Publications
Venture Investment Opportunities in Innovative Water Technology

Publications

Water Matters: Venture Investment Opportunities in Innovative Water Technology
>Executive Summary for National Onsite Water Reclaim Standards March 2009
>The Artemis Project Newsletter
> Reducing Greenhouse Gases Through Improved Water Policy

Press

Technologies Assessed:
Desalination
Membranes
Storm Water Treatment
Water Quality Monitoring
Onsite Water Reclamation
Disinfection of Water
Irrigation Automation
Cooling Towers

Companies and Applications
Assessed:
Energy Recovery, Inc.
Israeli Desalination Enterprises
NanoH2)
Agua Via
Abtech Industries
Checklight
Microvi Biotech
Miox
Hydropoint
Envirotower
To purchase the study
click here.

Water Matters’ first report provides

“A Dearth of Obvious Choices” for Water Investors

ENVISIONING A WORLD JUST EMERGING INTO SIGHT
“Vision is the art of seeing what is invisible to others,” wrote Jonathan Swift. Venture capitalists know that seeing trends before other investors do is the secret to great venture investments.

Historically, the water industry has been consolidated, dominated by a small group of large equipment manufacturers focusing on niche industrial markets and a conservative, slow-moving municipal market. Not surprisingly, less than 5% of cleantech investments have been in water to date, according to the Cleantech Network.


THE TRIPLE THREAT
Water scarcity with climate change and a decaying water infrastructure, is changing today’s market with remarkable speed.

The commercial demand for innovative technology that delivers, treats, stores or monitors water is a rare example of great need not predicted by historic industry activity, making this opportunity invisible to many potential investors. The next 18 months in particular offer an opportunity for windfall investment returns on water management solutions.

This 60 Page Water Matters report:

WATER SCARCITY
Water is reaching a critical level of scarcity that has begun to affect business and even populations in the richest countries. By 2025, water scarcity will be a basic fact of life in much of the developed world. Over the next decade, climate change will introduce at least a dozen new forces impacting the supply of water, from increased evapotranspiration to reduced snow fall.

Finally, the infrastructure that delivers clean water and disposes of sewage will continue to decay faster than the U.S. can fix it. Sewage pipe and storm water collection systems fail on a daily basis, stopping business and creating significant health hazards. The U.S. EPA estimates that there are as many as 73,000 sewer spills in America every year. These accidental spills can send large volumes of untreated sewage into rivers and beaches.

Water scarcity, climate change and the decay of water infrastructure are creating a triple threat that investment banks such as JP Morgan identify as an element of business risk. “There has been a gradual transition in the management of water resources away from municipalities and toward larger private corporations,” noted Som Seif, chief executive officer of Claymore Investments recently in Standard and Poors’ The Outlook.

Despite long-term oppurtunities, how does a water tech company succeed in generating return on investment through products that save water when water is nearly free? Today, a few of the best management teams are demonstrating the promise of the emerging commercial, institutional and industrial (CII) market. Large real estate concerns are learning that better management of water for several purposes, including landscaping, commercial buildings’ cooling towers, and for rainwater harvesting practices deliver savings along with increased revenues and reduced business risk.


Water Matters’ first report– Venture Investment Opportunities in Innovative Water Technology provides the first in-depth examination this emerging CII market for water technology, key early-mover markets and the companies that have found success them.