UNITED STATES
 SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
 
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ACORN ENERGY, INC.

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EXPLANATORY NOTE

The following definitive materials are filed herewith related to the Registrant’s Annual Meeting to be held on June 10, 2010:

·  
Notice and Access Card (mailed to beneficial owners by Broadridge)

·  
CEO’s Letter to Stockholders and Corporate Information Page (included in “10-K Wrap” Annual Report provided or made available to stockholders entitled to notice of the Annual Meeting)
 

 








 
 
4 West Rockland Road, 1st Floor, Montchanin, Delaware 19710
Phone:  (302) 656-1708    Fax:  (302) 656-1703


Dear Friends and Fellow Shareholders:
 
To date, Information Technology has transformed every aspect of American life except our two biggest expenditures--health care and energy.  We communicate differently than we did twenty years ago, we learn differently, we access entertainment differently -- we even socialize differently.  Yet, while technology itself has impacted the energy and health fields, Information Technology specifically has barely dented them.  These two sectors of the economy suffer from tremendous inefficiencies.  When Information Technology collides with the healthcare and energy industries, we predict this will unleash tremendous prosperity both for our society and for those investors who have positioned themselves for the coming change.
 
This isn’t the place to discuss health care, but the realm of energy is our bailiwick, so I’ll share a few thoughts.
 
The Enercosm is the coming world of networked energy.  Surprisingly, the number one use of energy is not our end use as consumers but the extraction, refining, and distribution of energy itself.  The production of energy is incredibly inefficient.  In the past hundred years, those who produce and distribute most of our energy – oil companies, coal companies and utilities – have relied on and benefitted from economies of scale.  That era, however, is drawing to a close.  What’s next?  An era where Information Technology unleashes economies of connection, causing continuing deflation in the real cost of energy even as we factor in the cost of externalities like emissions controls and security.
 
Acorn Energy has positioned itself to promulgate and benefit from the coming transformation of the Enercosm.  In 2009, as the energy industry just began to tip into the new economy, our unique focus enabled us to ride out 2009, the Great Recession year, with 50% sales growth -- a feat we expect to repeat in Fiscal 2010.
 
And we’re just getting started.
 
Here are some highlights for 2009 at our constituent companies:
 
CoaLogix, our award winning cleaner coal technology provider, grew its sales by almost 80% to $18.1 million, while gross profit increased by 156% to $6.3 million.  On January 1, 2009, the Clean Air Interstate Rule (CAIR) became effective, substantially increasing demand for CoaLogix services.  We and our co-investor, EnerTech Capital III L.P. and senior members of CoaLogix management, pledged $11.5 million in investment to build a second plant in Charlotte to meet rising customer demands.  We anticipate the Steele Creek plant will be operational in the third quarter of 2010.  CoaLogix is transforming the Enercosm by lowering the costs of emissions controls for coal-fired power plants.  CoaLogix sits at the center of the web of air pollution controls systems and is helping our customers optimize and lower the cost of NOx removal.  A recently announced collaboration with FLSmidth, a €3.5 billion market capitalization supplier of material handling equipment, will expand our portfolio of solutions to SO3 and mercury remediation.
 
Coreworx revenue for 2009, the first full year of ownership by Acorn, totaled $4.0 million. In 2010 Coreworx will introduce four new products that will expand the appeal of its main product and substantially lower customer cost.   This transition and the acquisition of Decision Dynamics (DDY-TSX.V) are expected to greatly accelerate revenue growth; however, we expect the sales acceleration will be heavily weighted to the last six months of the year.  Coreworx is transforming the Enercosm by developing software tools to improve the productivity of construction management and the global supplier networks required to build major capital projects.  We are helping move the industry from islanded data collected in Excel spreadsheets to networked, web based systems that provide actionable business intelligence and enable collaboration across the global supply chain.  The addition of Decision Dynamics will enable Coreworx to offer cost management in real-time that solves one of the industry's biggest headaches: poor tracking of contractor labor costs and earned value.
 

 
DSIT revenue in 2009 rose 10% from $8.3 million to $9.2 million. Gross margins increased from 34% in 2008 to 44% in 2009. Recently announced orders and a robust pipeline of sales leads are expected to increase revenue more dramatically in 2010.  DSIT is transforming the Enercosm by developing intelligent systems for lowering the cost of protecting existing energy infrastructure.  Energy companies are in the business of investing vast amounts of capital in energy infrastructure and then extracting cash flows over long periods of time.  Our customers are becoming increasingly aware that those assets can disappear overnight in a terrorist attack.  Like clean air, the security of energy assets has been taken for granted.  Public policy is requiring these externalities to be included in the cost of energy.  Acorn is anticipating these changes and is creating a market before others recognize the opportunity.

Two other exciting companies in our portfolio are well positioned for the transformation of the Enercosm.  GridSense, the results of which we will fully consolidate after our acquisition at the end of April 2010, continues to gain market penetration with its revolutionary smart grid technologies.  U.S. Sensor Systems Inc. (USSI), in which we have options to buy a majority stake, will enable us to expand our energy security offering to pipelines, perimeter fencing, and solar farms.  In addition, USSI’s sensor technology is poised to be an enabling technology for 4D seismic that may help solve near-term concerns over hydrocarbon depletion.

The economic history of the world is punctuated by “jump points” - changes in the business environment so startling that we have no choice but to rethink the future.  The tricky part has been identifying them at the right time.  Very often investors and the media mistake the arrival of a stunning new invention for the jump point.  Acorn recognizes that technology revolution is a fitful process.  New technologies, particularly in the energy business, take time to be absorbed and diffused.

Most jump points occur well after the enthusiasm settles and the parade has passed.  This is why we think our strategy of acquiring businesses at big discounts to previously invested capital, and only after the technology has been proven with reference customers, makes so much sense. In fact, we believe the most compelling opportunities of the developing cleantech industry are a continuation of the Internet and telecom technology aspects of the Information Technology revolution. The profound implication of this is that rather than making bets on traditional cleantech businesses that benefit from economies of scale (such as ethanol, solar, and wind), we are investing in businesses that benefit from economies of connection.  These businesses benefit by both being capital-light and offering accelerating returns as their network scales.  We believe our dual management/shareholder's perspective and corresponding patience with our opportunity is a big off-balance sheet asset.

In last year’s letter to you I asserted that the stock market had undervalued our shares.  Although it soon rebounded substantially, I continue to believe that the share price does not yet fairly reflect the full value of our business. In 2009 I acquired 75,000 shares, and as of this writing I have personally acquired another 75,000 shares in 2010.

Thank you, as always, for your continued faith in Acorn Energy.

Sincerely,

John A. Moore
Chief Executive Officer
 

 
COMPANY
DIRECTORY
ANNUAL REPORT 2009
 
HEADQUARTERS
COMPANIES
INVESTOR RELATIONS
     
For additional information regarding
Acorn Energy, Inc.
Acorn Energy, Inc.
CoaLogix Inc.
please contact:
4 West Rockland Road
11707 Steele Creek Road
Rod O’Connor
P.O. Box 9
Charlotte, NC 28273
Cameron Associates
Montchanin, DE 19710
www.coalogix.com
rod@cameronassoc.com
302-656-1707    
www.acornenergy.com
 
 
INDEPENDENT AUDITOR
   
 
     
DIRECTORS & OFFICERS
Coreworx Inc. Friedman LLP
 
22 Frederick Street, Suite 800
Certified Public Accountants
John A. Moore Kitchener, Ontario, Canada 100 Eagle Rock Avenue
Director, President, CEO and
www.coreworxinc.com
East Hanover, NJ 07936
Chairman of the Board
 
www.friedmanllp.com
jmoore@acornenergy.com
 
 
George Morgenstern
Director, Founder and
LEGAL COUNSEL
Chairman Emeritus of the Board
DSIT Solutions Ltd.
 
 
2 Rechavam Zeevi Street
Eilenberg & Krause LLP
 
Givat Shmuel, 54017 Israel
11 East 44th Street, 19th Floor
Richard J. Giacco
www.dsit.co.il
New York, New York 10017
Director
 
www.eeklaw.com
 
   
Joe Musanti
Director and Chairman
of Audit Committee
GridSense™
 
REGISTRAR AND
TRANSFER AGENT
 
 
GridSense Inc.
American Stock Transfer & Trust Co.
Richard Rimer
2568 Industrial Blvd, Suite 100
59 Maiden Lane
Director and Member
West Sacramento, CA 95691
New York, New York 10038
of Audit Committee
www.gridsense.net
www.amstock.com
   
 
Samuel M. Zentman
Director and Member
of Audit Committee
 
 
 
Michael Barth
US Sensor Systems Inc.
 
Chief Financial Officer
19835 Nordhoff Street, Suite B
 
 
Northridge, CA 91324
 
Joe B. Cogdell, Jr.
www.ussensorsystems.com
 
Vice President, General Counsel
and Secretary
   
     
David T. Beatson
Chief Technology Officer