The IT and telecom industries over the last few years have started to get increasingly engaged in clean technology. Companies like IBM, Autodesk, Cisco and Intel are becoming ever more important.Here are all nine of Parker's predictions:What we’re seeing now, and this was particularly clear in India this year, is that the IT industry is seizing the energy opportunity as a chance to make money in this area. Whether it’s moving towards more integrated energy management systems or platforms, or smartening up the grids, or lowering carbon content in the supply chain, we see the IT industry turning on the taps this year and really rolling out new a range of products and offerings and driving a great deal of innovation in the cleantech space.
2009 will be the year IT turns its eyes to energy opportunities, not just in algorithms and software. For example, Intel is turning its quantum dot people, who’ve been working on next generation processors, to the solar challenge and opportunity, looking to develop new nano-based solar cells. We could well be in 10 years time calling Intel an energy company, in much the same way Applied Materials is becoming better known as a solar company.
1. Energy efficiency infrastructure boom initiated.
2. Global climate talks bog down—no serious deal until 2011/12.
3. U.S. passes national Renewable Portfolio Standard, but cap and trade bill only in 2010.
4. Wind stocks come back; thin film photovoltaics shakeout.
5. Clean technology venture capital stabilizes at $7 billion globally; private equity more active.
6. Failure rate of clean-tech startups doubles.
7. IT turns to the energy opportunity.
8. R&D stagnates; corporations acquire green growth assets.
9. Energy-water-food nexus emerges.
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