New England Water Innovation Network (NEWin) - Swim-MA
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Transcript New England Water Innovation Network (NEWin) - Swim-MA
ew ngland
ater nnovation etwork
A proposal developed by selected participants in the
Symposium on Water Innovation in Massachusetts 2012:
Per Suneby
Ned Barlett
John McArdle
Dave Reckhow
Matt Silver
Tom Tilas
BioConversion Solutions
Bowditch & Dewey
Battelle
UMass Amherst
Cambrian Innovations
AECOM
June 2013
is:
A network of resources to test, pilot, and
demonstrate new water technologies,
in order to:
Attract companies and researchers to work
and build businesses in Massachusetts;
Advance new solutions to local water issues;
and
Connect innovators to industry.
June 2013
The
Network of
Resources
Equipment
Test Bed Sites
• Existing sites
• Easily
upgraded sites
• Enabled for
private use by
approved
parties
+
Labs
Marketed &
coordinated
by
Experts
June 2013
Who Would Use
?
Startup companies
Major equipment companies
Engineering firms
Researchers
Students
State and federal government
June 2013
Why
?
Water Technology Innovation Roadmap
Invention;
Proof of
Concept
Technical
Evaluation;
Market Testing;
Scaling
Concept
Pilot / Beta
Demonstrate
Commercialize
Typical Effort: 3-4+ years and $X Million+
e Problem: Access to test beds, expensive lab equipmen
and specific expertise is time-consuming and expensive
June 2013
Why
?
Water Technology Innovation Roadmap
Invention;
Proof of
Concept
Invention;
Proof of
Concept
Technical
Evaluation;
Market Testing;
Scaling
Concept
Technical
Evaluatio
n; Market
Testing;
Scaling
Concept
Pilot /
Beta
Pilot / Beta
Demon
-strate
Demonstrate
Commercialize
Commercialize
June 2013
Business Model
Resource
Providers
• Information
about
capabilities
• Key contact
• Marketing
• Booking
• Billing
• Connections
Clients
•
Startup
companies
•
Major
equipment
companies
•
Engineering
firms
•
Researchers
•
Students
•
State and
federal
government
Test Beds
Equipmen
t
Labs
•
Memberships
• Fees
•
Sponsorships
• Fees
• Services
Experts
June 2013
Benefits For a Water Utility
Simplify and accelerate new technology evaluation
•
•
•
•
Sourcing
Vendor communications/expectations
Standardized approach
Potential access to gov’t/sponsor funds
Lower technology adoption risk
Raise industry leadership profile
• World-class utility
• More attractive employer
Support state initiative to grow industry
June 2013
Benefits
Constituency
Work
Experience
/ Jobs
Time to
Market
Test New
Tech.
✔✔
Public Utilities
Startups
Large Equipment
Vendors
✔
✔
✔
✔
✔✔
✔
✔
University
Researchers
VCs/Investors
Governments
✔
✔✔
✔✔
Expert
Services
✔✔
Engineering Firms
Students
Research
✔
✔✔
✔
✔
✔✔
✔
✔
✔
✔
✔
June 2013
Test Beds Are Core to Building Clusters
Location
Public Test Bed(s)
Singapore
(SINGwater: Singapore Innovation Gateway for
Water)
Since 2002
Israel
(Mekorot WaTech:
Center for Technology Innovation & Cooperation)
Since 2006
Milwaukee
(Milwaukee Water Council’s Collaborative Research
Center)
Ontario, Canada
(WaterTAP: Technology Acceleration Project)
Ohio River Valley (KY, IN, & OH)
(Confluence: Water Technology Innovation Cluster)
Planned 2013
Exist & planned
Exist & planned
June 2013
Example: Mekorot’s “WaTech”
CALL FOR JOINT R&D WITH MEKOROT 2014
June 2013
The Survey Says:
“What Should We Focus on to Re-enforce Our
Leadership?”
•
•
•
•
•
•
Pilot & validation sites 30%
Communications
18%
Water sector strategy
15%
Water sector incentives
15%
Accelerator programs
12%
Regulation
10%
Source: Audience response at “Water Innovation in Action” Conference, Toronto, Feb 27, 2013
June 2013
Some Potential
Site
Test Bed Sites
Waste
water
Drinkin
g water
Mass. Alternative Septic System
Test Center (MASSTC) (Sandwich,
Cape Cod)
✔
Amherst WWTP / UMass Amherst
✔
✔
MWRA (Deer Island, Carroll, etc)
✔
✔
Boston Water & Sewer
Mobile lab
✔
✔
Other TBD
✔
✔
Storm
water
Systems
& infrastructure
Nutrification
Salt
water
✔
✔
✔
✔
✔
✔
✔
✔
✔
✔
✔
June 2013
Financials
Each test bed site
All test bed sites
Labs
Launch
Capital ($M)*
Annual
Operating Expense ($M)*
$0 to $4
Breakeven/surplus
< $10
Breakeven/surplus
$0
Breakeven/surplus
$0.2
$0.2 +
* Estimated
June 2013
Letters of Interest
Universities
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Students
Harvard
MIT Water Club
MIT
Tufts WSSS
Northeastern
Tufts
UMass Amherst
UMass Dartmouth
UMass Lowell
WPI
Companies
AECOM
American Water
BioConversion
Solutions
Cambrian
Innovation
Clean Membranes
Desalitech
Oasys Water
Resolute Marine
Energy
ThermoEnergy
Xylem
Investors
ATV Capital
Black Coral
Clean Energy
Venture Group
Flagship Ventures
Flybridge Partners
Liberation Capital
Oxford
BioSciences
Venrock
June 2013
Legislative Support
An Act to Promote Innovative Water Management
in the Commonwealth (H. 2931)
“The Massachusetts Clean Energy Center shall use state funds to develop
and execute a state program to pilot and test innovative water
technologies.”
Water Infrastructure Finance Commission Recommendations:
“Allocate resources for programs that mitigate the inherent risks in
innovation by supporting pilot projects, proof of concept projects, and new
technology;”
“Invest in Massachusetts as a hub of innovation in the field of water,
wastewater, and stormwater management and technology.”
June 2013
A 2013 Survey Says:
Ontario Audience Asked:
“What Region Has The World’s Leading Water
Hub?”
•
•
•
•
•
•
Ontario
Israel
Singapore
Germany
Holland
USA
25%
23%
23%
16%
7%
4%
Source: Audience response at “Water Innovation in Action” Conference, Toronto, Feb 27, 2013
June 2013
Goal: A Future Survey Says:
“What Region Has The World’s Leading Water
Hub?”
• Massachusetts
• Israel
tied
• Singapore
tied
• All others
(noise)
#1
#2
#2
June 2013
Interested in
?
Resource provider?
Client?
Sponsor?
Implementation Committee?
Contact:
Michael Murphy [email protected]
Massachusetts Clean Energy Center
Business Development Manager, Water Innovations
Per Suneby
Ned Barlett
John McArdle
Dave Reckhow
Matt Silver
Tom Tilas
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
June 2013