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May 14, 2008, 9:42 am

Google, Big Oil invest $115 million in solar startup

The souring economy hasn’t dissuaded green tech investors from making big bets on renewable energy. On Wednesday, solar power plant builder BrightSource Energy announced it had raised $115 million from a group of investors that include Google.org, the search giant’s philanthropic arm, and oil giants Chevron and BP.

The investment in the Oakland, Calif.-based startup is Google’s (GOOG) second big solar energy play in the past two months. In April, Google.org joined a $130 million round for eSolar, a Pasadena solar power plant company whose chairman is Idealab founder Bill Gross.

BrightSource Energy, started by American-Israeli solar pioneer Arnold Goldman, has contracts to supply California utility PG&E (PCG) with up to 900 megawatts of solar electricity from power plants to be built in the Mojave Desert on the California-Nevada border. BrightSource has developed a new solar technology, dubbed distributed power tower, that focuses fields of sun-tracking mirrors called heliostats on a tower containing a water-filled boiler. The sun’s rays superheat the water and the resulting steam drives an electricity-generating turbine. (Artist rendering of BrightSource’s planned Ivanpah plant above.)

Given that a 500-megawatt solar power plant can cost more than $1 billion to build, $115 million is but a drop in the bucket. But it will allow BrightSource, which previously raised $45 million, to proceed with the development of its technology as it seeks project financing for construction of its first power plants.

And it can’t hurt to have such high-profile backers when you negotiate power purchase agreements with utilities. Besides Google, BP Alternative Energy (BP) and Chevron Technology Ventures (CVX), previous investors participating in the new round include Morgan Stanley (MS), VantagePoint Venture Partners, Draper Fisher Jurvetson and DBL Investors.

Another new BrightSource investor is Norweigan oil and gas behemoth StatoilHydro (STO). Apparently, even Big Oil has seen the light when it comes to hedging its bets with green energy.

Scott of Chicago said :
“Better not be a bird flying near these sun focused towers or they’ll be smoked in mid-air.”

It would be great to have these to control the grackle population around Austin, TX. These birds are the sorriest predatory (to other birds) around. And on the coast they would be great for seagull control. And in large cities for pigeon control, although the bums would trespass to get the cooked carcasses for food.

Posted By Jason Stoons, Austin, TX : May 30, 2008 6:28 pm

A small step for Big Oil but a needed one.

Posted By Kikoman, Amarillo, TX : May 18, 2008 6:29 pm

I guess the fact that this is a renewable source and doesn’t promote a carbon footprint escapes most people. Makes perfect sense to me. It has to start somewhere.

Posted By T Thomas Davison, MI : May 14, 2008 1:15 pm

These drops in the bucket are nothing more than political maneuvering designed to make big oil appear open minded.
http://www.squeezingbucks.com

Posted By squeezer, Naples, Florida : May 14, 2008 12:33 pm

“even Big Oil has seen the light”
Why don’t you ever hear “Big Agriculture” or “Big Media”?

Posted By Regan, San Antonio, TX : May 14, 2008 11:57 am

At 15 cents a kilowatt, a billion dollar plant payback is over thirteen years. This does not include maintenance, interest, or transmission losses. That 15 cents is from where I live now in Connecticut, in Virginia I paid 7 cents. If the plants last thirty years, it may work.

Also, will they superheat the water under pressure so the plant will generate throught the night.

Posted By Clay, Granby, CT : May 14, 2008 11:06 am

Better not be a bird flying near these sun focused towers or they’ll be smoked in mid-air.

Posted By Scott, Chicago IL : May 14, 2008 10:40 am
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Todd WoodySilicon Valley these days is all about making the green by being green. A senior editor for Fortune in San Francisco and a veteran environmental and technology journalist, Todd Woody writes about green tech as climate change drives new business models, technologies and opportunities. Before joining Fortune, Todd was an editor at Business 2.0, and the business editor of the San Jose Mercury News. Previous posts included senior writer and senior editor at The Industry Standard magazine, freelance writer for Wired magazine in Australia and a senior writer and environmental reporter at The Recorder, a San Francisco legal daily. He's one of the few people on earth who have seen the rare northern hairy-nosed wombat in the wild.
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