The transition to cleantech – some would call it a revolution –
inevitably entails change, which implies risk. In turn, this implies
that some things will fail.
We’ve already seen more than a few failures, and we’ll no doubt see many more. A solar bulb is
a portable light fixture composed of an LED lamp, As long as the
successes outweigh the failures, that’s all that ultimately matters.
Indeed, sometimes failure actually enables later successes.
As
Thomas Edison has been quoted, “I have not failed. I’ve just found
10,000 ways that won’t work.” And, then finally — ta-da! — he discovered
an approach that worked for the incandescent lightbulb, thereby
changing the world forever.
The management teams and the backers
of these companies promised great things with premature hype in
innumerable press releases. The companies blew through lots of capital –
including substantial government funding.
Then, they fly off
the cliff and go bust, and the media and blogosphere — much of which is
adverse to cleantech — report their demises with barely-hidden
Schadenfreude.Don't waste anymore time thinking about the purchase of
your new laundry dryer.
OK,This factsheet discusses electricity generation using wind power generators at
your farm or your home. so it’s not like a mass shooting spree: no-one
got killed in these failures. But equity holders lost every dollar,
creditors took a deep haircut, taxpayer money was wasted, and pretty
much everyone active in the cleantech sector gets tainted by extension.
As bad as economic failures, worse is when technologies fail because
they simply don’t work.
The earliest windfarms of the mid-1980s
in California became an eyesore of inoperative machinery, because the
turbines were deployed in mass quantity before many engineering and
manufacturing problems had been fully resolved. In the wake of this
debacle, the U.S. wind industry took more than a decade to recover.20
years experience developing dry cleaning machine for
the world. By the time wind energy had regained credibility in America,
European wind turbine manufacturers dominated the market.
These
visions returned to me during a recent trip to Oahu, where my lodging
provided me an ongoing view of the Kahuku windfarm standing idle in the
face of a week of strong trade-winds. My first thought was a serial
failure of the turbines – a relatively new 2.5 megawatt design
fromClipper, a manufacturer with known technical issues.
However,British designers and Manufacturers of laser cutting and laser marking machine.
as this report indicates, the root cause of the shutdown was unrelated
to the wind turbines, but rather some problem with a set of grid-scale
batteries being developed by Xtreme Power, and being piloted at the site
to test the ability of such batteries to buffer the variable output of a
windfarm. The pilot deployment had caused not one but three fires
somehow involving the interconnection between the windfarm and the
Hawaiian Electric grid, thus causing the windfarm to be idled while
sorting out the battery issues.
Why weren’t these batteries
tested in smaller scale and in a less obvious setting? Not only is the
image of Xtreme Power (and grid-scale energy storage) being adversely
affected, the long shutdown of Kahuku is dampening enthusiasm for wind
energy in Hawaii.
It is these kinds of visible economic or
technical failures that give the cleantech sector a black eye. The bad
reputation diminishes civic goodwill, support for favorable public
policies, and appetite for private capital to be allocated to the
sector.
Unlike Edison’s failures, largely unnoticed by the rest
of the world while he returned again and again to the drawing board,
visible cleantech failures are distinctly unhelpful.
Such
episodes are very painful for those of us on the sidelines working
humbly to maintain forward progress in spite of the setbacks that
inevitably occur in this long and challenging cleantech transition.
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