DTE Energy, the University of Michigan Launch 2nd Clean Energy Prize Competition
20 October 2009 - 3:00AM
PR Newswire (US)
ANN ARBOR, Mich., Oct. 19 /PRNewswire/ -- Following the success of
last year's inaugural Clean Energy Prize competition - conceived to
help move clean energy technologies from the laboratory to
commercial production - DTE Energy and the University of Michigan
have broadened the scope of the competition. For Year 2, the rules
have been changed to encourage participation from more Michigan
colleges and universities. This year, teams are not required to
include a U-M student. Any team with student representation from a
Michigan college or university is eligible. The teams still are
being challenged to develop the best business plan for bringing a
new clean energy technology to market. And again, the teams with
winning ideas will share $100,000 in prize money, to be awarded in
the spring of 2010. Applications and details of the competition are
available on the Clean Energy Prize Web site:
http://www.dtecleanenergyprize.com/. The competition was
established by DTE Energy and the University of Michigan, with
support from the Masco Corporation Foundation and The Kresge
Foundation, to encourage entrepreneurship in Michigan and the
development of clean-energy technologies. Algal Scientific Corp.,
comprised of business and engineering students from U-M and
Michigan State University, won the inaugural competition and earned
the top prize of $65,000. Algal's winning business plan was based
on a process that would use algae to simultaneously treat
wastewater and produce raw materials for biofuels. Algal and the
Clean Energy Prize's second and third place teams, Husk Insulation
and Ikanos Power, went on to also win prize money at several
national clean technology business plan competitions. "Our goal for
the Clean Energy Prize is to drive promising ideas and technologies
from the research lab to commercialization," said Knut Simonsen,
president, DTE Energy Ventures. "Algal Scientific Corp. is now well
on the way to achieving that goal. We think their example, and the
continuing progress of the other teams that competed against them,
will encourage a strong field of teams to participate this year."
Simonson added, "Algal's decision to locate its business in
Michigan supports the competition's other goal of helping to
reinvigorate a culture of entrepreneurship in the state." The U-M
Ross School of Business' Ross Energy Club along with the Michigan
Memorial Phoenix Energy Institute and the Michigan Initiative for
Innovation and Entrepreneurship are organizing the competition. The
prize organizers are receiving support from several other
University of Michigan entities, including the college of
engineering's Center for Entrepreneurship, the Zell Lurie Institute
for Entrepreneurial Studies, and MPowered Entrepreneurship. The
competition is open to students from all Michigan colleges and
universities. Gary Nye, one of the student leaders with the Ross
Energy Club, said a key development for the competition's second
year is expanding its reach throughout the state. "Modifying the
rules this year to allow competition from all Michigan universities
provides two key advantages," Nye said. "First, it helps provide a
focused alliance within Michigan around clean energy. Second, it
provides an intensified competition to draw out the best talent and
ideas that Michigan has to offer." Jeff Caveney, another Ross
Energy Club student leader, said the competition challenges
students with divergent skill sets to work together to move
technology from the laboratory to the marketplace. "The Clean
Energy Prize is the perfect avenue for business and engineering
students to gain experience turning thought into action," Caveney
said. The competition requires that teams focus on business ideas
that support renewable energy, energy efficiency, smart grid
technologies, environmental control technologies, plug-in electric
vehicles or energy storage. The business plan entries will be
judged by independent panels that will include leaders from the
venture capital, business, industry and academic communities. The
prize money rewards the winning teams with resources that can help
them further develop their ideas and ultimately start new
businesses that can contribute to Michigan's emerging role as a
leader in clean energy. DTE Energy Ventures is a DTE Energy company
that invests in emerging energy technologies and to date has
invested more than $100 million in energy-related companies and
funds, making it one of the larger Michigan-based venture capital
operations. Information about DTE Energy Ventures is available at
http://www.dteenergyventures.com/. DTE Energy (NYSE:DTE) is a
Detroit-based diversified energy company involved in the
development and management of energy-related businesses and
services nationwide. Its operating units include Detroit Edison, an
electric utility serving 2.2 million customers in Southeastern
Michigan, MichCon, a natural gas utility serving 1.3 million
customers in Michigan and other non-utility, energy businesses
focused on power and industrial projects, gas midstream,
unconventional gas production and energy trading. Information about
DTE Energy is available at http://www.dteenergy.com/. The Ross
Energy Club is a group of talented business students who share an
interest in energy. REC promotes career development by providing a
forum for education about all aspects of business in the energy
sector. The Michigan Memorial Phoenix Energy Institute develops,
coordinates and promotes multidisciplinary energy research and
education at U-M. Some 75 faculty in disciplines ranging from
engineering to policy to environmental science to urban planning
are a part of the institute. Michigan Initiative for Innovation and
Entrepreneurship is a consortium of all fifteen Michigan public
universities acting together strategically to foster a new Michigan
knowledge economy based on entrepreneurship and innovation. By
using the considerable resources of Michigan's institutions of
higher education, MIIE seeks to enhance the State's economic
competitiveness and stimulate growth. DATASOURCE: DTE Energy
CONTACT: Bernie DeGroat, U-M News Service, +1-734-647-1847, ; John
J. Austerberry, +1-313-235-8859, , or Lorie N. Kessler,
+1-313-235-8807, , both of DTE Energy Web Site:
http://www.dteenergy.com/
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