Australia and New Zealand for reducing carbon emissions.

The initiative is the first local version of GE’s ecomagination challenge, which invites entries from businesses, innovators and students for ideas on low carbon solutions and technologies.

The $10 million will be invested in the five winners to help bring their ideas or products to commercialization. The VC funds involved in the program are Southern Cross Venture Partners, MH Carnegie & Co, Cleantech Ventures, CVC and Greenhouse Cleantech.

“GE is a big supporter of collaborative innovation. With our scale we can take start-ups and new technologies to new levels, expanding markets and sharing skills to accelerate growth,” said Steve Sargent, President and CEO, GE Australia & New Zealand. “Australia and New Zealand have bipartisan national targets for renewable energy generation and greenhouse gas reduction, and are both strong markets for great technology that can compete on the world stage.

“So, we believe it’s the right time and the right place for our ecomagination Challenge to uncover and invest in technologies that will help us shift to a low carbon economy.”

Selection of five $100,000 Innovation Award winners will be based on the most progressive ideas that represent entrepreneurship and innovation around technologies, processes and business models. GE and the VC funds will pursue commercial relationships with promising Challenge entrants.

Ben Waters, director of ecomagination, GE Australia & New Zealand, said the transition to a low-carbon economy will drive significant growth in the cleantech market. “There has been great Australasian innovation in clean technologies but the big challenge has been in bringing these to market.”

The Challenge will be open for submissions over three months between 21 August and 30 November 2012. GE will announce the five winners of the Innovation Awards in early 2013. Ideas can be submitted here.

Comments

7 responses to “GE pledges $10m in search for next big (low carbon) thing”

  1. Nick Sharp Avatar

    Web test #1 for intending submitters is that the link behind
    “submitted here.” is trivially wrong. It should be:

    http://challenge.ecomagination.com/anz

    instead of:

    http://challenge.ecomagination.com/anz.

    that is, minus the end dot!

    1. Giles Parkinson Avatar
      Giles Parkinson

      link is fixed now!

  2. Nick Sharp Avatar

    I wish this venture well, but am unlikely to submit, as my idea does not fit its key term of reference, which is to devise something to reduce emissions whilst generating a commercial return.

    I am convinced our current society is unsustainable and lacking resilience as it does not follow key Blind Freddie rules about living indefinitely on a finite planet:

    Stop using UP non renewables
    Stop over harvesting fragile renewables
    Nurture the land, waters, air, and just about every living species

    We do the exact opposite in today’s huge city/suburban complexes, many of which might in any case sink below the rising seas in the coming centuries.

    We need to work out how to live well, but within those rules.

    I suspect we need to develop medium sized towns which can run very well on massively reduced infrastructure.

    Business has a problem with such an approach. There’s nothing to sell.

    By analogy, what is the level of support from fertiliser producers, plough manufacturers, and hybrid seed developers for organic agriculture, no-till farming, and seed saving?

    Nil?

    Read more about The Town in my (perhaps pretentiously titled?) little work “A Zillion Year Plan … for humanity” at the special price of $0.00 and 3.5Mb:

    http://bit.ly/djT522

    Load of rubbish? Well then, what’s your plan B, since “There’s no planET B”.

    @nickjsharp

  3. Martin Nicholson Avatar

    Perhaps we could get GE to use the $10m to find a way to get Australia to agree to follow the UK lead by considering using their own GE Hitachi Prism technology. We could leapfrog LWRs and go straight to fast reactors.

    http://www.ge-energy.com/products_and_services/products/nuclear_energy/prism_sodium_cooled_reactor.jsp

    1. Giles Parkinson Avatar
      Giles Parkinson

      Maybe. But here is what there CEO Jeff Immelt said about nuclear the other day. “It’s really a gas and wind world today,” Immelt told the newspaper in London while attending the Olympics. “When I talk to the guys who run the oil companies, they say look, they’re finding more gas all the time. It’s just hard to justify nuclear, really hard. Gas is so cheap, and at some point, really, economics rule.” Gets back to the pricing thing, Martin, and pricing risk.

      1. Martin Nicholson Avatar

        I absolutely agree, Giles. But who knows where the price of gas is going? Some are predicting a move to past $12/GJ by 2020 given international demand. In any event we can’t reach our 80% reduction in emissions by 2050 burning gas.

        1. Giles Parkinson Avatar
          Giles Parkinson

          can’t argue with that.

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