Boulder CEO to Use NREL Technology to Retrofit Windows
US e-Chromic first to option license under DOE challenge. Full story.
America, with its entrepreneurial spirit and innovative national labs, will lead the global clean-energy revolution and reap the economic and environmental benefits that go with it, Vice President Joe Biden vowed in a visit last week to the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL).
But that will happen only if partnerships between national labs and the most innovative start-ups are encouraged and allowed to blossom, he said.
New initiatives from the DOE are making it easier for small but innovative companies to access technologies developed at the national labs, he said.
Now, those licenses are just $1,000, so cost is no longer a barrier, he said.

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Vice-President Joe Biden spoke about clean-energy partnerships between government scientists and private entrepreneurs at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory on May 20.
Credit: Dennis Schroeder
NREL and other national labs will provide the spark, and private companies will use the efficiencies of the market to commercialize the best clean-energy innovations, Biden told an overflow crowd at NREL’s Golden, CO campus.
“Now, more than ever, America’s future competitiveness depends on our ability to innovate and our capacity to live up to our rich history of technological advancement,” said Vice President Biden. “This kind of public-private partnership fosters extraordinary innovation, allows brilliant ideas to develop, and gives businesses the tools they need to bring technology to the market.”
Biden prompted a standing ovation from a crowd of scientists and policy makers when he declared that “Science is back,” as a crucial player in American innovation.
The vice president noted that NREL has in the works such potentially revolutionary technology as a battery that could power a car 1,000 miles between charges, and cost about 5 percent of today’s gasoline costs.
If such ideas are squelched by the faction that would label any government participation as “socialism,” rest assured that China or Spain or Brazil or India will lead the clean-energy revolution — with help from their governments, Biden said.
Biden Cites Public-private Partnerships Going Back 150 Years

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NREL Director Dan Arvizu accompanied Vice President Joe Biden on a tour of NREL’s Process Development Integration Laboratory on Friday May 20. The PDIL has six bays where proven and experimental solar cells are made and tested in partnership with private industry.
Credit: Dennis Schroeder
Using the government to spark innovation is as American as apple pie, Biden said.
He noted that President Lincoln issued government bonds to help get the Transcontinental Railroad built — and now railroads are a $300-plus billion industry.
President Eisenhower used government aid to help push to the market the innovations from the Argonne National Laboratory that sparked a revolution in telecommunications.
When President Kennedy announced a national initiative to get a man on the Moon by the end of the 1960s, neither he nor most of the scientists hired for the effort could imagine that the space mission would launch the semiconductor industry, which in turn launched the personal computer, which made possible the Microsofts, Apples and Googles of the world, he said.
Similarly, no one today can guess at the marvels that will emerge from what is being developed at NREL and commercialized by private industry, he said.
Boulder Firm First to Sign Agreement under Streamlined “America’s Next Top Energy Innovator” Challenge

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Vice President Joe Biden, in NREL’s PDIL, speaks to, from left, NREL director Dan Arvizu, Colorado First District Congresswoman Diana DeGette, U.S. Senator Michael Bennet, and Colorado Seventh District Congressman Ed Perlmutter.
Credit: Dennis Schroeder
Biden announced the first option agreement under the DOE’s “America’s Next Top Energy Innovator” challenge. Boulder, CO-based U.S. e-Chromic LLC finalized an option agreement to use NREL technology to retrofit inefficient windows with thin films so that they deflect sunlight in the summer, sharply reducing the need for air conditioning in homes or offices.
“Any of you who’ve been in an office with direct sunlight know how fast it can make you want to crank up the A/C,” Biden said. U.S. e-Chromic CEO Loren Burnett, who was given the honor of introducing Biden, said:
“I’d like to express my sincere appreciation to the Obama administration for creating the Start-up America Initiative, and to (DOE) Secretary Chu for the America’s Next Top Energy Initiative Challenge. Suddenly launching a company around an NREL technology was within our reach.”
Buildings comprise about a third of U.S. energy consumption, and windows are a big chunk of the energy drain. So this one technology potentially can lower the nation’s entire energy budget by about 1 percent, Biden said.
NREL’s Executive Energy Leadership program participants were special guests at Biden’s announcement. Twenty representatives of industry, nonprofit and government organizations from nine states are participating in the 2011 Energy Execs class. The five-month program gives executive decision-makers throughout the United States an in-depth look at renewable energy and energy efficiency technologies.
America has Tough Competitors in Clean-energy Innovation

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Vice President Joe Biden shares a laugh with, from left, US e-Chromic CEO Loren Burnett, U.S. Senator Michael Bennet, U.S. Congressman Ed Perlmutter, and U.S. Congressswoman Diana DeGette
Credit: Dennis Schroeder
America’s heterogeneous population and its free-enterprise system have “let us do things no other system in the world has been able to do,” Biden said.
But the rest of the world isn’t standing still, he said.
“Imagine the first country to create a car battery better and cheaper than batteries today that can store much more energy and go 1,000 miles between charges,” the vice-president said.
“And imagine the country that doesn’t invest in these technologies, that continues to rely on fossil fuels. Some other country will lead us toward these breakthroughs.”
The United States “still has the best research universities and the best engineers,” Biden said.
“And we have 15,000 technologies held by our 17 national laboratories. Each of those technologies now can be developed by private enterprise.”
Biden pointed to the DOE-funded, NREL-run SunShot Incubator program, which funds start-ups that have the kind of disruptive technology that can lower the costs of solar energy to be on a par with coal-based electricity.
“The SunShot Incubator program has taken $60 million of DOE money and applied it to 20 start-up companies,” Biden said. “Those 20 companies have attracted $1.3 billion in private investment at a time when we are coming out of a recession. They’ve already added more than 1,000 good clean-tech jobs. And this is just the start.”
“The only way to know whether or not these ideas can fulfill the promise that they hold is to give them … to private enterprise to see if they can commercially make them viable,” Biden said. “That is not the business of government. That is not our business. … We’re in the business of providing the spark.”
— Bill Scanlon
Boulder Entrepreneur Rose From Ashes

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Vice-President Joe Biden walks to the podium at NREL as Loren Burnett, CEO of US e-Chromic completes his introduction. Biden delivered a 30-minute speech about innovation and entrepreneurship at NREL on Friday, May 20.
Credit: Dennis Schroeder
Loren Burnett lost his business in 2008 when the venture-capital markets dried up in the wake of the banking crisis. About the same time, his wife lost her job.
“The next two years, we continued to search for the next great idea around which to build a company,” Burnett, who shared the speaker’s podium with Vice President Joe Biden at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, last Friday, said.
“We learned about these amazing technologies that NREL was creating,” Burnett said. “Clean energy is something vitally important to America, and something I feel passionate about.
“I learned about this groundbreaking research in thin-panel electro-chromic windows.”
In January of this year, Burnett relocated his family from Washington, D.C. to Colorado, “a hotbed for entrepreneurship.
“The challenge for me was that the expenses to license the technology were very high because of the large number of patents,” he said.
“That all changed starting in January when President Obama announced the Start-up America Initiative,” he said. Then, in late March, DOE announced “America’s Next Top Energy Innovator Challenge,” which lowered the financial hurdle for accessing DOE technologies.
Suddenly ground-breaking technology was available to a small start-up.
US e-Chromic, LLC, is just getting started, but the plan is to use technology developed at NREL to make thin films that can be applied to existing windows. The films change colors, so in the summer they’ll reflect the sun away, keeping things inside much cooler and dramatically lowering the need for air conditioning.
“It means that you can turn this film on, activate it electronically, so the film actually reflects sunlight and heat away from the building and back to the atmosphere,” Burnett said. “We’re a brand new company, so right now we’re hiring mostly scientists. But after a couple of years, the sky will be the limit. We’ll certainly be hiring north of 100 people when we get into full manufacturing.”
The smooth technology transfer to US e-Chromic is the norm for NREL, Bill Farris, NREL’s vice president for commercialization and technology transfer, said. “He came to us, saying he was looking to grow a new business, he wasn’t sure what was available but ‘here’s what I’m interested in.’ We started a dialogue with him and it culminated in this transaction. We are rich in technologies, what we need are experienced entrepreneurs like Loren to partner with us and take the technologies to market”
Burnett still has to prove to potential investors that he’s the right man with the right business plan, as will others who license innovations from national labs, but technology transfer won’t be the big hurdle, Farris said.
“The labs have these technologies, and America has great American entrepreneurs. We must link the two together.”
— Bill Scanlon