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At a glance
Keeping quiet: Bloom Energy, a richly funded Silicon Valley startup, is keeping critical parts of its business plan secret as its first product launch draws international attention.
The promise: Bloom Energy’s fuel cells promise to allow homes and businesses to generate their own power, but it’s not clear how the company will get prices down.
What Bloom is saying: For the first time the company offered details about the price its customers pay for power, but experts said it wasn’t enough to gauge whether they’re saving money only because of generous federal and state subsidies.
Associated Press
K.R. Sridhar, CEO of Bloom Energy, holds up a fuel cell in front of Bloom Energy power servers at eBay offices in San Jose, Calif. Bloom hopes to make the cells available for home use.

Latest fuel cells in Bloom

– A secretive Silicon Valley startup working on a new way to produce cleaner energy is taking the wraps off its product: a huge box of fuel cells that it hopes will allow homes and businesses to generate their own electricity.

The technology from Bloom Energy, already used at major companies such as Google Inc. and eBay Inc., has been the subject of intense anticipation because it promises to produce more power – with less environmental damage – than other fuel cells on the market.

Yet analysts warn that the technology has yet to be widely proved.

“Fuel cells have always held the promise that they’re going to be this huge thing, but so far it hasn’t really materialized,” said Shu Sun, an energy technologies analyst with Bloomberg New Energy Finance. “What we are seeing is some of these fuel cell companies are making inroads into niche industries.”

A 2008 study by his firm found that the fuel cell market would reach $1.5 billion by 2015, primarily in wireless telecommunications, recreational vehicles and midsize “distributed generation,” which refers to fuel cells that would power, say, a block of apartments rather than individual homes.

Fuel cells themselves aren’t new. Scientists have been working on them since the 1800s, and they are used today in the space program, telecommunications and the military. They haven’t caught on widely for residential use largely because of costs.

Even in Japan, where fuel cells are common, their use is limited to powering smaller devices because those cells don’t generate a lot of energy, said Dallas Kachan, managing director of the Cleantech Group, a research and consulting firm.

Kachan said Bloom Energy’s product offers a “glimpse at this possible nirvana” of placing cells that can generate huge amounts of power closer to where the power is being used. Large technology companies could attach them to their computing centers, which can be energy hogs.

For instance, Google said Bloom Energy’s fuel cells are helping to power some of the facilities at the company’s headquarters in Mountain View, Calif. In 18 months, those cells produced 3.8 million kilowatt-hours of electricity – many more times the 16,500 kWh the average U.S. household consumes over that same period.

Kachan said Bloom Energy’s technology is exciting because of the amount of power it can produce and its ability to run on a variety of fuels, including renewable-energy sources.

Fuel cells make power through chemical reactions, but they need fuel themselves to work. Instead of only being able to use hydrogen, Bloom cells can use wind, solar power and whatever else is available.

Kachan also was drawn to the cells’ relatively low cost. The boxes businesses are buying cost $700,000 or more. The company hopes to have the price down to a few thousand dollars for residential customers.

Bloom Energy, based in Sunnyvale, has lured a high amount of venture capital – around $400 million, its co-founder and CEO, K.R. Sridhar, told “60 Minutes.” Bloom Energy declined to make executives or customers available ahead of the formal unveiling.

Kachan said he is “cautiously optimistic.”

“With $400 million having gone to this company, there are some exciting claims, but like everything else out of Silicon Valley, the market will separate fact from fiction, and will prove claims versus reality,” he said.