ClearVue Technologies managing director and CEO Douglas Doug Hunt said: “Since taking on the role of ClearVue Chief Executive Officer on 28 July, the total market opportunity for ClearVue has grown significantly. While we expect delays and slippages, as is the norm within the construction industry, we are taking a conservative approach by planning for a book rate of at least 10%.”
Notably, the company says demand holds steady in powerhouses like North America, Europe and the Middle East, where trials have already proven the tech’s benefits.
In a July 2025 Hong Kong government trial ClearVue’s photovoltaic (PV) solar vision glass glazing clocked a blistering 2.6-year payback period, slashing building energy needs by up to 125% when scaled across a 40-storey tower.
Its Singapore SkyLab results from earlier this year, showed ClearVue’s insulated glass units (IGUs) offsetting up to 71% of a building’s energy consumption while cutting glare by 75%.
These aren’t lab curiosities but real-world wins transforming glass walls into revenue-and energy- generating assets.
ClearVue’s tech, patented to harvest invisible light wavelengths at the edges of transparent panes, sidesteps the bulky panels of yesterday, seamlessly fitting into vision glass, spandrels, balustrades, skylights, greenhouses and even shaded vehicle parking bays, turning urban jungles into off-grid power generators.
The company’s global footprint is expanding too. Recent installations at Melbourne’s CFMEU Training and Wellness Centre showcase production-ready IGUs from licensed partners, while sponsorships like the September RICS Awards in Melbourne amplified the brand buzz.
In South Africa, the company’s partner, Concept Business Group, spotlighted the tech at the Architecture ZA conference, tapping into Africa’s solar boom.
Additionally, a dedicated Manila bid desk team is currently being recruited alongside calls for Perth-based architectural drafters and marketing pros to turbocharge ClearVue’s responses to surging enquiries.
ClearVue is now conservatively eyeing at least a 10% closing rate on the pipeline, potentially unlocking millions in likely near-term revenues.
With volatility in renewables cooling - as noted by Simply Wall Street’s analysis of ClearVue’s stock metrics where it opined “CPV’s weekly swings steady at 16% over the past year, outpacing 75% of Aussie peers” - this pipeline signals a maturing play in a market projected to hit ~US$90 billion by 2030.
That US$90 billion is a rounded take on the building-integrated photovoltaics (BIPV) forecasts which also align with Grand View Research’s US$89.8 billion estimation by 2030 at a 21.2% CAGR from 2024, and close to Allied Market Research’s US$86.7 billion and Vantage’s US$93.8 billion.
As governments worldwide mandate net-zero buildings, examples being Australia’s 2050 targets and Asia’s urban solar mandates, ClearVue is primed to take a box seat in the new energy revolution.
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