Led ENERCOVERY (2015-2016), an SME Instrument Phase 1 feasibility study for modular green energy recovery with an integrated business model.
GREENE ENTERPRISE, S.L.
Spanish SME developing modular green energy recovery systems, with expertise in waste valorisation and clean energy business models.
Their core work
Greene Enterprise is a Spanish SME based in Elche focused on green energy recovery and renewable systems engineering. They developed modular solutions for capturing and reusing waste energy streams from industrial or commercial processes, combining technical system design with business model development. Their participation in waste valorisation research indicates broader interest in converting waste streams — thermal, chemical, or material — into usable energy. They operate at the intersection of clean energy technology and commercial viability assessment.
What they specialise in
Participated in RENESENG II (2018-2022), a Marie Curie research exchange network focused on renewable engineering for waste valorisation.
ENERCOVERY explicitly combined technical energy recovery with business model design, suggesting commercial viability assessment as a core competency.
Involvement in RENESENG II, dedicated to converting waste streams into valuable energy products through engineering approaches.
How they've shifted over time
Both projects fall within a narrow three-year window (2015–2018), making a meaningful evolution analysis difficult. Their earlier engagement centered on a proprietary energy recovery concept (ENERCOVERY, SME-1 feasibility), suggesting an innovation-stage product idea with commercial intent. Their later participation in RENESENG II, an MSCA-RISE researcher exchange network, points toward embedding within an academic research community focused on waste-to-energy engineering. The shift from leading a commercial feasibility study to joining a scientific exchange program may signal a pivot from product development toward deeper technical research foundations.
Greene Enterprise appears to be building technical depth in renewable waste valorisation after an initial push toward commercial energy recovery, potentially positioning for a Phase 2 innovation project or an industrial research partnership.
How they like to work
Greene Enterprise has worked in both coordinator and partner roles across just two projects, showing willingness to lead when they have a proprietary concept and to join as a research partner when building domain expertise. With 14 unique partners across 9 countries from only 2 projects, their consortia are geographically diverse — typical of MSCA-RISE networks. They appear to be a lean SME that punches above its size in terms of international reach.
Despite having only two H2020 projects, Greene Enterprise has connected with 14 unique partners across 9 countries, primarily through the MSCA-RISE framework which inherently spans European and international institutions. Their network skews toward research organizations and universities typical of Marie Curie consortia.
What sets them apart
Greene Enterprise is one of the rare Spanish SMEs from the Valencia region that has engaged in both commercial innovation (SME Instrument) and international research exchange (MSCA-RISE) within the energy sector. Their dual experience — developing a proprietary energy recovery concept and participating in academic waste valorisation research — makes them a credible bridge between applied technology and scientific research. For consortium builders needing an industrial SME partner with hands-on energy recovery knowledge and commercial orientation, they fill a niche that purely academic or purely industrial partners cannot.
Highlights from their portfolio
- ENERCOVERYCoordinator role in an SME Instrument Phase 1 grant — one of the most competitive EU funding instruments for SMEs — for a modular green energy recovery concept with an integrated business model.
- RENESENG IIParticipation in a large MSCA-RISE network (2018–2022) on renewable systems engineering, giving the company exposure to academic research on waste valorisation across multiple European countries.