Clean tech law could also address issues and conflicts surrounding the placement of such technologies (e.g., glare from solar panels).
[1] Now, clean tech, is generally considered to include multiple advanced technologies in four economic sectors: energy, water, materials, and transportation.
These technologies break down in the following categories: As a discrete legal field, clean tech law is in its infancy and so vaguely defined that it focuses as much on more familiar areas like liability and ownership as it does business models and corporate strategies.
The transactional side of clean tech law revolved around development and commercializing of new technologies in renewable energy, pollution, and other frontiers in the fight against climate change and protection of natural resources, and the creation of green jobs.
In addition, the basic economics are inseparable from substantive social and ethical issues posed by these emerging technologies.