An upward graph made of grass inside a glass piggybank to represent investment in climate change solutions.
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Kiko Ventures joins the climate tech investment stampede with a $450m Evergreen fund

Given the dire predictions about the impending (and basically already here) climate crisis, the world can’t get enough climate tech funds right to power new innovation that can address the issue.

FTSE 250-listed investment firm IP Group has been investing in the area previously but has clearly “read the runes” and reshaped its existing investment strategy, thrown it in a pot, given it a stir and come out with a properly dedicated clean tech/climate venture fund. Kiko Ventures, an “evergreen” climate tech fund (because it’s coming from a listed entity, so it doesn’t have a 10-year timeline to return a fund like a normal VC) is launching today with a $450 million (£375 million) fund to invest in climate tech and “regenerative” technologies. It will invest at the seed and Series A/B stages or in the public capital markets.

Set to deploy £200 million over the next five years, Kiko will launch with existing assets that it says is already valued at over £175 million, as well as a number of new investments it has yet to announce.

The timing is ripe. After all, the Climate Tech VC newsletter recently suggested global investment in the sector has reached an all-time high of $40 billion last year, a trajectory which is likely to continue.

Kiko Ventures’ founding team comprises the existing IP Group clean tech team, led by Robert Trezona and Jamie Vollbracht, with new partner Arne Morteani, formerly of other clean tech VC funds.

Previous investments from IP Group include fuel cell firm Ceres Power (exited); First Light Fusion; and Oxbotica, (autonomous mobility software used by BP and ZF).

In a statement Trezona (founding partner, Kiko Ventures) said:

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We’ve launched Kiko to unleash the full power of human ingenuity by uniting ideas, expertise and capital to unlock a sustainable future. To do this, we’ve created an investment model of truly flexible capital that empowers change, rather than hindering it.

Last year, investors poured $10 billion into European startups tackling the climate crisis, up from $5.4 billion the year before, according to this year’s Atomico report.

By comparison, other European climate-focused funds in the space include Astanor Ventures ($325 million), World Fund (€350 million), 2150 (€270 million), Norrsken VC (€125 million), Blue Horizon €183 million), Emerald Technology Ventures ($100 million) and Pale Blue Dot ($87 million).

But Kiko appears to be the first (as far as we can tell) “evergreen” fund with access to public markets funding rather than a traditional VC.

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