LOS ANGELES, Oct. 17 (Xinhua) -- As demand for clean
energy rises around the world, Silicon Valley firms in Northern California are
looking to develop solar energy, a report said on Tuesday.
The region's venture capitalists, chip makers and
entrepreneurs bet on sun power, which also relies on silicon, said the report on
the Los Angeles Times website.
"Engineers and entrepreneurs in Silicon Valley are
taking advantage of their expertise in computer chips to design and manufacture
electricity-generating solar cells that they hope will be increasingly
competitive with traditional energy sources such as coal and natural gas," said
the report.
Most solar cells and chips are made from the same raw
material from which the valley gets its name.
"We're in the very early stages of a long build-out
in solar technology," Erik Straser, who heads the "clean tech" practice at Menlo
Park venture capital firm Mohr Davidow Ventures, was quoted as saying. "The
potential is really enormous."
Despite being three times more expensive than fossil
fuel in the U.S., solar energy has great potentials taking into consideration of
worries about global warming mainly resulting from fossil fuel, said the report.
Silicon Valley investors are also taking an interest
in solar, part of their growing interest in companies that develop
environmentally friendly technologies.
The solar energy industry "is expected to grow from
11 billion dollars in 2005 to 51 billion dollars in 2015, according to a
projection by Clean Edge Inc., a market research firm focused on clean
technology.
This has prompted many firms in the Silicon Valley to
venture into the field.
About 1.4 billion dollars in venture capital was
invested in clean tech ventures in the first six months of this year, and 1.6
billion dollars was invested last year, according to the Cleantech Venture
Network.
About one-third of that money was invested in Silicon
Valley, said Carl Guardino, who heads the Silicon Valley Leadership Group.
Solar's expansion in Silicon Valley won't necessarily
create many manufacturing jobs in the region. Production primarily takes place
in low-cost countries, mostly in Asia, according to the report.
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