Plus: Smalt raises new funding; what's going on in the EV market?; latest climate deals
View in browser
Sponsor Card - Climate tech-10

Morning Rico,

 

In recent weeks, most media attention regarding climate tech has been on Swedish battery giant Northvolt, and the problems it’s facing raising new funding to keep operations going. 

 

None of its large shareholders has yet disclosed whether or not they’ll put in additional capital. Meanwhile the Swedish government has said it won’t step in. I look into the latest in the Northvolt saga below. 

 

Elsewhere today:

  • Exclusive: General Catalyst-backed green energy installer training startup Smalt raises €8m
  • EV startups: Early-stage market map
  • Germany unveils €12bn initiative to bolster startup scene

P.S If you’re attending this year’s Sifted Summit on October 2-3, don’t miss my panel on European moonshot investments with Anna Fredrixon, cofounder of Norrsken Launcher, Andrea Ceccolini, co-CEO at Real Ice and Christian Bauer, chief financial and commercial officer, at Volocopter. And if you’ve not got your ticket yet, you can do that here.

 

— Mimi Billing, Europe editor

    /A message from our sponsor Groupe ADP

    It's not easy being green 

    Air travel is contributing to the pollution which is warming the planet. Action needs to be taken - and your startup could be part of the change. Groupe ADP — one of the biggest airport operators in the world — is hosting its fourth Airport Innovation Days for startups working on transportation and aviation solutions to promote their company, win money and meet investors.

    Apply now
    Section Heading - 2023-10-19T090236.962

    🇩🇪 German politicians announced that they hope to pour €12bn into the country’s startup scene by 2030 to provide more growth capital to startups and strengthen the German economy.

    • The so-called WIN Initiative, which was announced earlier this year, is set to mobilise money from public and private capital sources such as Deutsche Bank, Allianz, Commerzbank, Deutsche Telekom, AXA Deutschland and insurance companies such as HUK Coburg.
    • At the Startup Germany summit on Tuesday, a declaration of intent was signed by all parties supporting the initiative (to cheers from the audience), including 20 corporations such as BlackRock and Deutsche Börse, and Chancellor Olaf Scholz himself.
    • Politicians clarified how the hoped-for €12bn will be spent, though no details were given about how much money has already been committed.

    🇩🇪 Berlin-based Smalt, a training academy and tech platform for the green energy installation industry, has raised €8m in seed funding led by proptech VC Noa, formerly A/O PropTech. Existing investors including General Catalyst and Owl Ventures also participated in the round. 

    • Smalt upskills and deploys workers to install green energy systems like solar panels, with a focus on employing migrant workers in Germany. The round came ahead of schedule for the Smalt team, which raised €4.1m last spring, the company tells Sifted.

    🇬🇧 In the UK, Dozens of green vehicle technology projects including ultra-lightweight vehicles, zero emission buses and new battery technology are set to benefit from £88m of joint industry and government funding.

    The big story

    Northvolt — a poster child of European climate tech which has raised €11bn since it was founded in 2016 — has hit troubled waters in recent months, and is now in urgent need of fresh capital.

     

    The Swedish battery maker had its eyes on a further $1.2bn, but is now trying to raise half that amount, according to Swedish media Dagens Industri.

     

    Last week, as the first part of a strategic review, the company also announced job cuts and the closure of two sites, and plans to double down on production from its main site in the north of Sweden after a period in which it has suffered from production delays and cancelled orders. 

     

    A lawyer with insight into the company tells me its response to the strategic review can be seen as a way to cut costs as well as making it look more favourable to investors. Others, including investors, experts and Swedish media, are asking whether Northvolt will be able to turn things around.

     

    Who could save Northvolt’s financial situation?

     

    Northvolt’s largest shareholder, according to its annual report for 2023, is German car manufacturer Volkswagen, which owns 21% of the battery maker. VW is facing its own challenges caused in part by falling demand for EVs in Europe. It recently announced that it’s considering closing factories and quit a labour agreement that protected workers from layoffs. As Germany’s largest private employer, and the politics involved with strong unions, it’ll be difficult politically to invest more capital in the Swedish gigafactory, one banker with knowledge of the situation tells me, saying that “VW’s hands are tied.” 

     

    VW hasn’t disclosed if it’ll put more money into Northvolt, but it did tell Bloomberg on Monday that it supports "the industrial ramp-up of the existing production.” 

     

    As well as being a major shareholder, VW is also Northvolt’s largest offtaker: it ordered $14bn worth of battery cells in 2021 to be delivered across a 10-year period. Earlier this year, Sifted asked Northvolt and Volkswagen how many cells should have been produced as part of that deal by mid-2024 and how many had actually been produced, but did not receive comment on the matter from either company. In the first nine months of 2023, Northvolt produced 79.8 MWh worth of battery cells, compared to the total capacity of its plant, some roughly 16k MWh (16 GWh) per year, according to documents seen by Swedish Di.

     

    Northvolt’s other major shareholder, Goldman Sachs, holds a 19% stake in Northvolt, according to the company’s cap table. Like VW, Goldman has not disclosed whether it’ll inject fresh capital into the struggling company.

     

    Harald Mix’s investment company Vargas is also on the cap table with Northvolt cofounder and CEO Peter Carlsson: together they own 13.9% of the company. Vargas, also a company builder, and Carlsson, an individual, are unlikely to be able to inject the capital to save the situation — but as my banker contact tells me, "It could be solved if, for example, Harald Mix used his network to get someone to step in at last minute." 

     

    Will the state step in?

     

    On Monday, the Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson ruled out rescuing the company. “There is no question of the Swedish state going in and becoming a shareholder. Right now, the ball is in the court of Northvolt’s shareholders,” he said at a press conference. “We don’t involve ourselves in the business plans of individual companies but we do want to be a good place for this kind of industry.” 

     

    Germany had €902m worth of state aid approved by the EU earlier in the year to support the construction of a Northvolt gigafactory in Heide. Yesterday, a German minister told Dagens Industri that the German government is in dialogue with Northvolt, “to find a solution for it to succeed,” however, they didn’t answer whether the government is open to additional support in the current crisis. 

     

    Without the consent of the EU though, it’s not that easy to do, Bo Becker, head of the finance department at the Stockholm School of Economics, tells Sifted. Instead of EU member countries investing directly in companies, the EU would be the one to offer financing in terms of a loan, he says.

     

    The European Investment Bank (EIB) already agreed earlier this year to finance Northvolt’s gigafactory in Northern Sweden, with a total lending package of around $1bn.

     

    Sweden's media frenzy

     

    Northvolt has long been a media darling in Sweden, but since reports of deaths at its Norrsken factory last year as well as the challenges it’s faced this year, there has been a 180-degree turnaround in the tone of reporting.

     

    In the last week, headlines of the threat of insolvency at Northvolt have been widespread and experts and editorial opinion pieces are questioning whether anyone can step in to save Northvolt at this stage. 

     

    As one lawyer tells me, if someone came in it would likely be with a long list of demands and added security for the investment, which may make some other shareholders uneasy. As one banker close to the dealings tells me: “The shareholders are driven by different interests, and at the moment, they are putting sticks in each other's wheels."

     

    Carlsson asked employees in a team wide meeting last week not to speak to reporters, according to a video recording shared with local media. He also said: “the road ahead will also be a turbulent one for Northvolt. We have to make further decisions that are painful, to secure the long-term viability of the company”. 

     

    Northvolt’s woes show the huge challenge faced by Europe’s infrastructure companies: a new breed of startup far more capital-intensive than the rest of the tech ecosystem. The companies have to convince the world’s deepest-pocketed investors to back them, all in the face of mounting competition from a heavily-subsidised battery supply chain in China. 

     

    Northvolt, as Europe’s best-funded climate tech, carries a lot of the continent’s climate ambitions on its shoulders — and the latest turns accentuate the difficulties of doing something for the first time, and how important it is to manage the expectations regarding production.

     

    — Mimi

    ADVERTISEMENT

    Digital ad (1)-1
    Story of the week (5)
    Screenshot 2024-09-19 at 10.48.12

    Growth in EV sales in Europe is slowing, which means major carmakers, in turn, are slowing their investment in new battery-powered models, dialling back their ambitious electrification goals. Volvo, for example, recently adjusted plans to become a fully electric car manufacturer by 2030.

     

    To compete on price with Chinese rivals as well as falling oil prices and the expiration of auto subsidies for EVs, EV-related costs need to come down — a lot. This is where startups can come in. 

     

    The level of VC funding into EV tech has dropped significantly from last year. That said, there’s still been a steady charge of EV deals in Europe so far in 2024 for charging infrastructure startups. In January, for example, Paris-based EV-charging startup Electra raised a €304m Series B, then in February Lisbon-based Powerdot raised €100m funding to expand its EV charging network across Europe.

     

    Dig into market trends, the most active investors and funding figures more in our latest briefing.

     

    For access to our full briefing library, plus our weekly deals newsletter breaking down the latest funding trends and unlimited access to Sifted’s journalism, subscribe to Sifted Pro.

    Section Heading - 2023-11-02T100551.468

    What does the future airport look like?

     

    The increasing pressure on aviation to reduce fossil fuel use is kicking all kinds of climate-friendly innovation into gear, from vertiports to hybrid planes. Our report explores the new tech revolutionising airports and the current pressure on the airport industry.

    Download it here
    Deals

    Munich, Germany-based Reverion, which is building reversible, carbon-negative power plants, raised $62m in Series A funding. Energy Impact Partners led the round and was joined by investors including Honda, European Innovation Council, UVC Partners and Extantia Capital.

     

    Barcelona, Spain-based Stark Future, which is developing electric motorbikes made from sustainable materials, signed a €40m credit facility with the European Investment Bank.

     

    Schiedam, Netherlands-based Battolyser Systems, which is developing hydrogen electrolysers, raised €30m in Series A funding from Global Cleantech Capital, Innovation Industries and Invest-NL.

     

    Copenhagen-based Matr Foods, which makes plant-based meat alternatives, raised €20m in debt funding from the European Investment Bank (EIB).

     

    Turin, Italy-based Tau Group, which creates technologies for the electrification of mobility, raised €11m in Series B extension funding. CDP Venture Capital and Santander Alternative Investments led the round.

     

    London-based Zevero, a global carbon accounting platform, raised €6.2m in seed funding. Japanese VC Spiral Capital led the round and was joined by investors including Indonesian VC East Ventures.

     

    Antwerp, Belgium-based Beebop, developers of power grid software used by utilities companies and grid operators, raised €4.9m in seed funding. Angular Ventures led the round and was joined by investors including Contrarian Ventures

     

    Paris-based Standing Ovation, which produces animal-free proteins for dairy products, raised a €3.75m Series A extension from investors including Astanor Ventures.

     

    Cambridge, UK-based Evoralis, a spinout from the University of Cambridge which is developing plastic-depolymerising enzymes, raised £2.5m in seed funding. Italian VC firm LIFTT led the round and was joined by investors including Cambridge Enterprise Ventures, Parkwalk Advisors, Backbone Ventures, Circular Plastics Accelerator and Archipelago Ventures.

     

    Faroe Island-based Ocean Rainforest, which grows and processes seaweed sustainably, raised €2.5m in Series A funding. Impact investor Triodos Investment Management led the round and was joined by investors including Grantham Foundation, Builders Vision, Katapult Ocean, Twynam and World Wildlife Fund (WWF).

     

    Paris-based Bib Batteries, which is focusing on extending the lifecycle of EV batteries, raised €2.2m in funding. Family Ventures led the round and was joined by investors including NextGear Ventures, SuperCapital and the Wendel family office.

     

    Rome-based Renewcast, which provides wind energy generation forecasting, raised €2m in seed funding. South Western Power Group (SWPG), part of US multinational MMR Group, led the round and was joined by investors including CDP Venture Capital’s Green Transition Fund.

     

    If you’d like to submit a deal, get in touch. 

     

    For more deals, analysis and M&A insight, become a Pro subscriber to receive our weekly Deals newsletter.

    Facebook
    twitter@2x
    Instagram
    LinkedIn

    Copyright © 2024 SIFTED (EU) LTD, All rights reserved.

    Sifted EU Ltd, 1 Friday Street, London, England, EC4M 9BT

    Simply unsubscribe to opt out of Sifted Updates.