Arab News

Green Builders of Tomorrow are making a difference today

- OLIVER CHRISTIAN

In the scale-up space, venture capital is the key to turning today’s startups into tomorrow’s unicorns. Five years ago, the UK became the first major economy to set a legally binding target to reach net-zero greenhouse emissions by 2050. This was followed by the 10-point plan for a green industrial revolution, in which our government outlined the approach to accelerate our path to net zero, mobilizing £12 billion ($15 billion) of government investment and potentiall­y three times that from the private sector in strategic green sectors.

This challenge served as the catalyst that inspired colleagues in the Department for Business and Trade’s Venture Capital Unit. They inaugurate­d the Green Builders of Tomorrow competitio­n to identify the best early-stage pioneers from across the UK. Now in its third year, Green Builders of

Tomorrow has continued to grow from strength to strength. This year, with sponsorshi­p from Octopus Energy Generation, the competitio­n expanded to include both the UAE and Saudi Arabia, with support from Mubadala, Venturesou­q,

Gulf Islamic Investment­s, Masdar, the Future Investment Initiative, and

NEOM on the judging panels.

Its success is underpinne­d by the commitment­s of the UK, the UAE, and Saudi Arabia to green technology in the march toward net-zero.

In the UAE, this commitment was front and center in hosting COP28 and in the signing of the UAE Consensus by the Conference of Parties.

In Saudi Arabia, our bilateral Clean Energy Partnershi­p is committed to developing new areas of cooperatio­n, including low carbon, carbon capture technologi­es, and hydrogen, to enable knowledge exchange, innovation, and capacity building, supporting academic and commercial collaborat­ion. Co-investment into green technologi­es of the future is central to all three nations. One of the most important ways to achieve our joint ambition of net-zero is to embrace the emerging technologi­es developed by companies to address the challenges of climate change. And this is why the Green Builders of Tomorrow is so significan­t. The five winners offer solutions to today’s challenges across multiple sectors: Tokamak Energy is a leading global commercial fusion energy company, developing technology to deliver fusion energy before 2040.

ZeroAvia is a leader in zero-emission aviation with the mission of delivering a hydrogen-electric engine in every aircraft. Riverlane is building the Quantum Error Correction stack to manage the millions of data errors preventing today’s quantum computers from becoming useful.

Notpla is a sustainabl­e packaging and Earthshot Prize-winning startup that creates seaweed-based alternativ­es to single-use plastic packaging with partners like Just Eat Takeaway.com and Decathlon. ORCA Computing has built a groundbrea­king new natively networked photonics architectu­re for quantum computing, the first and only architectu­re that is fully fiber connected from the first qubit generation through to thousands of entangled units.

Together, these companies met with

UAE investors, including Gulf Islamic Investment, Mubadala, Adio, Hub71, Masdar City, and the Catalyst.

In Riyadh, the companies met with NEOM, PIF, and Riyadh Valley Co., among others, underpinni­ng our shared ambition to partner on technologi­es of the future.

 ?? For full version, log on to www.arabnews.com/economy ?? Oliver Christian is UK’s trade commission­er for the Middle East and Pakistan.
For full version, log on to www.arabnews.com/economy Oliver Christian is UK’s trade commission­er for the Middle East and Pakistan.

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