• On TechRepublic: Five super-secret features in Windows 7

Green Tech

Read all 'China Energy Recovery' posts in Green Tech
April 21, 2008 6:30 AM PDT

Waste heat: The next frontier for clean-tech companies

by Michael Kanellos
  • Post a comment

China is the Saudi Arabia of waste heat, according to Roger Ballentine, president of Green Strategies.

The country's power plants aren't very efficient and, unlike Denmark or Japan, China hasn't invested a lot in technologies that can capture the heat and harness it to produce electricity. That means there's a vast amount of potential energy being squandered--or waiting to be tapped by an entrepreneur or two.

China isn't alone. Over half of the electricity produced in the U.S., for instance, never actually gets used for a productive purpose. A lot of it gets converted into heat, and is then lost.

"There is a tremendous amount of low-hanging fruit," Ballentine said. "Power plants in the U.S. make more heat than Japan uses in a year."

As a result, expect to see a number of companies pursuing this opportunity. China Energy Recovery, for instance, announced this week that it has landed $8.5 million in financing to expand operations. (Ballentine consults for CER.).

Earth Day 2008

Click here to see all of News.com's Earth Day 2008 stories, photo galleries, and more.

In the U.S., meanwhile, keep an eye on Recycled Energy Development, founded by Tom Casten, one of the big names in the industry. He also founded Trigen Energy and Primary Energy.

And GMZ Energy, spun out of Boston College and MIT, says that it too has a more efficient way for converting heat to electricity.

Recycled Energy, like most companies in this business, doesn't sell equipment. Rather, the companies install it at a power plant, maintain it, and get paid according to the percentage of power the equipment saves. If power consumption, controlling for variables, drops by $1 million, a company might receive $500,000, for example.

The technology, Ballentine said, is fairly well-established. Mostly, getting energy out of waste heat revolves around getting companies to adopt it.


  • prev
  • 1
  • next
advertisement

S.F. hacker space: Heaven for the DIY set?

The Noisebridge hacker space offers sewing and Mandarin classes, soldering workshops, Internet-controlled front door access, and a server room with no door.
• Photos: Circuits, code, community

The browser battles go on and on

roundup From Firefox to IE and from Chrome to Opera and Safari, there's no sitting still for browser makers looking to keep their products fresh and competitive.

About Green Tech

Innovation in energy and environmental technologies is long overdue, in business and at home. Green-tech guru Martin LaMonica and other CNET writers serve up fresh clean-tech news and commentary.

Add this feed to your online news reader

Green Tech topics

Most Discussed



advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right