Alliance Partners

Sunday, August 20, 2023

Innovafeed -a bug company raises close to $500m



Innovafeed (founded in 2016 ) is a bug business cofounded by  Bastien Oggeri, Aude Guo & Clément Ray.  that has raised a fresh  $260m in a raise led by Qatar’s sovereign wealth fundmaking total raise $460m 


Source: Innovafeed


Other investors include 

  • Paris-based Creadev 
  • Singapore state-owned fund, Temasek, 
  • global agricultural commodity traders ADM and Cargill, 
  • Future French Champions (a joint venture between Qatar Investment Authority and Bpifrance), 
  • ABC Impact, IDIA Capital Investissement and Grow Forward
  • La Caisse d'Epargne Hauts de France, Groupe Crédit Agricole, 


BNP Paribas, Arkéa and Société Générale contributed €38m in debt financing.


What it does 

Innovafeed operates two plants in northern France that convert the larvae of the black soldier fly into thousands of tonnes of insect oil and meal for pets, fish, chickens and pigs. 


The black fly has the ability to eat any kind of waste food. 


Bugs are high in nutrients and is a climate-friendly way of feeding fish and animals because the process uses maggots fed with agricultural byproducts, like rotting vegetables, on a fraction of the land needed for livestock. Soy and fishmeal, the traditional bedrock of animal feed in Europe, require a lot more space and can be harmful to the environment. 


“Every factory we build, it’s around 50k tonnes of CO2 avoided,” Oggeri estimates. 


“We won’t replace your burger at the moment — but we can start with snacks and sport nutrition [food],” he says. 


Buggy Growth 

Innovafeed are looking to build insect farms in the US and Asia, with the company targeting up to 20 sites, cofounder Bastien Oggeri tells Sifted. 


The company says it has signed contracts worth more than €1bn over the next 10 years.


Dutch insect farmer Protix has raised over $100m to date. Global competitors include Canada’s Enterra Feed and US company EnviroFlight. 


Rabobank, a Dutch lender, predicts that global insect production could reach 500k tonnes a year by 2030, up from just 10k tonnes in 2020.



https://sifted.eu/articles/innovafeed-animal-feed-insects


The World’s Biggest Bug Farm Wants to Decarbonize Fishmeal

With five floors of insect incubators, Innovafeed’s newly expanded plant in France can produce 15,000 tons of insect protein per year. https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2023-04-28/the-world-s-biggest-bug-farm-wants-to-decarbonize-fishmeal?in_source=embedded-checkout-banner



Research says that people want sustainable food


 More than half of U.S. consumers say they want sustainable food, according to a 2019 survey by the International Food Information Council, a nonprofit. Three out of fivepeople in the U.K. are willing to pay more for environmentally friendly food options, according to a survey of 1,000 people by professional services firm GHD released in November. 



Wednesday, August 16, 2023

VCs and Employees cash out 💰 for over $500m from SafetyCulture




SafetyCulture founded by  Luke Anear raises $34 million while planning a $500 million VC share sale at a $2.7 billion valuation.


Safety Culture turnover is $132m (32% up from previous year )- valuing it at 20X revenue !


Anear said the funding and the turn to profitability would take them to the flywheel -  giving them  an “infinite runway”


It’s our understanding that $500 million will payout  Blackbird and Index Ventures  who have invested for 10 years as well as employees who have participated in their share scheme.


This should free up equity to allow you to investment  from US VC at a higher valuation giving a payday for the funds LPs ands empmoyees! 


Blackbird also sold $150m of Canva shares  last week,


What does Safetyculture do ?


It helps keep your workplace safe easily and affordable by providing an extensive library of resources crafted by safety experts who understand the complexities of health and safety programs. Safe Work Method Statements (SWMS)Management Plans and much more are available to help you meet compliance standards, protect employees and keep your business running smoothly.


Examples of products you can buy from their extensive library  are quality management systems for $700 , quality management systems for $30and risk management plans for $50!


Any company, large or small  can create their  own safety library with their own logo on a saas model! 


IK note!  A Learning Platform  should fit into this space - which boards well for the likes of Edtech, BSI learning be a part of the #nexttechrevolution ! 


Monday, August 14, 2023

Pendulum raises a further 14.5m after a 6.75m raise 2 years ago


Sydney-based customer communications start-up Pendula has closed a $14.5 million funding round led by Octopus Ventures after they raised  $6.75 million in a series B funding round  from  MA Financial Group  and Equity Venture Partners 2 years ago -  in 2021!


Pendula has built a very impressive product that enables its equally impressive customer base to quickly and easily communicate with businesses through automated SMS and emails and has an impressive client base managing over 20m conversations.


Clients  include iconic brands including amaysim, Cancer Council, TEDX, Ramsay Health Care and Origin Energy. 


The product has enabled its  clients to attain 500% increases in conversation rates and 430% stronger engagement when compared to traditional email-based customer communications.

Saturday, August 12, 2023

Upstream a Solar Energy company has raised $20 million






 Upstream  a Solar Energy company founded by Nathan Begley has raised $20 million from MA Financial’s growth ventures business. 


Upskilled helps corporates go solar and save money !


Upskilled places solar panels on its clients’ sites, who then purchase energy from Upstream, instead of the grid at a lower cost.


They currently operate 15 megawatts of rooftop solar energy and battery storage and is looking to reach 100 MW in three years.


“The generation amount of coal fired power stations that will be shut down in the next 11 years is the same amount of generation needed by the state of NSW at 7.00am in the morning – 7 GW or 7 million kilowatts. To power the electric vehicles needed in future is 40 times that amount. We need to invest massive amount of money and innovation into fixing this problem.“

Nathan Begley, Managing Director of Upstream Energy

Wednesday, August 09, 2023

Four lessons-learned from founders at Main Sequence - Peerless



Peerless -  Main Sequence portfolio forum . Collaboration learning and growth at its finest 
Phil Morle share 4 insights taken from The Main Sequence portfolio annual meetup called Peerless where 55 companies gathered to connect , contribute and collaborate with a view to learn and grow 
He shares 4 common ideas that resonated with him - Thanks Phil Morle for your insights !

#1 — Communities can’t prosper online alone

Post-pandemic, I am slowly remembering this. Life online can default to a transactional and hollow mode. We get lost in urgent, literal work and miss the magic that happens when people come together.
This is where our intuition pulls us into the conversations we need to have. We find inspiration in places that we would not think to visit. When people are in the same room, the ‘ecology of talent’ is visible and the collective power of the group that Brian Eno calls Sceniussprings into life.

#2 — Growth comes in stages, and phase transitions are always messy

After all these years of making companies, it is still possible for me to believe that a perfect, smooth growth experience is possible. It isn’t. I finally accepted this at Peerless.
As companies grow, they reach a point where they can’t grow any further in their current shape. There are structural reasons for this. The right team for what we just did is the wrong team for what we need to do next. The cap table may misalign shareholders to adjust the strategy. Or we ran out of customers in the set where we found product/market fit.
There are many reasons. But all companies hit a conflation of headwinds at some stage. This requires recognition in the first instance, then a deliberate effort for phase transition.
What usually happens is one of these two things:
  • Companies don’t see (or resist) phase transition and growth plateaus, or
  • Companies find themselves in a forced phase transition.
In both cases, it hurts like crazy. It looks messy. It looks like failure.
But it isn’t. It is normal.
Let’s figure out how we sense an incoming phase transition.
Then accept it will hurt like hell.
Then get into it.
This is the work.

#3 — A Founder's first responsibility is to ensure the best CEO is in the seat.

The ‘Founder’ and the ‘CEO’ are often the same person, especially in the early stages. But they don’t need to be. And sometimes they shouldn’t be. The CEO of a startup is an impossibly difficult task, and there is much personal development to be done so that the person grows with the company.
How do Founder/CEOs know that they are still the best person to be in the CEO seat? How are they measuring their own performance to take on new skills and capabilities or perhaps knowing when to find a replacement?
As one of the biggest shareholders in a company, the Founder’s first responsibility is to have the best person in the world leading the company.
Some ideas:
  • CEOs accept they can’t do everything they need to do yet and need to establish a program for learning it. Like professional athletes, CEOs need to train. No matter how experienced they are.
  • Find someone outside the company to share experiences with. The old cliche holds true that ‘It is lonely at the top’. Find who you can share experiences with to explore your own mind.
  • If CEOs bring on a coach, consider that you might need a different coach for the different stages of the company. Coaches run out of ‘experience capacity’ as well as CEOs.

#4 — Pay attention to the people when building an enduring businesses

Neil Perry joined us to discuss how he has grown his food business, including restaurants, TV shows, books and the Qantas food service. His secret is an idea he calls the “Care Principle”.
We don’t think about that enough in venture and startups. We’re transactional, looking for every optimisation and efficiency and sometimes not thinking enough about how it makes the team feel and how that, in turn, makes the company perform.
He said at one point:
“I want everyone that leaves one of my companies to leave a better person than the one that walked in.”
It is easily said but non-trivial to do. How do you operationalise that? How is an encounter with a team member different every single time because this is a guiding principle?
If you care, what do you do differently?
He told a story about the price of fish at the market and a relationship with a supplier. If the market price is less than the price that has been agreed, do you haggle? Or do you acknowledge that that supplier goes to sea each day to catch the freshest fish that you rely on each evening in the restaurant, so you stay with the agreed price?
If you care, what do you do differently?
🖖🏻 #hack+hustle+flearn
Phil is a deep tech investor, and he’s  building out loud. Subscribe here or follow him @philmorle

Collaboration between Universities, Corporate and Government is key


Another great example of the collaboration between universities and tech companies!!!

Universities working alongside tech companies is a proven formula. 

Stanford University and Silicon Valley coexist in a collaborative and symbiotic way. Seeding over 6000 tech companies and 45 unicorns in recent years. 

A pleasure to pop by the ATOMOS offices yesterday in Melbourne. Strategically placed in the modern offices of the University of Melbourne’s engineering and tech  tower in Swanson St. And great to catch up with newly appointed advisor to the Atomos board and chair of the audit and risk committee, James Joughin 

Atomos is a great Australian tech company, with a world wide brand presence in hi rez video monitor tech for the broadcast and entertainment industries.

(Paul Greenberg has been recently  appointed non exec chair of the Atomos board).

Monday, August 07, 2023

Side Stage Ventures backed by founders of Linktree, Go1 and Airtasker




A $30m early stage fund -   Side Stage Ventures led by   Ben Grabiner and rich lister Markus Kahlbetzer  has been backed by a bunch of 

Aussie tech start-ups and funds .


Kahlbetzer was a founding partner at Tank Stream Ventures which led the seed round of ed-tech unicorn Go1 - and Andrew Barnes and  Tim Fung is now backing Markus!


Whose invested 


Limited Partners include 

  • Alex and Anthony Zaccaria of Linktree 
  • Tim Fung and Andrew Barnes of Go1 , 
  •  Matt Allen from Tractor Ventures , 
  • Jaddan Comerford of Unified Music 
  • Andrew Barnes of UK-based venture fund LocalGlobe


“Focus will be in investing up to $500k seed funding in creative arts and talent startups to help scale their businesses.



Some of its investments Heaps NormalMr Yum and EQL


Markus Kahlbetzer told Tegan Jones of startupdaily that the start-up ecosystem in Australia is ripe with innovation, with some successful unicorns as proof of concept!


He enthused


“We have world-class talent, a burgeoning startup ecosystem, government support and plenty of other competitive advantages in a post-COVID world that can transform Australia into a world-leading innovation hub. There has never been a better time to build and invest in Australia than now.”


Bens shares in a blog  why he is so excited https://medium.com/side-stage