Venture Capital for Clean Technology

Clean technology is a somewhat ambiguous term but one heard more and more often today. According to Clean Edge, a research firm specializing in the study of this sector, clean technology refers to a diverse range of products, services, and processes that make use of renewable materials and energy, strive to use fewer natural resources, and to reduce emissions and wastes in both the process of their production and their use. Such companies may be in fields like renewable energy, electric motors, green chemistry, water use management, public transportation, sustainable agriculture, and areas of information technology specifically aimed at helping to reduce or eliminate emissions and waste in any number of processes.

Today’s market size is the amount invested by venture capital firms around the world in clean technology endeavors. The amounts for both 2011 and 2012 are shown. Clear from these data is that investment in such endeavors fluctuates greatly from year to year, despite the seeming relentless admiration for such clean technologies in the media at large. The New York Times article from which this market size comes (a link to which is provided below) tells an interesting story about how one company is using niche market products to help bridge the gap between proof of concept and small scale production to high volume production, a gap often referred to in the industry as Death Valley.

Geographic reference: World
Year: 2011 and 2012
Market size: $9.6 billion and $7.4 billion respectively
Source: Diane Cardwell, “A Side Trip on the Road to Clean Fuel,” The New York Times, June 23, 2013, page B1, and available online here.
Original Source: Cleantech Group’s i3 Platform
Posted on June 24, 2013

Charitable Giving

Today’s market size post provides a measure of charitable giving in the United States last year. Charitable giving was greatly impacted by the recession and financial system melt-down of 2007–2009 but contributions have been rising as the economy recovers, slowly. In 2011, charitable giving totals were up 4% over giving in the prior year but were still 11% lower than the total giving in 2007. Of interest is the fact that contributions made by individuals accounted, in 2011, for 73% of all charitable giving in the United States.

Geographic reference: United States
Year: 2011
Market size: $298 billion
Source: “Giving Statistics,” National Park Service website posting with a great deal of information reproduced from the report listed below as the Original Source. Here is a link to the National Park Service website.
Original source: Giving USA 2012, American Association of Fundraising Counsel.
Posted on September 14, 2012