Solar energy is a growing source of electricity supply. Oil companies including BP and Shell recognized this early on and entered the solar industry when it was still in its relative infancy. These companies invested heavily in vertically integrated solar companies that were at one point among the largest in the world. But neither BP nor Shell was successful, and they both decided to exit the solar market. This stands as a paradox since such companies have the funds, the long-term perspectives, the management systems, the multinational presence and the lobbying clout to potentially succeed in this new energy industry. Why were they not successful, and why did they ultimately exit? This paper uses innovation theory to explore the reasons why large incumbent corporations typically fail to succeed in commercializing disruptive innovations at scale. Evidence from semi-structured interviews and discussions with former employees of BP Solar and Shell Solar confirm the explanatory power of key constructs from innovation theory in accounting for the big oil companies' experience with solar technology. Ultimately, the findings suggest that oil companies would have done better to treat their solar businesses as separate stand-alone entities.
[1]
Damian Miller.
Selling Solar: The Diffusion of Renewable Energy in Emerging Markets
,
2009
.
[2]
Travis Bradford,et al.
Solar Revolution: The Economic Transformation of the Global Energy Industry
,
2006
.
[3]
James M. Utterback,et al.
Mastering the Dynamics of Innovation: How Companies Can Seize Opportunities in the Face of Technological Change
,
1994
.
[4]
R. Yin.
Case Study Research: Design and Methods
,
1984
.
[5]
Joseph A. Schumpeter,et al.
The Instability of Capitalism
,
1928
.
[6]
H. Stevenson,et al.
A Paradigm of Entrepreneurship: Entrepreneurial Management *
,
1990
.
[7]
Ron Adner,et al.
The Wide Lens: A New Strategy for Innovation
,
2012
.
[8]
Howard S. Geller.
Energy Revolution: Policies for a Sustainable Future
,
2002
.
[9]
E. Penrose.
The theory of the growth of the firm twenty-five years after
,
1960
.
[10]
Thomas P. Hughes,et al.
The Electrification of America: The System Builders
,
2023
.
[11]
J. Tidd,et al.
Innovation and Entrepreneurship
,
2007
.
[12]
Clayton M. Christensen.
The Innovator's Dilemma: When New Technologies Cause Great Firms to Fail
,
2013
.