Home  |  Careers  |  Contact
Power Up Your Products

Power Up Your Products
with G24i's Solar Technology

BusinessGreen: Clean tech urged to embrace

25 September 2008
Climate change entrepreneurs and investors were today advised to increase their engagement with policy makers or risk having their business models undermined by "wrong-headed" legislation.

Speaking to around 400 attendees at the Library House Essential Cleantech conference in Central London earlier today, former speaker of the California legislature and clean tech entrepreneur Robert Hertzberg warned that green businesses had to improve the level of dialogue with the legislators who will drive much of the demand for low carbon technologies.

"Unlike the Silicon Valley revolution, which was led by computer scientists, in this [clean tech] revolution the winners and losers will be decided in large part by policy wonks," he said. "You need to engage with elected officials in a much more serious way than has happened in the past, because at the moment they don't really get it."

Hertzberg, who is also chairman of thin film solar specialist G24i, predicted that a huge wave of new regulation and government clean tech investment was likely to follow the inauguration of a new US president, regardless of who wins this November's election.

But he warned that clean tech companies themselves had to contribute to the development of this new legislative framework or risk the perpetuation of incentive programmes that tend to only benefit some green technologies.

"The way governments place incentives at the moment is wrong headed," Hertzberg said, arguing that the appeal of market-based incentives were always undermined by politicians' reluctance to provide certainty that they will continue over the long term.

Referring to this week's vote Senate vote to extend tax credits for solar energy, Hertzberg warned that even an extension of eight years would not give investors the certainty they ideally wanted. "If you don't have certainty incentives will continue [clean tech] businesses end up having to hire lobbyists instead of engineers," he said.

Hertzberg argued that instead governments should focus policy efforts on " de-risking" all clean tech investments, by offering tax breaks for investors and imposing a "floor" on the price of carbon-intensive forms of energy that would allow clean tech firms to invest in new developments with a greater degree of certainty.

His comments were echoed by Richard Barrington, head of sustainability and public policy at IT giant Sun Microsystems, who also argued that green companies needed to be "smarter in our interaction" with regulators.

He cited the example of the EU's REACH directive, which is intended to lead to the gradual phasing out of potentially hazardous chemicals, arguing that companies needed to be aware now of which chemicals will be targeted.

"If you are developing a new clean technology that has a chemical in it that will be banned under REACH you are not going to be able to produce that product, " he said. "You need to engage with Brussels now, or you are going to have a serious problem."

In the News

03 August 2010

UK site first in world to make ‘Green from Green’

G24 Innovations and Ecotricity join forces to manufacture solar panels using the power from wind energy.
read more
10 June 2010

PROFESSOR GRÄTZEL WINS THE 2010 MILLENNIUM TECHNOLOGY GRAND PRIZE

The Winner of the 2010 Millennium Technology Prize is Professor Michael Grätzel from Switzerland for his thir [..]
read more
05 May 2010

Silicon Valley companies win UK innovation awards

Silicon Valley companies Ribbit Corp. and G24 Innovations Inc. won awards for business innovation from BritWee [..]
read more
04 December 2009

G24i Creates Personal Power Plants

Winner: Clean/green technology Silicon Valley / San Jose Business Journal - by Mary Duan
read more
17 November 2009

Dye-Sensitized Solar to Go

The low-cost cells make their debut on electronics-charging bags.
read more

Press Releases

Research & Resources

Awards & Recognition