watch that are disrupting the energy industry

  • December 18, 2020 2:46 AM PST
    The top 21 startups to watch that are disrupting the energy industry

      VCs
    flooded the clean-tech industry with nearly $10 billion in 2019,
    according to PitchBook. It's the second-highest investment sum in a
    decade.While investors are betting big on clean tech, only five startups
    have reached unicorn status, with a valuation of $1 billion or more,
    according to PitchBook and reporting by Business Insider. Here are the
    21 startups with the highest valuations, based on data from PitchBook,
    Crunchbase, and our reporting. We didn't include startups that focus on
    electric vehicles (EVs), EV infrastructure, or biofuel production.Click
    her to subscribe to Power Line, Business Insider's weekly clean-energy
    newsletter.Click here for more BI Prime stories.Around 2008, clean tech
    was declared dead. Over the next year, venture investments in the
    industry tumbled.Now, the industry is bouncing back. According to data
    from PitchBook, global venture capital (VC) funding in 2019 neared $10
    billion, after hitting $14.1 billion in 2018.That's great news for the
    thousands of startups in the sprawling clean-tech industry, which has
    fusion energy in one corner and carbon capture and utilization in
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    VCs flooded the clean tech industry with nearly $10 billion in 2019,
    according to PitchBook. It's the second-highest investment sum in a
    decade.
      Ruobing Su/Business Insider
      But while investors are
    betting big on clean tech once again, the industry hasn't produced many
    unicorns — or startups with a valuation of $1 billion or more.Why aren't
    there more billion-dollar startups? One possible explanation is a
    shortage of funding, relative to other industries like healthcare.
    Another is that clean tech companies don't generate, as one investor
    calls it, “a network of users.” “In most cases, these companies are not
    creating the things that cause a lot of social media and other companies
    to sizzle, which is new networks,” said Tom Blum, a member of the Clean
    Energy Ventures Group, which funds clean tech startups. “In most cases,
    you're actually just replacing commodities that already exist.”There
    are, however, some noteworthy exceptions.Business Insider compiled a
    list of the most valuable startups in clean tech, based on data from
    PitchBook and Crunchbase, and our own reporting. The list reveals five
    unicorns — three of which make batteries — in addition to several
    startups with a valuation of greater than $400 million. Startups are
    listed below by their latest post-money valuations, based on data from
    PitchBook or company comments, except for where marked with an asterisk.
    The list doesn't include startups that make electric vehicles (EVs) or
    scooters, EV infrastructure, fuels from biomass, or those that provide
    services to highly localized markets. Unless otherwise noted, the data
    come from PitchBook.