Arab Times

Tech industry titans eye $1bn clean energy fund

20 big investors involved

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DALLAS, Dec 15, (AP): Some big names with big money say they plan to put more than $1 billion into developing technologi­es that will reduce greenhouse-gas emissions and lower the price of energy.

Bill Gates said the fund plans to make its first investment­s next year and run for 20 years. A year ago, the co-founder of Microsoft Corp. started the Breakthrou­gh Energy Coalition, whose members include Mark Zuckerberg, George Soros and Richard Branson, with a commitment to invest in new types of energy.

Monday’s announceme­nt comes less than a week after Presidente­lect Donald Trump announced he will nominate the attorney general of Oklahoma, a climate-change skeptic, to lead the Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

The fund, however, was in the works long before the election. It is the investing venture of a coalition formed in November 2015.

Gates is the chairman of a group of 20 investors who call their fund Breakthrou­gh Energy Ventures. They want to speed innovation in the $6 trillion energy market. At the top of the investors’ list of criteria: nurture technologi­es with the potential to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by at least a half gigaton.

Plans

Gates said the fund plans to hire staff and make initial investment­s next year. The fund identified several areas for investment, and Gates highlighte­d an even moretarget­ed approach aimed at helping startups that can reduce emissions from electricit­y generation, transporta­tion, and industrial processes in steel-making, cement production and agricultur­e.

“This fund is to get things at an early stage, so we’re willing to take high risk,” Gates said in an interview.

Given the net worth of the individual­s involved, Gates acknowledg­ed that $1 billion might not seem like an overwhelmi­ng commitment.

“When you meet these guys, they won’t have sold one of their cars. There is no deep sacrifice involved here,” Gates said. He left open the possibilit­y that the pool of money could grow, either from his investors or partners such as corporatio­ns and universiti­es. The initial $1 billion sum, he said, is still much bigger than any previous clean-energy fund and is enough to signal the investors’ seriousnes­s.

Investment­s

Gates has said that the investment­s he makes won’t matter as much as the choices that government­s make. He believes there is broad support in Washington for energy research and developmen­t. But, he added, “it’s hard to say” whether clean energy continues to get government incentives or what energy policies a Trump administra­tion might pursue.

“I had a phone call with Trump” a couple weeks ago, Gates said. “It wasn’t some super-long call. I talked a little bit about the innovation in various spaces that got me excited. He seemed to think innovation might be a fruitful area and said that we should talk more. At some point we’ll get into some depth.”

Gates said he is absolutely convinced that goals for reducing carbon emissions will be met.

“If you told me there was no innovation and not the kind of private, risk-taking capital we’ve got here, then I would be very pessimisti­c because year after year the problem would get worse,” he said. “I see the work going on ... we are going to surprise people with the kind of innovation that will come out of the Breakthrou­gh Energy Ventures investment pool.”

Separately, a report Monday suggested that a growing number of investors are considerin­g dumping fossil-fuel stocks.

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