Venture

5 areas where VCs can play an outsized role in addressing climate change

Comment

Image Credits: Javier Zayas Photography (opens in a new window) / Getty Images

Jamil Wyne

Contributor
Jamil Wyne is an advisor, investor and author focusing on entrepreneurship, technology and economic development in emerging markets. He has worked with the World Bank, IFC, UN, Clean Energy Venture Group, Schmidt Futures, Ashoka, and other organizations.

More posts from Jamil Wyne

While global tech and finance leaders have suggested that the world’s first trillionaire will be someone tackling climate change and that many climate unicorns are on the way, current VC levels are dwarfed by the mind-boggling funding amounts that are needed to give humanity a fighting chance.

As of October, climate-tech startups had raised over $32 billion in 2021 and, according to Dealroom and London & Co., U.S. VCs invested nearly $50 billion in climate-tech companies between 2020 and 2021. However, depending on whom you talk to, the climate finance gap currently sits at $2.5 trillion to 4.8 trillion.

To put this gap into perspective, total global VC funding (across all sectors, including climate) in 2021 was at an estimated $643 billion, and most countries in the world, aside from a handful, have a GDP under $4 trillion. Additionally, a sharp uptick in the number of climate funds and startups has some experts worrying about the potential of a bubble, and doubters may argue that traditional VC investment strategies are too risky to make a meaningful contribution to addressing climate change.

So where precisely do VCs factor into global efforts to address climate change? Indeed, a vast portion of the investments will be allocated toward infrastructure investments, as well as emergency funding, which will not yield venture-like returns. By the same token, new policies and national programs will be spearheaded by governments, and as conditions worsen in certain countries, foreign aid agencies will be crucial players.

Accordingly, we won’t be looking to VCs to write billion-dollar checks, create new policy incentives, or provide shelter and food to populations in need. However, VC funds and their investment strategies and networks have unique features that give them an important position in these global efforts.

Below we outline five key areas where we believe VCs can play a role in addressing climate change:

Image Credits: Jamil Wyne and Abrar Chaudhury

Backing and de-risking proven climate technologies

Venture capital has a vital role to play in de-risking climate technologies, which can help bring costs down, accelerate adoption rates and transform markets to enable a decarbonized future. Any hope of addressing the climate crisis requires helping entrepreneurs to mitigate technology risks and scale their innovations quickly and cost-effectively.

This is a role that the venture capital world is used to playing, and it’s critical now more than ever because there is such a wide spectrum of new climate-focused technologies the market has yet to embrace. Venture capital, and especially early-stage venture capital, can create a material impact by working with companies at this stage. Those that are successful will find a big pot of growth capital angling to scale their technologies.

“Early-stage VCs can play a pivotal role in helping climate tech startups with both capital and expertise for commercial technologies,” said Daniel Goldman, managing partner at Clean Energy Ventures. “For instance, a more sustainable approach to decarbonizing heavy industry by enabling a diesel engine to run on low- or zero-carbon fuels at the same cost and performance would have a material impact on long-haul trucking, agriculture and construction equipment, and backup resiliency-based power generation.”

Early-stage signaling for talent

Despite the growing number of headlines, climate tech is still a young sector and must demonstrate credibility to talented professionals. It may be obvious, but every founder will ultimately need tens, if not hundreds or perhaps even thousands of employees to follow them.

Once climate-focused startups convince investors to back them, they will need to recruit employees to follow suit. Second to dollars, inward talent flows are critical to the climate-tech sector, both in terms of augmenting its legitimacy as well as ensuring that these firms have access to the best and brightest.

According to Susan Su, a partner at Toba Capital, VC can create a significant impact by simply building legitimacy around climate tech, which has high importance in the eyes of job-seekers and talent. “It can be harder for early-stage startups to attract top-notch talent if you’re not VC-backed. Early-stage fundraising isn’t just about getting capital; it’s just as much about sending a signal out to the broader market of potential candidates, future employers, partners or even eventual acquirers that your company has been underwritten by professional investors who believe in its growth story,” she said.

Su argues that VC is an especially potent early signal for pre-revenue and pre-profit startups looking to build credibility with diverse stakeholders.

Navigating the value chain

VCs and their portfolio companies are essentially at the early stage of a value chain — at the beginning is a young business idea, and at the other end is a market with consumers, investors and partners.

VC funds tend to find companies when they’re still in the early days of that value chain. If companies find efficient ways to grow, they can attract larger ticket sizes at the later stages, and attract partners and customers in the process. Even the largest global tech corporations once started out at the beginning of this value chain.

Robert Murphy, a fellow at Breakthrough Energy and former World Bank economist, explains this value chain as a funnel: “The earlier-stage ideas will be the ones at the top of the funnel that will naturally evolve to the later stage, necessitating the larger funding rounds and more strategic partnerships that can open up new markets.”

By being an early-stage champion, VCs can help ensure that there is a smooth ramp for climate-tech companies as they enter this funnel, and, ideally, become primed for the journey toward scaling.

Ushering in new types of investors

VCs have the unique position of being able to encourage atypical investors to take climate change more seriously. Both incumbent and new VC funds that place capital in climate-focused startups can draw the attention of investors still on the sidelines.

Manu Schoenfeld and Andrew Kalish, CEO and head of business development, respectively, at PowerX, a YC-backed climate-tech startup, point to the work of groups like Fifth Wall Ventures and its Climate Fund being indicative of this effort. “The aggregation of capital from major real estate firms by Fifth Wall into a climate-specific fund shows how VCs can be a bridge between major industry players and the companies tackling climate change head-on,” said Kalish.

Clean Energy’s Goldman also observed the same trend: “We’re seeing incredible receptivity from a wide range of investors, including traditional institutions such as pensions, endowments and insurance companies, but also large family offices and major financial institutions.” He added that not only are more asset owners and managers entering this field, but venture capital is increasingly serving as an important component of their overall investment strategy.

Building the ecosystem

Beyond providing capital to early-stage companies, VCs can help orchestrate strategic partnerships and shape markets for their portfolios.

Climate change is unique in that it requires many actors from the public, private, civil and academic sectors to collaborate. Murphy feels VC funds are “well-placed to help startups develop strategic partnerships, navigate regulatory hurdles, and out-maneuver incumbents when needed.” They can also bring disparate actors together to help ease the pathway to revenue.

Successful climate mitigation and adaptation projects will be fundamentally multi-stakeholder, and climate VCs with deep industry and technical experience in the sector are among the few with the networks and ability to move fast, which is necessary for helping shape these ecosystems.

Where do we go next?

While the VC funds of the world indeed have a growing and prominent role to play in global climate change efforts, it is important to keep in mind that they are just one of many players in this equation, and there are limits on how far they can take us.

For example, It is widely documented that developing countries are the most vulnerable to climate change and the least prepared to deal with it. Goldman pointed out that while the U.S. and China are the largest carbon emitters in the world, emerging markets are in need of more financial and technological support to address emissions.

The cost of decarbonization in these countries is likely far higher than in OECD countries. Schoenfeld expresses a similar concern, saying that many VC-backed climate-tech solutions are hard enough to implement and scale in the U.S. and EU alone, while developing countries, with their limited infrastructure and purchasing power, are in more need of these solutions but are less equipped to absorb them.

While most VC verticals will be assessed in terms of how much they return to investors, climate tech may be unique in that its success will also be determined, essentially, by its contribution to the preservation of our livelihoods and how much it can avoid a winner-take-all dynamic. We are still in the early days, but optimism and anticipation are high, and VCs with their unique vantage and positioning can be leaders by creating credible, investable and scalable investments shifts in the climate space.

“We’re seeing unprecedented increases in valuations, but we may not appreciate the long game and the extraordinary paradigm shift at its embryonic stage, and therefore fail to appreciate the future scale of the opportunity in the coming decades,” Goldman said. “There’s a chance we’re being myopic — could this be like the Internet x100, impacting all sectors of society on a global basis?”

More TechCrunch

Hiya, folks, and welcome to TechCrunch’s regular AI newsletter. This week in AI, Apple stole the spotlight. At the company’s Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) in Cupertino, Apple unveiled Apple Intelligence,…

This Week in AI: Apple won’t say how the sausage gets made

360 One WAM, India’s largest wealth manager focused on ultra-high-net-worth individuals, has agreed to acquire popular Indian mutual fund investment app ET Money for about $44 million. 360 One disclosed…

India’s 360 One acquires mutual fund app ET Money for $44M

Helen Toner, a former OpenAI board member and the director of strategy at Georgetown’s Center for Security and Emerging Technology, is worried Congress might react in a “knee-jerk” way where…

Helen Toner worries ‘not super functional’ Congress will flub AI policy

Layoffs are tough. This year alone, we’ve already seen 60,000 job cuts across 254 companies according to layoffs.fyi. Looking for ways to grow your network can be even harder during…

Layoffs Got You Down? Get a Half-Price Expo+ Pass at Disrupt 2024

YouTube announced this week the rollout of “Thumbnail Test & Compare,” a new tool for creators to see which thumbnail performs the best. The feature first launched to select creators…

YouTube creators can now test multiple video thumbnails

Waymo has voluntarily issued a software recall to all 672 of its Jaguar I-Pace robotaxis after one of them collided with a telephone pole. This is Waymo’s second recall. The…

Waymo issues second recall after robotaxi hit telephone pole

The hotel guest management technology company’s platform digitizes the hotel guest journey from post-booking through checkout.

Insight Partners backs Canary Technologies’ mission to elevate hotel guest experiences

The TechCrunch team runs down all of the biggest news from the Apple WWDC 2024 keynote in an easy-to-skim digest.

Here’s everything Apple announced at the WWDC 2024 keynote, including Apple Intelligence, Siri makeover

InScope leverages machine learning and large language models to provide financial reporting and auditing processes for mid-market and enterprises.

Lightspeed Venture Partners leads $4.3M seed in automated financial reporting fintech InScope

Venture fundraising has been a slog over the last few years, even for firms with a strong track record. That’s Foresite Capital’s experience. Despite having 47 IPOs, 28 M&As and…

Foresite Capital raises $900M sixth fund for investing in life sciences companies

A year ago, Databricks acquired MosaicML for $1.3 billion. Now rebranded as Mosaic AI, the platform has become integral to Databricks’ AI solutions. Today, at the company’s Data + AI…

Databricks expands Mosaic AI to help enterprises build with LLMs

RetailReady targets the $40 billion compliance market to help reduce the number of retail compliance losses that shippers incur annually due to incorrectly shipped packages.

YC grad RetailReady raises $3.3M for an AI warehouse app that hopes to save brands billions

Since its launch in 2013, Databricks has relied on its ecosystem of partners, such as Fivetran, Rudderstack, and dbt, to provide tools for data preparation and loading. But now, at…

Databricks launches LakeFlow to help its customers build their data pipelines

A big shoutout to the early-stage founders who missed the application window for the Startup Battlefield 200 (SB 200) at TechCrunch Disrupt. We have exciting news just for you! You…

Bonus: An extra week to apply to Startup Battlefield 200

When one of the co-creators of the popular open-source stream-processing framework Apache Flink launches a new startup, it’s worth paying attention. Stephan Ewen was among the founding team of the…

Restate raises $7M for its lightweight workflows-as-code platform

With most residential solar panels installed by smaller companies, customer experience can be a mixed bag. To try to address the quality and consistency problem, Civic Renewables is buying small…

Civic Renewables is rolling up residential solar installers to improve quality and grow the market

Small VC firms require deep trust, mutual support, and long-term commitment among the partners —a kinship that, in many ways, resembles a family dynamic. Colin Anderson (Palantir’s ex-CFO and former…

Friends & Family Capital, a fund founded by ex-Palantir CFO and son of IVP’s founder, unveils third $118M fund

Fisker is issuing the first recall for its all-electric Ocean SUV because of problems with the warning lights, according to new information published by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.…

Fisker’s troubled Ocean SUV gets its first recall

Gorilla, a Belgian company that serves the energy sector with real-time data and analytics for pricing and forecasting, has raised €23 million ($25 million) in a Series B round led…

Gorilla, a Belgian startup that helps energy providers crunch big data, raises $25M

South Korea’s fabless AI chip industry saw a slew of fundraising events over the last couple of years as demand for hardware to power AI applications skyrocketed, and it seems…

Fabless AI chip makers Rebellions and Sapeon to merge as competition heats up in global AI hardware industry

Here’s a list of third-party apps that were Sherlocked by Apple at this year’s WWDC.

The apps that Apple Sherlocked at WWDC 2024

Black Semiconductor, which is developing a chip-connecting technology based on graphene, has raised $273M in a combination of private and public funding. 

Black Semiconductor nabs $273M in Germany to supercharge how chips work together

Featured Article

Let there be Light! Danish startup exits stealth with $13M seed funding to bring AI to general ledgers

It’s not the sexiest of subject matters, but someone needs to talk about it: The CFO tech stack — software used by the chief financial officers of the world — is ripe for disruption. That’s according to Jonathan Sanders, CEO and co-founder of fledgling Danish startup Light, which exits stealth…

10 hours ago
Let there be Light! Danish startup exits stealth with $13M seed funding to bring AI to general ledgers

Fresh off the success of its first mission, satellite manufacturer Apex has closed $95 million in new capital to scale its operations.  The Los Angeles-based startup successfully launched and commissioned…

Apex’s off-the-shelf satellite bus business attracts $95M in new funding

After educating the D.C. market, YC aims to leverage its influence, particularly in areas like competition policy.

Washington’s political class doesn’t know Y Combinator exists —  yet

Lina Khan says the FTC wants to be effective in its enforcement strategy, which is why it has been taking on lawsuits that “go up against some of the big…

FTC Chair Lina Khan tells TechCrunch the agency is pursuing the ‘mob bosses’ in Big Tech

With dozens of antitrust cases and close to a hundred on the consumer protection side, the agency is now turning to innovative tactics to help it fight fraud, particularly in…

FTC Chair Lina Khan shares how the agency is looking at AI

The ability to pause your activity rings is a minor feature update for most, but for those of us who obsess about such things to an unhealthy degree, it’s the…

Apple Watch is finally adding a feature I’ve been requesting for years

Featured Article

Why Apple is taking a small-model approach to generative AI

It’s a very Apple approach in the sense that it prioritizes a frictionless user experience above all.

18 hours ago
Why Apple is taking a small-model approach to generative AI

When generative AI tools started making waves in late 2022 after the launch of ChatGPT, the finance industry was one of the first to recognize these tools’ potential for speeding…

Linq raises $6.6M to use AI to make research easier for financial analysts