How Biofuel Hype Burned CalPERS: $468 Million Clean-Energy Loss

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How Biofuel Hype Burned CalPERS: The $468 Million Clean-Energy Loss

When California’s giant public-pension system, CalPERS, set out to invest in “the next big thing” in clean energy, it poured nearly $468 million into a private-equity vehicle called the Clean Energy & Technology Fund (CETF). The promise was bold: accelerate climate innovation, profit from the energy transition, and show that public money could drive sustainable growth.

Eighteen years later, the fund’s performance tells a harsher story. As reported by The Center Square, CalPERS’s investment is now worth only $138 million—a 71 % loss, or roughly $330 million of principal wiped out. Add another $22 million plus in management fees, and the hole deepens toward $350 million.


The Cleantech 1.0 Era: Biofuels, Big Dreams, and Bigger Fees

CETF launched in 2007, during the so-called Cleantech 1.0 boom. Silicon Valley venture capital firms—clustered along Sand Hill Road in Menlo Park—were raising billions to fund green startups that promised to replace fossil fuels with renewable alternatives.

The star of the movement was biofuels: companies claiming to convert plant material or algae into drop-in gasoline and diesel substitutes. Funds backed firms like KiOR, Range Fuels, and Amyris, all of which later imploded or drastically underperformed.

A 2025 analysis by the Washington Examiner confirmed that CalPERS was a major limited partner in funds managed by Khosla Ventures, a marquee Sand Hill Road VC that bet heavily on biofuels, synthetic fuels, and advanced materials. Many of these ventures consumed hundreds of millions of dollars but never scaled past pilot plants.

When KiOR declared bankruptcy in 2014, for example, it left investors—including public pensions—holding worthless equity. Similar fates met Range Fuels (a $320 million DOE-backed ethanol startup) and Cello Energy in Alabama, all darlings of the mid-2000s green boom that never achieved commercial output.


How the Fee Machine Works

For the venture-capital firms managing these funds, failure didn’t mean poverty. VC partnerships typically charge a “2 and 20” structure—2 % of committed capital every year as a management fee, plus 20 % of any profits (the carried interest).

Applied to CalPERS’s commitments, that means that Sand Hill Road fund managers collected millions annually—whether or not their portfolio companies succeeded. Because these funds lock up investor capital for 10-12 years, management fees alone can equal 15-20 % of the total capital over the life of the fund.

CETF’s external managers and sub-funds followed similar structures. CalPERS records show at least $22 million in fees paid even as valuations cratered. Insiders estimate that, when layering the fund-of-funds model (CalPERS → CETF → VC → startup), total fee drag could exceed 25 % of the original commitment. That means taxpayers effectively financed both the losing investments and the venture-capital overhead.


Why Biofuels Went Bust

  1. Physics vs. optimism. Converting cellulose or algae into liquid fuel proved far more expensive than promised. Many early projections underestimated energy inputs, enzyme costs, and infrastructure needs.

  2. Cheap shale gas. The U.S. fracking boom drove down natural-gas and petroleum prices just as biofuel plants were coming online, destroying the business case.

  3. Policy whiplash. Federal subsidies under the Renewable Fuel Standard were inconsistent, and loan guarantees dried up after several high-profile failures.

  4. Capital intensity. Each new facility cost hundreds of millions to build, a scale incompatible with venture financing.

By 2013, the “biofuel bubble” had burst, leaving investors from Sand Hill Road to Sacramento nursing losses. CalPERS’s exposure through its clean-energy fund simply made those losses public.


The Broader Clean-Tech Fallout

Biofuels weren’t the only problem. CETF also bet on solar manufacturers, smart-grid startups, and energy-storage prototypes—all sectors hammered by global competition and collapsing hardware margins. Chinese solar giants like Suntech and Trina undercut U.S. producers, sending dozens of domestic firms into bankruptcy.

Still, the fund’s managers continued collecting their contractual fees. That’s the paradox of private equity: investors bear the downside; managers keep the management income.


Sand Hill Road’s Incentive Problem

Critics of the system point to a fundamental misalignment. Venture-capital firms profit from raising and managing funds, not necessarily from delivering consistent returns. Once a public-sector investor like CalPERS commits money, the VCs get paid for a decade, even if the portfolio goes to zero.

Some pension-fund consultants now argue that public money shouldn’t chase high-risk Silicon Valley trends where valuations are opaque and outcomes depend on speculative technology. Others say these partnerships still have value—but only if structured with stricter transparency and claw-back provisions.


CalPERS’s Defense and New Direction

CalPERS officials emphasize that CETF was created long before its current governance reforms. “It’s a legacy investment from 2007,” spokesperson Abram Arredondo said, noting that the fund has since reduced fees, expanded co-investments, and tightened oversight.

The pension system claims its newer private-equity strategies focus on infrastructure and large-scale renewables rather than startup risk. Overall, CalPERS’s private-equity portfolio delivered 14.3 % last year—healthy by industry standards—but the clean-energy loss remains a reputational stain.


The Accountability Gap

CalPERS refused to disclose the full list of companies or venture funds that CETF backed, citing state exemptions for alternative investments. That secrecy frustrates watchdogs and journalists who want to know exactly how public money was used.

Here’s where the old saying applies: “Sunlight is the best disinfectant.” Transparency acts like sunlight—it exposes hidden problems, deters conflicts of interest, and forces accountability. Without it, taxpayers can’t tell which managers profited while their pensions lost hundreds of millions.

Reform advocates argue that California lawmakers could require CalPERS to publish detailed performance reports on every private-equity and venture-capital relationship: fees paid, valuations, realized gains and losses, and names of the general partners involved. That level of disclosure already exists for some university endowments and could restore trust in the state’s pension system.


Lessons for Public-Sector Investors

  1. Avoid hype cycles. Cleantech 1.0 showed how political enthusiasm and media buzz can override financial discipline.

  2. Negotiate fees ruthlessly. Even small changes in fee terms can save tens of millions over a decade.

  3. Insist on transparency. Public funds should disclose the same performance data that private-market investors demand.

  4. Focus on proven technology. Large-scale wind, solar, and storage projects now offer steadier returns than early-stage biofuels ever did.


The Big Picture

CalPERS’s $468 million clean-energy loss is not just a financial failure—it’s a lesson in how mission-driven investing can go wrong when oversight collapses and incentives reward managers regardless of results.

The biofuel ventures that once promised a green revolution instead became case studies in over-optimism. The venture capitalists who sold that dream walked away with their fees intact. And California’s public employees—the teachers, firefighters, and civil servants whose pensions fund these experiments—are the ones left paying for it.


Sources:

  1. The Center Square – “CA state retirement fund lost 71 % of $468 M put in clean energy”

  2. Washington Examiner – “CalPERS clean-energy fund lost 71 % of $468 M”

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