Dubai Telegraph - 'Not crazy to be optimistic' on climate tech, Gates tells investors

EUR -
AED 4.207188
AFN 72.747127
ALL 94.522947
AMD 420.891414
ANG 2.051074
AOA 1051.654532
ARS 1676.580608
AUD 1.635534
AWG 2.064932
AZN 1.941136
BAM 1.952976
BBD 2.307307
BDT 140.496849
BGN 1.937062
BHD 0.432043
BIF 3416.05302
BMD 1.145594
BND 1.479014
BOB 7.909563
BRL 5.902669
BSD 1.145609
BTN 107.994816
BWP 15.568603
BYN 3.183079
BYR 22453.63325
BZD 2.303909
CAD 1.625282
CDF 2611.953355
CHF 0.925674
CLF 0.026247
CLP 1032.993657
CNY 7.755207
CNH 7.765681
COP 3949.78884
CRC 519.690857
CUC 1.145594
CUP 30.358229
CVE 110.105793
CZK 24.186002
DJF 203.99687
DKK 7.474568
DOP 66.960168
DZD 152.91815
EGP 57.161796
ERN 17.183903
ETB 181.324038
FJD 2.575008
FKP 0.865737
GBP 0.866957
GEL 3.036137
GGP 0.865737
GHS 12.819464
GIP 0.865737
GMD 84.204043
GNF 10036.029975
GTQ 8.731375
GYD 239.433792
HKD 8.980611
HNL 30.644771
HRK 7.532618
HTG 149.64229
HUF 351.691461
IDR 20424.500704
ILS 3.39594
IMP 0.865737
INR 108.218146
IQD 1499.431902
IRR 1575191.108326
ISK 144.063115
JEP 0.865737
JMD 181.012323
JOD 0.812188
JPY 185.201811
KES 148.251191
KGS 100.181797
KHR 4594.247018
KMF 492.00917
KPW 1031.034581
KRW 1758.377232
KWD 0.352866
KYD 0.954615
KZT 559.062556
LAK 25299.72938
LBP 102584.781028
LKR 382.329231
LRD 208.494155
LSL 18.890698
LTL 3.38264
LVL 0.692958
LYD 7.30659
MAD 10.66428
MDL 20.230789
MGA 4823.08884
MKD 61.604269
MMK 2405.150558
MNT 4101.708672
MOP 9.240938
MRU 45.719803
MUR 54.770554
MVR 17.699977
MWK 1986.418361
MXN 19.868097
MYR 4.757077
MZN 73.215224
NAD 18.890698
NGN 1561.913565
NIO 42.154924
NOK 11.107274
NPR 172.793212
NZD 1.999279
OMR 0.440465
PAB 1.144645
PEN 3.873499
PGK 5.021013
PHP 70.015239
PKR 318.665757
PLN 4.257627
PYG 7034.753905
QAR 4.172567
RON 5.238
RSD 117.355676
RUB 83.629808
RWF 1678.201706
SAR 4.300204
SBD 9.235115
SCR 16.954866
SDG 687.92911
SEK 10.989107
SGD 1.480634
SHP 0.855301
SLE 28.353755
SLL 24022.527792
SOS 654.710539
SRD 42.848065
STD 23711.473192
STN 24.485435
SVC 10.023906
SYP 126.624856
SZL 18.885601
THB 37.696321
TJS 10.61615
TMT 4.009577
TND 3.382309
TOP 2.758315
TRY 53.226229
TTD 7.768311
TWD 36.26834
TZS 3008.880825
UAH 51.463337
UGX 4165.976222
USD 1.145594
UYU 45.763828
UZS 13792.057424
VES 694.954452
VND 30152.021793
VUV 135.332323
WST 3.152438
XAF 655.56703
XAG 0.017228
XAU 0.000273
XCD 3.096023
XCG 2.064572
XDR 0.815308
XOF 655.561311
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.342751
ZAR 18.821412
ZMK 10311.709535
ZMW 20.534606
ZWL 368.88065
  • CMSC

    0.0500

    22.37

    +0.22%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    12.67

    +0.39%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0300

    18.4

    -0.16%

  • NGG

    -1.2400

    79.44

    -1.56%

  • BCE

    0.0000

    23.28

    0%

  • BCC

    3.8500

    74.66

    +5.16%

  • CMSD

    0.0000

    22.29

    0%

  • RBGPF

    -0.5300

    60.61

    -0.87%

  • AZN

    -2.9600

    174.93

    -1.69%

  • VOD

    -0.2300

    14.3

    -1.61%

  • RIO

    -2.5900

    100.08

    -2.59%

  • GSK

    -1.4800

    50.67

    -2.92%

  • RELX

    -0.8300

    31.18

    -2.66%

  • BTI

    -0.5800

    58.91

    -0.98%

  • BP

    -1.0400

    39.1

    -2.66%

'Not crazy to be optimistic' on climate tech, Gates tells investors
'Not crazy to be optimistic' on climate tech, Gates tells investors / Photo: Chris Jackson - POOL/AFP

'Not crazy to be optimistic' on climate tech, Gates tells investors

Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates on Thursday urged investors to get behind cutting-edge climate technologies he says would drive a "green industrial revolution" and a next wave of global prosperity.

Text size:

Over three days in an upmarket London venue, Gates showcased more than 100 companies making ground on cutting planet-heating emissions from carbon-intensive sectors most responsible for climate change.

Gates is a firm believer in the power of innovation to drive breakthroughs in heavily polluting industries like manufacturing, energy and transport.

He is the single largest investor in a fund he established in 2015 that has ploughed around $2.2 billion into early-stage technologies like low-carbon cement, zero-emissions aviation and sustainable building materials.

But in the quest to deploy these technologies more quickly at scale, Gates is seeking to widen the investor base from venture capitalists to pension and sovereign wealth funds.

Many of the innovations he has bankrolled are still at the lab level and not making a dent on the heat-trapping gases that drive global warming, let alone a return on investment.

Critics say climate technology is a costly distraction when deep reductions in emissions are needed today, as well as money to help the developing world cope with climate change.

Gates acknowledged that innovation alone would not solve the problem, but said there were several reasons to be optimistic.

Some of these companies are already rolling out innovations, he said, while others are showing great progress in short time.

"I think the clock is moving forward because of human ingenuity," he told reporters at the close of his Breakthrough Energy summit at a 19th-century dockyard in London.

"I do think we can provide all services that mankind wants with zero emissions without making the cost of those services higher... I don't think I am crazy to be optimistic."

- 'Green industrial revolution' -

Less than a decade ago, Gates said, there was very little investor interest in climate technologies.

He raised an initial $1 billion with other ultra-wealthy investors including Amazon's Jeff Bezos and Alibaba's Jack Ma, and their first summit in 2022 attracted a few hundred attendees.

But investors beyond deep-pocketed philanthropists are starting to pay attention to climate start-ups long deemed too risky a bet, industry figures show.

At the London event, Gates brought together around 1,500 executives from banks, state-backed investment funds and major businesses.

In one pavilion, potential investors inspected hydrogen-electric aircraft engines designed by ZeroAvia, hunks of low-carbon steel manufactured by Boston Metal, and an enormous magnet used by Commonwealth Fusion Systems to test fusion power.

Source, a company that uses a "hydropanel" to harvest water from vapour in the atmosphere, quenched thirsts on a hot summer's night.

The fast rise in investor interest was obvious and understandable, said Tim Heidel, CEO at Veir, a company backed by Gates that is exploring high-temperature conduction to improve electricity transmission.

"They have an opportunity to build some of the largest companies on the planet," Heidel told AFP at a reception night where attendees drank cocktails with names such as "electricity elixir" and listened to a string quartet.

Gates told investors that "if you're helping to solve climate, the chance of building very large, very profitable companies" would follow.

"I think it's fair to say that what you're seeing... (with) those companies is the foundation for this green industrial revolution," he said in an opening pitch after walking on stage to the sound of "Revolution" by the Beatles.

- 'Life or death' -

The optimism stood in stark contrast to the diplomatic climate meetings hosted by the United Nations.

Crucial negotiations in June toward a new target on climate finance ended in bitter disagreement over how much rich countries should pay poorer ones for their emissions.

Veteran US diplomat John Kerry said it would be the private sector -- not governments -- that would raise the trillions of dollars needed every year to confront the challenge, and new technology would drive that progress.

"It's not your average technology mission. This is life or death, literally," the former American climate envoy said Thursday.

This year is shaping up as the hottest on record, with floods devastating swathes of the globe while many parts of Europe, Asia and Latin America are sweltering under record-breaking heatwaves.

Without urgent emission cuts this decade, the world risks breaching 1.5 degrees Celsius of warming above industrial levels, the benchmark limit of the Paris climate accord.

Julia Reinaud, a senior director at Breakthrough Energy, said it was time to "double down" and get early-stage technologies from prototype to power grid.

"We don't have the 30 years that it took to develop solar to where it is today," she told AFP.

B.Krishnan--DT