A New Landscape for Climate Investment
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A New Landscape for Climate Investment

Investors are looking for on-ramps to clean-energy impact investments.

By Karen Hube
Tue, Dec 14, 2021 11:32amGrey Clock 2 min

By 2030, Wright Electric, a New York-based start-up, plans to introduce a 186-seat electric aeroplane with a 1280km range for commercial use. Its battery technology, which will be used in about a dozen engines to propel a single aircraft, is a major step toward achieving zero-carbon emissions in air travel.

But the technology is just half the story of how a group of entrepreneurs and engineers, led by Wright founder Jeff Engler, are helping revolutionise air travel. The second half is about how groups called climate-technology accelerators and incubators are helping entrepreneurs turn potentially transformative ideas into practical use, not only with investment and philanthropic capital, but through mentorship, networking, and advisory services.

For investors looking for on-ramps to clean-energy impact investments, accelerators and incubators provide visibility into the landscape of promising start-ups and opportunities to deploy capital.

These groups, which have exploded in numbers in recent years, are the bridge between the academics, engineers, and scientists who conceive of solutions to the world’s environmental problems and the corporations, municipalities, and nations that are looking for ways to meet ambitious climate goals.

“Big corporations and cities have developed these strategic energy action plans—they may need 50% of their fleet to be electric by 2030 or reduce greenhouse gases by 50% by 2040—but they don’t know how to get there,” says Bob Irvin, executive director of Joules Accelerator, in Charlotte, N.C., which elevates climate-tech start-ups in North Carolina and South Carolina.

“Typically entrepreneurs need a corporate partner to get to scale,” says Emily Reichert, chief executive officer of Greentown Labs, one of the nation’s largest incubators with an accelerator program based in Somerville, Mass.

This public-private symbiosis is increasingly being recognized by lawmakers as the key to greening technology across industries. Seventeen states have created 23 so-called green banks—not official banks, but accelerators that channel investment capital to speed up the adoption of climate technology.

“Collectively they have deployed $1.9 billion of green-bank capital to cause $7 billion in total investment,” says Jeffrey Schub, executive director at the Washington, D.C.-based Coalition for Green Capital, which is an incubator for green banks.

While the roles of accelerators and incubators can overlap, and often the terms are used interchangeably, typically an incubator provides physical space—offices, conference rooms, or laboratories—and the relationships with start-ups can endure for years.

For example, start-ups in Greentown Labs’ incubator program have use of 100,000 square feet of office and laboratory space and an open timeline. “Our accelerator program is more of a boot camp with limited time, and is almost completely virtual,” Reichert says.

An accelerator’s role is to provide anything from mentorship to investment capital, typically over a period of weeks or several months. Some will invest in start-ups, while others will serve as matchmakers between entrepreneurs and investors.

Nate Kirchhofer, chief executive officer of BioZen Batteries, a Santa Barbara, Calif.-based start-up developing environmentally sound batteries capable of powering massive operations such as solar-power fields, worked with the Los Angeles Cleantech Incubator (LACI), which has an in-house six-month accelerator program.

“LACI helped us hone our pitch, and we raised money by being part of the program,” says Kirchhofer, an electrochemist. “One of the main benefits was the networking and tons of contacts—the possibility to talk to investors, mentors, and meet similar early-stage, like-minded clean-tech founders.”



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Qatar Experiences the Fastest Non-Energy Business Growth in Nearly Two Years

Employment grew for the 16th consecutive month as companies expanded.

Fri, Jul 5, 2024 2 min

According to a recent PMI report, Qatar experienced its fastest non-energy sector growth in almost two years in June, driven by surges in both existing and new business activities.

The Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) headline figure for Qatar reached 55.9 in June, up from 53.6 in May, with anything above 50.0 indicating growth in business activity. Employment also grew for the 16th month in a row, and the country’s 12-month outlook remained robust.

The inflationary pressures were muted, with input prices rising only slightly since May, while prices charged for goods and services fell, according to the Qatar Financial Centre (QFC) report.

This headline figure marked the strongest improvement in business conditions in the non-energy private sector since July 2022 and was above the long-term trend.

The report noted that new incoming work expanded at the fastest rate in 13 months, with significant growth in manufacturing and construction and sharp growth in other sectors. Despite the rising demand for goods and services, companies managed to further reduce the volume of outstanding work in June.

Companies attributed positive forecasts to new branch openings, acquiring new customers, and marketing campaigns. Prices for goods and services fell for the sixth time in the past eight months as firms offered discounts to boost competitiveness and attract new customers.

Qatari financial services companies also recorded further strengthening in growth, with the Financial Services Business Activity and New Business Indexes reaching 13- and nine-month highs of 61.1 and 59.2, respectively. These levels were above the long-term trend since 2017.

Yousuf Mohamed Al-Jaida, QFC CEO, said the June PMI index was higher than in all pre-pandemic months except for October 2017, which was 56.3. “Growth has now accelerated five times in the first half of 2024 as the non-energy economy has rebounded from a moderation in the second half of 2023,” he said.

 

MOST POPULAR

Chris Dixon, a partner who led the charge, says he has a ‘very long-term horizon’

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