Working Paper

The Role of Venture Capital and Governments in Clean Energy: Lessons from the First Cleantech Bubble

Matthias van den Heuvel, David Popp
CESifo, Munich, 2022

CESifo Working Paper No. 9684

After a boom and bust cycle in the early 2010s, venture capital (VC) investments are, once again, flowing towards green businesses. In this paper, we use Crunchbase data on 150,000 US startups founded between 2000 and 2020 to better understand why VC initially did not prove successful in funding new clean energy technologies. Both lackluster demand and a lower potential for outsized returns make clean energy firms less attractive to VC than startups in ICT or biotech. However, we find no clear evidence that characteristics such as high-capital intensity or long development timeframe are behind the lack of success of VC in clean energy. In addition, our results show that while public sector investments can help attract VC investment, the ultimate success rate of firms receiving public funding remains small. Thus, stimulating demand will have a greater impact on clean energy innovation than investing in startups that will then struggle through the “valley of death”. Only with demand-side policies in place should governments try to plug funding gaps by targeting clean energy startups with low potential for outsized returns that will continue to find it hard to attract private capital.

CESifo Category
Energy and Climate Economics
Keywords: venture capital, renewable energy, start-up firms
JEL Classification: G240, Q400, Q480, Q550