More Evidence We've Entered the End of Oil is a posting in WIRED's blog network that discusses the end of oil meme in the context of an article in the Wall Street Journal.
Seems to me in addition to the geo-data about quantities of recoverable oil, there is also the psycho-data that indicates human institutions are starting to formulate what a post-oil world might look like. This is a significant step, in my opinion, in bringing about change. I assume the rate of chance will be non-linear, and that over time, perhaps less time than we imagine, the momentum of non-oil energy sources in the market will increase significantly.
Blogging for family, friends, and visitors, updated intermittently. A semi-permanent record. Mostly a photoblog but not entirely.
Tuesday, November 20, 2007
Monday, November 12, 2007
more on VCs tackle green
from CNN Money, an article focused on Al Gore getting hands-on with the VC community in their efforts to marshal entrepreneurial efforts to turn energy problems into energy opportunities. In my opinion, this is worth reading - as I've noted before, unleashing our economic system can address environmental problems and create wealth.
see: Al Gore's next act: Planet-saving VC
relevant snippet:
however, the catch:
Read the article!
see: Al Gore's next act: Planet-saving VC
relevant snippet:
According to Doerr, by 2009 more than a third of Kleiner's latest fund, which was raised in 2006 and totals $600 million, will be invested in technologies that aim to reduce emissions of carbon dioxide. Already Kleiner has invested more than $270 million from various funds in 26 companies that make everything from microbes that scrub old oil wells to electric cars to noncorn ethanol. Twelve of Kleiner's 22 partners now spend some or all of their time on green investments.
however, the catch:
There is, however, one thing standing in their way. Five years after Kleiner Perkins made its first green investment, the firm hasn't had one "exit" -- VC-speak for an IPO or a sale of a company that validates the investment thesis. Doerr equates this moment to Internet investing (which he famously called "the greatest legal creation of wealth in the history of the planet") before Kleiner took a certain search engine public in 1995. Now, he wonders, "what's the company that will lead the boom? What's the Netscape of green innovation?"
Read the article!
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