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Although I purchased in the Strawman portfolio and then sold, I managed to avoid in real portfolio which meant I dodged the capital raising at 50c as well plus a few options.
But it is interesting that management had subscribed to the capital raise and it was oversubscribed. Lots of conviction from management. With those facts, the CR should have done well and the price should have held up.
Main concern is the macro picture when we have property development in general starting to show some slowdown as a result of a slowing economy which would have some impact on a window business such as ClearVue even though the windows do produce some electricity from solar.
Guess this is what is holding the price down at the moment. Still divided on CPV.
Below I have listed a summary of the announcements of ClearVue contracts for there transparent photovoltaic glass. I have not included distribution announcements or MOU agreements.
· October 2023 $250K contract for 1st US solar greenhouse. Greenhouse System USA Inc. has placed a c.A$250,000 order for ClearVuePV Solar Glazing for a greenhouse project in California. https://announcements.asx.com.au/asxpdf/20231030/pdf/05wp8fqg5r2sdz.pdf
· August 2021 first order from Japanese greenhouse leader Tomita Technologies. This, the first order since the license was granted in April, is for 187 of ClearVue’s glazing panels that will be used to cover an area of around 333m2 with fabrication to be completed in approximately 12 weeks. https://announcements.asx.com.au/asxpdf/20210825/pdf/44zpnvfffw0rrk.pdf
· October 2020 order for 500 sqm of product from Brazil. AMB Brazil’s first order is for 500 square metres of ClearVue IGU products (equivalent to approximately USD $200,000). The 500 sqm order represents ClearVue’s largest order to date and demonstrates proof of product- market fit for ClearVue's technology. https://announcements.asx.com.au/asxpdf/20201001/pdf/44n801t7mtgdt7.pdf
· May 2019 First order from it Middle Eastern Distributor. Grafsol has placed an order on the Company for 100 square metres of ClearVue integrated glazing units (IGU’s) for an order value of USD $45,000 before duties, tax, insurance and shipping. The panels to be used in part of a new construction project within the UAE. https://announcements.asx.com.au/asxpdf/20190501/pdf/444rg2q3wtf156.pdf
· April 2019 Commercial Sale and Delivery to South African Property development group GrowthPoint Properties Limited. The sale is for four (4) 1.2m x 1.2m panels, which GrowthPoint and Conscius Consultants intend to use as a technology demonstrator to assist them in obtaining a 6-Star rating for the new building. https://announcements.asx.com.au/asxpdf/20190402/pdf/443z6xc2nnkjrz.pdf
· March 2019 Warwick Gove Shopping Centre Western Australia. ClearVue has installed its clear solar PV glass into its first demonstration site – the entrance atrium. The atrium entrance area ClearVue PV glass will charge a battery for energy storage and will provide power for lighting in the atrium, outside signage and for a display screen inside the Centre. The display will provide information on the performance of the atrium in terms of its power generation, energy savings made and carbon offsets. The atrium may also be further upgraded to include other real time information collected from IoT sensors integrated with the atrium structure and powered by the ClearVue PV glass. https://announcements.asx.com.au/asxpdf/20190130/pdf/4425l2jc5p01tq.pdf
Board And CEO
Victor Rosenberg - Non-Executive Chairman & Founder
Mr Rosenberg is a serial entrepreneur, recognized globally for his contributions to the glass industry. Extensive business experience in senior management and sales over ~50 years.
Martin Deil - Chief Executive Officer
Mr Deil brings a deep knowledge of the international façade and architectural envelopes business to ClearVue, having spent the past 30 years in various senior management roles of increasing responsibility, including as CEO, Deputy CEO and COO within the Permasteelisa Group in different locations globally. Mr Deil has a Bachelor of Science (Honours) in Management and Systems from City University London.
Jamie Lyford - Executive Director
Mr Lyford is an IP, technology, commercial and licensing lawyer with 28 years of experience at local, national and international law firms, BHP and global IT company ATOS. Commercialisation specialist and operated Western Australian Government Innovation Centre.
Gerd Hoenicke - Non-Exec Director
Mr Hoenicke has worked as a CEO, a technical director, and a consultant for various internationally recognised façade companies (including Schneider, Seele and Schuco) and has an extensive portfolio of recognised façade projects. He currently runs his own consultancy business and works with architects and engineers on major US and European project.
Chuck Mowrey - Non-Exec Director
Mr Mowrey is the CEO of 8G Solutions, a leading U.S. contract glazier. He has more than 40 years of experience in the commercial glass and glazing industry gained over 5 decades. Mr Mowrey has led several companies to significant growth and onto an innovation path including Harmon Inc., Guardian Glass and others.
Inside Ownership Ordinary Shares % CPV Issued Net Value at $0.50
Victor Rosenberg 27,130,198 11.21% $13.565m
Martin Deil 1,084,000 0.45% $542K
Jamie Lyford 9,476,618 3.91% $4.739m
Gerd Hoenicke 236,900 0.10% $118.45K
Chuck Mowrey 0 0 0
Total 37,927,716 15.66% $18.963m
*Only accounted for Ordinary Share not the Option
Hypothetic Real World Application
Solar panels, in real-world conditions, typically produce between 200 to 300 watts per square meter. Contrastingly, the latest generation of transparent photovoltaic glass, such as ClearVue, reaches a peak of 40 watts per square meter.
In one of Clearvue presentations they use the example of One World Trade Center (Freedom Tower) in New York City having over 93,000 sqm of glass and out of curiosity I wondered how much of its daily power requirements could be powered if it was Clearvue glass. With a bit help from Chat GPT, I have come up with an answer of less than 10% of the building daily requirements at peak output (probably bit too optimistic). Happy to be correct on the math or thinking too, if anyone has better understand or knowledge on the subject!!
To gauge the potential of transparent photovoltaic glass, let's consider the One World Trade Center (WTC) in New York City. With over 93,000 square meters of glass facade, the building presents an intriguing opportunity for solar energy integration.
Estimating Power Requirements: To estimate the power requirement of One World Trade Center, we consider various factors such as size, occupancy, and equipment. Assuming an average power consumption rate of 0.1 kWh per square foot per day, equivalent to approximately 350 megawatts (MW) of power per day, we gain insights into the building's energy needs.
Calculating Power Generation: Given the area of the glass panels (93,000 square meters) and the power generated per square meter (40 watts), we can calculate the total power generated. The result, 3,720,000 watts, highlights the potential contribution of transparent photovoltaic glass.
So assuming ~roughly 6 hours of peak production (depending on sunlight etc), resulting in 22,320,000 watts, or roughly 6.4% Building requirements.
Maybe jumping into subject to deeply but if you were to use the 93,000 square meters on solar panels which from quick research would cost same or less than transparent photovoltaic glass and obviously not on the building (in field/solar farm) it would power ~48% building requirements under the same assumptions.
The spark for diving into this stock came from an intriguing episode of the Tech Zero podcast by the Australian Financial Review. They shed light on sustainable architecture, highlighting how Atlassian's headquarters is changing the game.
Looking into the construction industry, it's clear it's a big contributor to global carbon emissions, making up around 39% of energy-related carbon dioxide emissions globally, as per the International Energy Agency.
In response to this challenge, ClearVue has stepped up with their innovative glass technology. It's not just about keeping things transparent anymore; their tech also generates electricity. They've come up with a clever interlayer that activates light passing through the glass to generate energy. Their latest windows can churn out a peak power of 40 Watts per square meter.
*Above Picture from ClearVue Investor Presentation 14/02/2024 Side 6
But what can you actually do with that? Well, quite a bit:
· Light up LED bulbs: You can illuminate multiple spaces with the energy harvested from ClearVue's windows.
· Power small gadgets: Devices like smartphones and tablets, known for their modest power needs, can be juiced up efficiently.
· Run small appliances: Everything from blenders to toasters could find a home in a sustainable energy ecosystem.
· Fuel low-power DIY electronics projects
While ClearVue is making waves, it's important to remember they're not alone in this space. Competitors like Solar Window Technologies, Glass to Power, ML System, Onyx, Next Energy Technologies, and Ubiquitous Energy are also making strides in sustainable glass tech.
Competition
· Solar Window Technologies (OTCMKTS: WNDW Market Cap ~US $16.492m ) https://www.solarwindow.com/about-us-2/
· Glass to Power https://www.glasstopower.com/?lang=en#
· ML System (Polish Listed on Warsaw Stock Exchange 2018 WSE: MLS) https://mlsystem.pl/about-us/?lang=en
· Onyx https://onyxsolar.com/about-onyx/company Private Company - Has done lot large scale projects
https://onyxsolar.com/projects
· Next Energy Technologies https://www.nextenergytech.com/faq
· Ubiquitous Energy https://ubiquitous.energy/about/
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