The new cash boost follows the UK government’s November announcement of its 10 Point Plan for a green industrial revolution
In a bid to position the UK as a leader in green technologies, the government is planning to inject £166.5 million (around $235.4 million) into the sector at a time when VC investment in climate tech is reaching a new high.
Last year saw investors pour record levels of VC funding into the UK’s climate tech sector, with just over $480 million invested across 39 deals, according to PitchBook data.
Carbon Clean Solutions, a provider of carbon capturing and storage technology, raised $22 million last July from backers including Equinor Ventures and Icos Capital. And First Light Fusion, an Oxford-based startup aiming to decarbonise energy systems, secured a $25 million investment in December led by Oxford Sciences Innovation.
The new cash boost, which is expected to create more than 60,000 jobs, follows the UK government’s November announcement of its 10 Point Plan for a green industrial revolution, which targets 250,000 new jobs. The plan will see the government invest £12 billion into green sectors with the aim of delivering a net-zero carbon economy by 2050.
The new UK funds will be awarded to entrepreneurs, businesses and academics who are developing technologies in areas including carbon capture, greenhouse gas removal and hydrogen to reduce emissions, as well as those finding solutions to decarbonize the UK’s most polluting sectors.
The UK’s drive toward promoting sustainable technology coincides with a wider European push to fund climate tech. Last year, the EU announced nearly €550 billion (around $673 billion) would be devoted to green projects over the next seven years—the largest single climate pledge ever made, Reuters reported.