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The biggest European agritech deals in H1 2025

European agritech demonstrated measured resilience and strategic maturity amid a still-cautious investment climate. Rather than broad, hype-driven expansion, the sector showed clear signs of consolidation, technical depth, and stronger alignment with real on-farm and food-system needs. More attention went to areas tied to efficiency and sustainability, using fewer inputs, improving animal and crop performance, and strengthening resilience to climate and cost pressures. Indoor and controlled-environment growing continued to develop, but with a stronger focus on energy use, automation, and making the economics work. Digital tools also shifted toward helping farmers make clearer decisions, rather than simply collecting more data. The following are the ten largest funding rounds in the European agritech industry during the first half of 2025. Amount raised in H1 2025: €39M First Water is an Icelandic aquaculture company developing sustainable, land-based Atlantic salmon farming in Þorlákshöfn. Using advanced closed-containment technology, clean subterranean seawater, and Iceland’s renewable energy, the company aims to produce high-quality salmon while reducing environmental impact. Its approach supports strong biosecurity, stable growing conditions, and responsible production as it scales its multi-phase facility for both domestic and international markets. In April, First Water secured €39 millon to promote sustainable salmon production. Amount raised in H1 2025: €13M Fyteko is an agri-biosolutions company founded in 2014 that develops bio-based plant solutions for more sustainable agriculture. Inspired by nature and backed by science, Fyteko builds proprietary, chemically pure biomolecules used in biostimulants and biocontrol to improve crop performance, strengthen drought/heat resilience, and reduce reliance on conventional chemicals. In February, Fyteko landed €13 million to create biomolecules that protect and enhance the world’s crops. Amount raised in H1 2025: €7.5M Doktar is an agricultural technology company leading digital transformation in farming. Founded in 2017, it combines proprietary software, IoT devices, hyper-local weather forecasts, satellite imagery, soil analysis, and AI-driven models to deliver data-driven insights from field to market. Doktar helps farmers, agribusinesses, and food companies optimise operations, reduce input costs, and support more sustainable and efficient agricultural production. In June, Doktar raised €7.5 million to expand its product portfolio and scale its holistic service model globally. Amount raised in H1 2025: €6M Agteria Biotech is an agricultural biotech startup on a mission to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions by tackling methane from cattle, a major climate contributor. The company has developed AB-01, a patent-pending feed additive designed to significantly lower methane production in cows in a scalable, affordable, and science-backed way without disrupting normal digestion. Agteria collaborates with leading researchers and partners to bring its solution to market and support more sustainable livestock farming. Agteria Biotech raised €6 million in February to reduce methane emissions from cattle. Amount raised in H1 2025: €5M Avisomo is an agricultural technology company specialising in automated vertical farming and plant factory solutions designed to integrate with large-scale retail and food supply chains. Its modular systems enable cost-efficient, year-round cultivation of high-quality produce with minimal human interaction. Avisomo’s end-to-end solutions help reduce operational costs, improve scalability, and support sustainable indoor crop production. In January, Avisomo secured €5 million in funding to advance its indoor farming technology and support sustainable, large-scale local food production. Amount raised in H1 2025: €4.4M Biocsol is an agricultural biotechnology company focused on developing biological solutions for sustainable crop production. The company specialises in bio-based products that support plant health, improve resilience, and help protect crops while reducing reliance on conventional chemical inputs. By combining scientific research with practical agricultural needs, Biocsol aims to contribute to more efficient, environmentally responsible farming systems. In February, BiocSol raised €4.4 million to advance its R&D platform and to demonstrate global proof of concept for its first two biofungicide products. Amount raised in H1 2025: $4.3M Antler Bio is an agri-biotech company transforming dairy farming with its EpiHerd platform, which combines gene expression analysis and artificial intelligence to generate actionable insights at the herd and individual animal level. By linking genetics, environment, and farm management, the platform helps farmers improve milk yield, animal health, fertility, and longevity. Antler Bio’s approach enables earlier, more precise decision-making, supporting more efficient, profitable, and sustainable dairy production across Europe and beyond. In June, Antler Bio secured a $4.3 million investment to scale its world-first EpiHerd system. Amount raised in H1 2025: €3.5M Collie is an agritech company that uses artificial intelligence to improve demand forecasting and supply chain efficiency for fresh produce. Its AI-driven platform helps growers, distributors, and retailers better predict demand, reduce food waste, and optimise planning by turning complex data into accurate, actionable insights. By increasing transparency and efficiency across the value chain, Collie supports more sustainable and profitable fresh food systems. Collie secured €3.5 million investment in February for digital livestock management. Amount raised in H1 2025: €2.73M BlueRedGold is a company focused on producing premium saffron through controlled-environment agriculture and technology-driven cultivation methods. By growing saffron indoors under optimised conditions, the company ensures consistent quality, purity, and year-round production while significantly reducing water use and environmental impact. BlueRedGold combines agricultural innovation with full traceability and quality control, aiming to scale sustainable saffron production and make this high-value spice more accessible to global food, beverage, and wellness markets. In June, BlueRedGold raised €2.73 million for an automated saffron cultivation system. Amount raised in H1 2025: £2.1M Fotenix is a climate technology company developing advanced photocatalytic solutions to capture and convert carbon dioxide into valuable products. By combining proprietary materials science with scalable reactor systems, Fotenix enables carbon utilisation across industrial applications, helping reduce emissions while creating new economic value. The company’s technology supports the transition toward a circular, low-carbon economy by turning waste CO₂ into a resource rather than a liability. In April, Fotenix secured £2.1 million in new funding to help farmers detect disease and protect yields, weeks before symptoms appear.

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UK is “not a good jurisdiction to list in,” says UK fintech boss

At a recent live episode of a well-known fintech podcast in London, a tall, lean banking executive told a packed audience about a “complete geek” thing he likes to do when visiting a new city on a business trip. Richard Davies, the CEO of UK fintech Allica Bank, said he likes to hunt out the increasingly rare sight of physical bank branches. A three-day trip to Stockholm proved largely fruitless, spotting only one, said Davies, which he contrasted with US cities, where branches were left, right and centre whenever he stepped out of a hotel. While the host of the podcast gently mocked Davies over his bank branch hunting, it turns out that the 46-year-old CEO might have the last laugh. In an act of serendipity, Allica is now considering buying a bank in northern Europe. Davies' encyclopaedic knowledge of the European banking landscape could prove crucial. “It is quite a big decision for us," says Davies, sitting in Allica’s new two-floor London office, about the prospect of buying a bank. “It’s occupying a chunk of my time.” Allica is looking to go international, as it wants to mimic its UK success, which has seen it collect several “fastest growing" awards, be championed by chancellor Rachel Reeves, and become one of the few profitable global challenger banks. What is Allica Bank? While some people might mispronounce its name (some call it “Allishia”, Davies laughs), there is little ambiguity about Allica’s proposition: it is a business banking specialist. Allica targets the established SME sector (between five and 250 employees), offering them lending, such as commercial mortgages and equipment loans, and current and savings accounts. Although the SME sector is the backbone of the UK economy (making up over 99 per cent of businesses), the sector in recent times has been overlooked by the big banks, which have preferred to lend to big corporates amid risk concerns about lending to SMEs. In the slipstream, Allica has been making hay. Financial figures Top line figures show that Allica has lent over £3bn to businesses, boasts over £4bn deposits, and has amassed over 25,000 business customers. Its latest financials show pre-tax profits increased 86 per cent year-on-year to £29.9m, after hitting its first full year of profit in 2023, with revenue up 68 per cent on the year to £292.1m. Like other challenger banks, it makes money (over 90 per cent) by net interest income- the interest gains it makes between lending and deposits. Allica doesn’t position itself as a high-risk, high-margin lender and Davies says just one per cent of its loans have defaulted in the past 12 months, below the industry average of between two and two and a half per cent. Along with its spic and span new London offices, Allica also has offices in Manchester and Milton Keynes, employing over 800 people. Davies rings the changes Davies, a banking veteran, joined Allica in 2020, when it had a banking licence but little else. “It had made a couple of loans, but that was basically it," Davies told The Banker. Davies made changes, inculcating the organisation with a fintech-like ethos, bringing its third-party tech in-house, better remunerating engineers, while introducing Amazon-style cross-functional engineering/product “squads”. Another move to wrest more control was to do more direct lending and be less reliant on brokers. Fundraising Allica has raised over £390m to date, latterly a 2022 £100m Series C led by Netflix and Spotify backer TCV, with existing investors Warwick Capital Partners and Atalya Capital Management participating. New funding would “probably” only be undertaken should it go ahead with overseas expansion, but otherwise it will continue to run off its balance sheet, says Davies. He said: “I think it’s fair to say if we were to raise now, we would be in the unicorn territory.” European expansion In another nod to Amazon, Davies channels Jeff Bezos' “one-way door” mantra when discussing its plans to acquire a bank in northern Europe. Bezos famously simplified risky decisions into two camps: one-way door (irreversible) and two-way doors (reversible). An easier route for Allica to go international by passporting its UK banking licence was kiboshed by Brexit, while getting an international banking licence from scratch could take up to three years, Davies says. Allica is now deciding whether to green-light its international plans. He says: “Clearly buying a bank in Europe is kind of a one-way door thing. The small bank would give us the entry point. We would very much deploy our platform on top organically.” Allica has notched up three acquisitions to date, most recently embedded finance provider Kriya (now ensconced on the second floor of Allica’s offices), following that of Allied Irish Bank’s SME portfolio and bridging finance specialist Tuscan Capital. AI On AI, Davies does not have a Pollyannaish view but thinks it can be “very transformational” for parts of the business. He says: “If you go and blindly apply it to all use cases, you’ll cause a lot of damage.” On the customer service side, Davies says Allica has started “to play with agentic AI”. But the big productivity gains, he says, are likely on the engineering side, where AI coding will lead to cross-functional engineering roles replacing specialist roles. “We will keep growing our business a lot. We will probably grow the number of staff a lot less,” he says. CV Before arriving at Allica, Davies earned his banking stripes with stints at OakNorth, Lloyds, HSBC, Lloyds, and TSB. But arguably his biggest gig was at Revolut, where he was drafted in as chief operating officer in 2019, capturing national news headlines, amid concerns about its internal culture and governance. “A key role was professionalising and starting to enhance the governance controls,” he says of his time at Revolut. He only lasted one year at Revolut, saying the opportunity to run his own ship at Allica was too good to turn down (Davies can be seen chatting away in a recent video of a party celebrating Revolut’s 10-year anniversary). Working week Unlike Revolut’s Nik Storonsky, who reportedly has 42 direct reports, Davies has just 13, which, that said, is above the industry average of seven. The rhythm of his working week is partly dictated by weekly meetings with Allica’s “squads”, while fatherhood has meant he now prefers early morning to evening work. Davies also does his bit for the UK fintech industry, being a member of the UK unicorn council and a stalwart at fintech conferences. His strengths, he says, are “ high bandwidth”, while his weaknesses are “talking too fast” (a behaviour which media trainers repeatedly tick him off over). The budget As UK economic growth slows, Allica has been campaigning for reforms so that the regulatory environment does not inhibit debt provision. Allica says the UK economy is stalling, potentially because there is a £90bn lending gap in financing SMEs. Wearing his SME hat, Davies wasn’t impressed with the UK Autumn Budget, wanting an extension to the Growth Guarantee Scheme and highlighting an absence of further business rate discounts for SMEs. With his startup hat on, things were much rosier, with the chancellor's plans to increase access to the Enterprise Investment Scheme (EIS) and Enterprise Management Incentives (EMI) getting a thumbs up. The government, he says, “likes tech” but “I don’t think the government is particularly SME focused”. UK not "good jurisdiction" to IPO There has been much chatter this year about whether London has lost its lustre as Europe’s fintech capital. Davies thinks London is still the place to be, but is facing the same conundrum as other markets. He says: “I think the ultimate challenge for every country apart from the US is the public market, where the US is clearly the draw with Nasdaq.” There are “no firm plans” for Allica to IPO, he says, but he has a swipe at the UK as a listing destination. “Currently, the UK is not a good jurisdiction to list in, it's just a fact”, he says, pointing to the lack of growth investors and the shortage of liquidity in the market. The future The SME lending sector has seen a big shift in recent years, with startups now making up 60 per cent of the market, compared to 2019 when the four biggest banks made up 90 per cent of lending. But recent data show big banks are boomeranging back, a return welcomed by Davies. Davies says: "I think that is a good thing. The market needs a variety of players and SME lending is still flat. We alone are not going to change this industry.” Allica is targeting 10 per cent of the market by 2028. He adds: "That is not a small task, given we are just over five per cent now. We want to keep scaling across current accounts, across direct lending, across broker lending. Kriya is a very exciting business on the embedded lending side."

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Europe’s edge in energy, software, and the future of compute

Voyager is an early-stage venture capital firm backing climate technology companies building the foundations of a decarbonised global economy. Founded four years ago by climate-tech investors and operators Sarah Sclarsic and Sierra Peterson, the fund was set up with an explicit ambition: to become the leading early-stage climate-tech VC operating across Europe and North America. Today, Voyager manages $450 million across two announced funds. It invests from Seed through Series A, writing tickets of up to €9 million as lead or co-lead. I spoke with Matthew Blaine, who leads Voyager’s European team, about how the firm has managed to raise and deploy significant amounts of capital while remaining deliberately lean. The value of a flat, independent structure Blaine said, there are different models for building a venture capital firm. “You can be very centralised, with one or two locations and a large junior team under a small number of partners,” he explained. “Or you can be flatter, with experienced hires who cover a lot of ground independently.” The firm has opted for the latter approach, operating with a fully remote team. “We like that because it gives us strong geographic coverage with a relatively small team,” Blaine said. Decarbonisation is a cross-sector “trillion-dollar commercial” opportunity  Blaine is quick to push back on the idea of climate tech as a narrow or self-contained industry. “I sometimes push back when people talk about “the climate-tech sector” or “the climate-tech industry,” because that conversation often very quickly narrows to carbon credits, carbon accounting, and what I’d call some of the more obvious or well-worn areas. That’s not really how we think about it.” Instead, Voyager sees decarbonisation as a trillion-dollar commercial opportunity over the next 30 years.  The firm invests broadly across sectors, from the future of compute to industrial and manufacturing applications. This includes areas such as novel chip designs as well as cooling, photonics, and AI for manufacturers.  Rather than being narrowly focused on a single industry, the firm prefers to remain flexible, looking for situations where “an exceptional team, a huge market, the right timing, and excellent technology come together.”  Where Europe stands out — and where it struggles In Europe, Blaine sees particularly strong momentum in energy and renewables, some progress in hydrogen, and growing headwinds in more crowded areas like carbon credits. “Europe is incredibly strong in the future of compute,” he said. “Across the geographies we look at — especially Switzerland and the ETH ecosystem — there’s fantastic innovation in photonics, chip design, and data-centre cooling.” Across Voyager’s two core markets, Blaine notes that much of the most exciting innovation in these areas is coming out of Europe. The challenge, however, is commercialisation. “These companies often need to sell into the US market,” he said. “That’s where we like to help as a transatlantic fund.” Another area where Europe consistently excels is climate software, particularly in energy management and grid orchestration. “When I reflect on the ten best deep-tech companies I’ve seen over the last three years at Voyager, probably eight or nine of the most impressive deep-tech companies were in the US,” Blaine said . “But on the software side, it’s almost the reverse: probably eight or nine were European.” He attributes this to Europe’s more complex and heavily regulated energy markets, which create fertile ground for sophisticated software solutions. “You see that in large rounds in Germany, in the UK, and across Europe — companies helping industrial, commercial, and consumer customers procure energy more efficiently and balance the grid to manage the intermittency of renewables.” Scale, ambition, and a mindset gap However, Blaine notes that Europe is a much younger startup ecosystem than the US.  “It’s easy to forget that Microsoft and Apple were founded in the 1970s, Amazon in the early 1990s. In Europe, the ecosystem only really got going around 2010. “ Even companies often seen as part of the old guard, like Monzo or Revolut, were only founded a decade later. “Building enduring enterprise value takes a long time.” He contends that Europe already leads in energy and grid-related software, as well as parts of the future-of-compute ecosystem. “Orchestrating huge numbers of connected devices — smart meters, heat pumps, storage systems — to balance the grid is something European companies are particularly strong at. What he’d like to see more of in Europe is ambition to build overwhelmingly dominant companies. While historically, Europe has always produced foundational companies, ARM and ASML, for example, are central to how the global economy operates.  What he would like to see more of, however, is ambition at the very top end. “Too often, success is framed as exiting at €1–2 billion. That’s a huge achievement, but I’d love to see more founders push beyond that. When Google tried to acquire Wiz for around $23 billion, and the founders turned it down because they saw a $100 billion opportunity, that level of ambition is still rare in Europe.” Part of the challenge, he argues, is structural. Many US investors invest globally, including heavily in Europe, while most European investors focus almost exclusively on their home market. “That can create a more myopic worldview, where people haven’t necessarily built or invested at global scale before. Sometimes the grass looks greener in the US, but there’s also less experience in taking companies from continental scale to truly global scale.” That’s where funds like Voyager try to help — providing a global perspective from the earliest stages, so companies are built for worldwide dominance rather than just becoming the European winner and exiting. European portfolio highlights Voyager’s European investments reflect this thesis across software, energy, and mobility. Some of the key examples: ENAPI (Germany) ENAPI is building a unified EV charging software platform that enables seamless data exchange and transaction clearing between charge point operators and eMobility service providers. Packfleet (UK) Image: Packfleet. Carbon-neutral courier startup Packfleet is operating an all-electric fleet and purpose-built routing software to deliver parcels efficiently and sustainably across the city.  InRange (UK) InRange is creating a double-sided marketplace to enable the development and use of solar assets near load centres. InRange matches owners of property capable of hosting solar installations with buyers seeking reliable low-carbon electricity, and manages the asset development, power sales and operation. ANNEA (Germany) Starting with wind assets, ANNEA enables renewable operators to minimise downtime from predictable failures and maximise electricity generation through automated control inputs. CarbonChain (UK) From source to shipment, CarbonChain's software tracks the emissions intensity of commodities and industrial inputs across supply chains. CarbonChain provides asset-level and cargo-specific emissions data to enable accurate systemic decarbonization from the ground up. Together, these investments underscore Voyager’s conviction that climate is not a niche — but the defining economic transformation of the coming decades. Lead image: Freepik.

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European tech weekly recap: More than 75 tech funding deals worth over €1.3B

Last week, we tracked more than 75 tech funding deals worth over €1.3 billion, and over 15 exits, M&A transactions, rumours, and related news stories across Europe.Click to read the rest of the news.

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Omnidocs acquires majority stake in Switzerland’s officeatwork to deepen DACH presence

Danish software company Omnidocs has acquired a majority stake in officeatwork, a Switzerland-based provider of document creation solutions with a strong foothold in the DACH region.  Omnidocs is a document generation and automation solutions company focused on enhancing productivity, compliance, and quality across critical sectors such as public services, financial services, and legal firms.  Founded in 1975 in Switzerland, officeatwork offers a comprehensive, Microsoft 365-integrated suite that enables organisations worldwide to streamline document creation, enhance content management, and maintain consistent branding across proposals, contracts, presentations, and emails.  With more than 500 customers and a solid presence in Switzerland, as well as growing international revenues from Germany, the Netherlands, and the United States, officeatwork represents a strong strategic fit with Omnidocs.  This transaction marks the fourth add-on acquisition for Omnidocs since partnering with Main Capital Partners and further strengthens the group’s global market position. Omnidocs already holds an established position in Denmark and continues to expand across the Nordic region. This is supported by a strong international presence in the Benelux through the acquisition of Xential and in the UK via Presentation Solutions.  Martin Seifert, Founder of officeatwork, commented: “Joining forces with Omnidocs marks an exciting new chapter for officeatwork. Our shared vision for innovation and customer-centric solutions will allow us to accelerate growth and deliver even greater value to our clients across Europe and beyond.” Jeppe Schytte-Hansen, CEO & Co-founder of Omnidocs, added: “I am very happy that we are taking this step with adding officeatwork to Omnidocs Group. It will serve as a solid catalyst for our strategic approach in the DACH & Benelux region. I am convinced that the team members that we will welcome and bring to our kick-off in Copenhagen in a few weeks will contribute with both strong domain knowledge and a solid market focus. We are looking to combine both teams and products during the first half of 2026.” Wessel Ploegmakers, Partner and Head of Nordics at Main Capital Partners, concluded: “The addition of officeatwork is a strong reflection of Omnidocs’ successful buy-and-build strategy. The company brings a high-quality product, a loyal customer base, and a well-established presence in the DACH region. We are pleased to support this step as Omnidocs continues to build an internationally leading platform in document creation and automation.”

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Lovable raises $330M, Quantum Systems acquires FERNRIDE, and N26 appoints new CEO

This week, we tracked more than 75 tech funding deals worth over €1.3 billion and over 15 exits, M&A transactions, rumours, and related news stories across Europe. In addition to this week's top financials, we've also indexed the most important/industry-related news items you need to know about. If email is more your thing, you can always subscribe to our newsletter and receive a more robust version of this round-up delivered to your inbox. Either way, let's get you up to speed. Happy holidays! As next week is a very short week before the festival season, it's a Merry Christmas and happy holidays for those who celebrate from all of us at Tech.eu. We won't be doing a round-up next week, but we still have some great stories coming out up until the new year, so check back onto the website.  ? Notable and big funding rounds ?? Lovable raises $330M at a $6.6B valuation to turn non-developers into software builders ?? Exein raises an additional €100M to expand its embedded cybersecurity platform ?? Neural Concept raises $100M to scale AI-native engineering ??‍?? Noteworthy acquisitions and mergers ?? Swiss-US startup HomeBuddy acquired for $190M ?? Quantum Systems expands defence autonomy stack with FERNRIDE acquisition ??  Monzo buys digital mortgage broker Habito ?? Bought snaps up luxury rental platform Robes Rental in third acquisition of 2025 ?? Tech giant ABB makes swoop for Manchester tech firm IPEC

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Nodu lands $1.45M to upgrade Europe’s payment rails as stablecoins surge

Stablecoin infrastructure startup Nodu has closed a $1.45 million pre-seed round led by Digital Space Ventures. Nodu is a London-based stablecoin infrastructure startup with Latvian roots, founded in 2025 by Alex Novozhenov (CEO), Vladislav Nikolayev (CTO), and Daria Dubinina, the team behind the fintech platform Crassula. Nodu provides banks, fintechs, and businesses with a ready-to-use global compliance and payments framework for stablecoins, enabling them to launch services without building infrastructure internally. The platform supports sending, receiving, and holding stablecoins, with compliance and reporting handled automatically. It is designed to integrate fiat and digital-asset rails into a single, regulated workflow, connecting European institutions with global payment and blockchain networks. A key feature of Nodu’s offering is its stablecoin off-ramp functionality, which is available in over 100 countries and supports near real-time, lower-cost fiat payouts, including those for cross-border remittances. As EU banks continue to prioritise digitalisation and seek additional revenue opportunities, Nodu is positioned to help address technical and regulatory hurdles. The company offers a faster, compliance-focused route to deploying digital-asset services, without a major engineering build-out. Nodu launched with an existing base of relationships from the founders’ prior work. Before beginning operations, the team reported having more than 40 Crassula clients and over 20 partners interested in adopting the platform, supported by a network of more than 15,500 industry contacts. Following the new funding, Nodu plans to expand its geographic coverage, scale its engineering and compliance teams, and deepen partnerships with banks and fintechs.

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StretchSense raises $2.3M to drive global expansion of XR training gloves

StretchSense, a wearable technology company that develops data capture gloves, has secured $2.3 million in funding led by PXN Ventures, with support from Scottish Enterprise. The company has now raised nearly $20 million across three external funding rounds. Founded in 2012, StretchSense specialises in advanced motion capture gloves designed to connect human movement with digital environments. Its products use proprietary stretch sensor technology and machine learning to deliver high-fidelity hand and finger tracking for VR and XR applications, including animation, gaming, training, and simulation. The company’s gloves enable natural, controller-free interaction, providing precise real-time motion capture for immersive environments and creative workflows. StretchSense’s product portfolio includes XR training gloves for immersive learning and simulation, gaming and streaming gloves for intuitive interaction, and professional motion capture gloves for animation and virtual production. The technology emphasises comfort, durability, and usability, including features such as machine-washable textiles and robust sensor performance. The company is increasingly focused on sectors including healthcare, education, aviation, and defence. Its gloves, developed through over a decade of hand data capture research, support realistic training experiences that encourage muscle memory development. The gloves also incorporate haptic technology, using vibrations to simulate interaction with digital objects. Recently appointed CEO Chris Chapman, formerly an investor director at the company, said the technology is intended to simplify and enhance interaction in XR environments by removing traditional controllers. He added: The XR Train glove powers scalable, truly immersive training, delivering intuitive interaction and measurable outcomes across enterprise and government environments. With its latest investment, StretchSense is looking ahead to 2026, with a focus on scaling its XR training technology and further integrating physical interaction alongside virtual environments to support learning outcomes.

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Neural Concept raises $100M to scale AI-native engineering

Swiss-based Neural Concept has raised a $100 million Series C round led by Growth Equity at Goldman Sachs Alternatives, with participation from existing investors Forestay Capital, Alven, HTGF, D.E. Shaw Ventures, and Aster Capital. Founded in 2019 and spun out of EPFL in Lausanne, Neural Concept develops an AI-focused engineering platform for product development. The company embeds AI into design and simulation workflows to help engineering teams accelerate development and improve product performance across efficiency, safety, and sustainability. (You can check out our earlier interview with Pierre Baqué, CEO and co-founder, on how the company’s 3D AI platform is being used to reshape engineering workflows at OEMs.) Neural Concept’s CAD-native enterprise AI is designed to interpret geometry, constraints, and design intent. The company says the platform supports physics-aware design copilots that enable teams to evaluate more design options earlier in the process and reduce late-stage changes. Neural Concept reports growing adoption as engineering organisations move from pilots to wider deployments, with activity across sectors including automotive, aerospace and defence, energy, semiconductors, and consumer electronics. It also reports partnerships with global OEMs and component suppliers. Dr. Pierre Baqué, CEO and founder of Neural Concept, said the company was created to enable AI-driven design for complex systems such as future vehicles and spacecraft: Advances in AI are transforming engineering from a process of trial and error into a data-driven workflow where tradeoffs and constraints can be understood and optimised from the start. This investment enables us to fast-track our progress toward establishing the intelligence layer powering every engineering team, worldwide. The company plans to use the funding to accelerate product development, including a planned generative CAD capability in early 2026, expand its global go-to-market teams, and deepen partnerships with companies such as Nvidia, Siemens, Ansys, Microsoft, and AWS.

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Endra closes $20M seed round amid surging demand in construction supercycle

Stockholm-based Endra, an AI-powered mechanical, electrical, and plumbing (MEP) platform, has closed a $20 million seed round led by Notion Capital, with participation from existing investor Norrsken VC. The built-environment sector is under pressure to increase delivery capacity substantially. Some estimates suggest global construction output would need to grow by more than 40 per cent by 2030 and close to 70 per cent by 2040 to meet projected demand. The IEA projects total building floor area could expand by roughly 75 per cent by 2050. In parallel, around 20 per cent of existing buildings may need to be retrofitted by 2030 to align with zero-carbon-ready targets, implying a retrofit pace significantly above today’s levels. Housing demand adds to these requirements, with projections indicating the need for about 21 million new homes annually through 2030. Demand for digital infrastructure is also increasing, with global data-centre capacity expected to more than triple over the course of the decade as AI, cloud, and high-density computing workloads expand. As project volumes and requirements increase, engineering teams are looking for ways to reduce design time and manual work. Endra’s AI-based platform is intended to reduce these bottlenecks by replacing prolonged manual MEP design work with an automated, end-to-end workflow. An architect’s 3D model can be imported into Endra, which then automatically generates core MEP systems, such as outlets, switches, lighting, fire alarms, cabling, and ventilation. The platform produces building-code-compliant, clash-free 3D models and the associated documentation, including drawings, schematics, calculations, and schedules. Work that typically involves multiple consultants and extended design iterations can be completed in hours, with outputs tailored to local regulatory requirements and designed to reduce repetitive manual effort. This can support faster and more predictable project delivery. In deployed projects, Endra reports efficiency gains of more than 70x, helping teams speed up the delivery of complex electrical, cooling, and cabling systems. Commenting on the funding round, Niklas Lindgren, co-founder and CEO of Endra, noted that global construction activity is accelerating and that MEP engineering underpins how buildings function. He added that Endra significantly shortens design timelines, reducing processes that typically take months to just hours. By bringing generative design to MEP engineers, we are helping leadership teams in design consultancies address critical challenges, including labour shortages, the shift toward outcome-based pricing and the growing complexity of managing outsourced design units. This seed round helps us accelerate that mission. The seed round follows a €3 million pre-seed completed in May 2025 and will be used to support Endra’s next phase of growth, including expanding into additional countries, serving customers across regions, and progressing its product roadmap.

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Lovable raises $330M at a $6.6B valuation to turn non-developers into software builders

Lovable has raised $330 million in Series B funding at a $6.6 billion valuation, led by CapitalG and Menlo Ventures' Anthology fund. Additional investors in this round include the venture arms of leading companies building the future of work: NVentures (NVIDIA’s venture capital arm), Salesforce Ventures, Databricks Ventures, T. Capital (Deutsche Telekom), Atlassian Ventures, and HubSpot Ventures. They’re joined by Khosla Ventures, DST Global, EQT Growth, Kinship Ventures, and returning investors Accel, Creandum, and Evantic, among others. According to a blog post published by the company, Lovable was launched to empower the 99 per cent — the people who've had ideas but lacked the technical skills to bring them to life.  In response a new category of people has emerged: builders.  “They're the product manager who wants to show, not just tell. The marketer with projects stuck in engineering backlogs. The ops team using outdated software for internal tooling. The nurse who sees a better way to visualise patient journeys. The artist in need of a website with an e-commerce platform integration—in time for the holidays. The founder turning a side hustle into the main thing. And they're building at a scale we never imagined:” The company has experienced prolific user growth: 100,000+ new projects built on Lovable every day25 million+ total projects created in its first year Half a billion visits to Lovable-built websites and apps in the last six months 6 million+ daily visits to Lovable-built sites and apps (200 million+ monthly) What they're building Lovable's product-building platform is used by large enterprises such as Klarna and Deutsche Telekom are already doing. Deutsche Telekom uses Lovable for UI projects that require rapid stakeholder alignment and time-boxed decision-making. Teams build functional prototypes early, making value tangible and enabling faster, more confident decisions across large, multi-layered teams. This has reduced time-to-market and development cycles from weeks or months down to days. According to Lovable, a leading ERP platform, replaced traditional specs and slide decks with working prototypes, compressing a project that once took four weeks and 20 people into a four-day sprint with a four-person team. The change has allowed the organisation to take on four times as many projects, with around 75 per cent of its front-end now generated directly through the platform. A global ride-sharing and delivery platform cut design concept testing from six weeks to just five days, enabling non-UX staff to build end-to-end flow demos themselves. In one case, a product manager created a functional prototype in 30 minutes — work that previously would have taken three months. Jorge Luthe, Senior Director of Product at Zendesk, shared: "Thanks to Lovable’s rapid prototyping and real-time collaboration capabilities, we’ve dramatically streamlined our product development process. What once took six weeks — from idea to working prototype — now takes just three hours. This shift has enabled our product management, UX, and engineering teams to collaborate faster and more effectively than ever before." Shipping real products in production Other examples of compelling usecases: A nurse at one of the world's largest healthcare organisations built an app that visualises patient journeys — it's now included with every invoice as standard. A global professional services firm moved from static decks to functional prototypes for competitive bids, targeting 50% efficiency gains and helping their team win more business. A leading enterprise human capital management platform rebuilt their onboarding workflow tools in days rather than months, adding complex features like task tracking, progress monitoring, and AI assistance. New startups emerging Lovable has showcased some of the startups that have emerged from the use of its tech:  Henrik and Peter built Lumoo, an AI-powered fashion platform with virtual try-on — $800K ARR in nine months, serving 15+ of the largest fashion brands in the Nordics. Allan built ShiftNex, a healthcare workforce staffing platform — $1M ARR in five months with 5,000+ healthcare users. Jaleel and Hussein quit their jobs with 60 days to make money, built QuickTables on Lovable, and are now making over $100K/year. Brickwise got into Y Combinator and secured $500K to help tenants and landlords solve property management issues — built on Lovable. Q Group, a leading Brazilian edtech company, built a premium version of their platform in one month and generated $3M in revenue in 48 hours. According to Lovable, the investment accelerates its work in three key areas: Deeper integrations. Builders don't work in isolation. They use Notion for docs, Linear for tickets, Jira for sprints, Miro for brainstorms. Lovable already connects to these tools, and we're going deeper — so the context you've already built informs what you create next. Enhanced collaboration and governance. As more teams adopt Lovable, they need the features enterprises expect. We're continuing to invest in making Lovable ready for organisations of every size. Infrastructure to take products from prototype to production. Lovable isn't just for demos. With built-in hosting, databases, authentication, and payments, people ship real products — not just mockups. We're continuing to build out the capabilities that make this possible. According to Laela Sturdy, Managing Partner at CapitalG: "Lovable has done something rare: built a product that enterprises and founders both love. The demand we're seeing from Fortune 500 companies signals a fundamental shift in how software gets built." Matt Murphy, Partner at Menlo Ventures, shared: "Lovable is a beloved product for all the right reasons. They've done what was previously unimaginable by turning a latent market of tens of millions of people into web developers and content creators. We love category builders like our previous early investments in Uber and Anthropic — companies that have the opportunity to be enormous. Lovable is showing exactly that trajectory. " According to Lovable:  “This is the age of the builder. A seismic shift in what's possible. The story belongs to the teachers, product managers, founders, and dreamers who now have the tools to bring their ideas to life. “

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Swedish startup TrialMe is fixing the data gap that keeps women out of clinical trials

For decades, modern medicine was built on male biology as the default and female biology as a deviation, a problem rooted in the long-standing exclusion of women from medical research. ​ Now, a Swedish startup is here to change all this. TrialMe is a platform designed to make participation in clinical trials accessible, transparent, and less intimidating — particularly for women, who have historically had very poor experiences with medical research. ​ The platform is the brainchild of Hanna Kalesse, who I spoke with at Slush. “It completely knocked me out for nine months” Kalesse is a medicinal chemist, so she’s been aware of the gender health gap for a long time. “It’s something we learn during our studies. But what really pushed me to act was experiencing it personally.” Kalesse was prescribed medication that she was told would take about two weeks to adjust to, after which she could continue studying and working as normal. Instead, she shared, “It completely knocked me out for nine months. I couldn’t ride a bike, couldn’t read, and couldn’t even have proper conversations. It turned my life upside down.” It all started with a hackathon Around this time, there was a women’s health hackathon at Sahlgrenska Science Park. Her best friend wanted to participate but didn’t have a concrete idea. Kalesse told her: "I know a problem, and I have an idea." “We joined together, placed in the top three, and Diana from Daya Ventures encouraged us to turn it into a real company. That was the starting point for TrialMe.” Why underrepresentation distorts diagnosis, dosing, and care ​ The exclusion of women from drug trials and medical research has a significant impact on the evidence for prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of health conditions, especially those that disproportionately affect women, from autoimmune diseases and migraine to chronic pain and mental health disorders, Alzheimer’s disease, and cardiovascular disease. ​ Despite their prevalence and burden, these conditions frequently lack robust, sex-stratified clinical data, leaving critical gaps in how they are diagnosed, assessed, and treated. When differences in women’s biology, hormones, and risk profiles are not factored in, critical variations in diagnosis, symptom presentation, treatment, and optimal dosing go unrecognised. The result is higher rates of misdiagnosis, suboptimal care, and adverse drug reactions among women. The exclusion of childbearing age women a barrier to women's health research One of the biggest problems is the exclusion of women of childbearing age from research, a sizable percentage of the population. How reproductive-age policies still sideline women in clinical trials Historically, women of reproductive age were routinely excluded from trials due to concerns about fetal risk and assumptions that hormonal cycles made women “too complex” to study. According to Kalesse, in Spain, for example, women of childbearing age are broadly excluded from clinical trials. In Sweden, where we’re starting, the approach is different. “Here, participation is possible with safeguards — for example, pregnancy testing at each visit or using birth control. In my case, birth control wasn’t an option due to severe side effects, so instead I had to clearly state that I would do my best not to become pregnant and undergo regular pregnancy tests. The blanket exclusion of women “just in case” remains a major barrier to building accurate medical evidence.” Regulation is still catching up Shockingly, it wasn't until 1993 that federal legislation mandated the inclusion of women and minorities in all NIH-sponsored clinical research, and that study designs allow analysis of sex-based differences. However, this does not apply to any research with other sponsors.  It wasn’t until 2022 in Europe — you read the right — that the EU Clinical Trials Regulation was amended to explicitly require trial populations to reflect the demographics of those likely to use the medication, including gender balance, “unless otherwise justified in the protocol.” Sponsors must justify any lack of representation and can no longer omit women (or other demographic groups) without a scientific or ethical rationale.   That said, they can still claim they were unable to recruit an equal percentage of female trial participants to men. The hidden cost of recruitment Recruitment is one of the biggest bottlenecks in clinical research –  around 80 per cent of trials fail to recruit on time. Recruitment typically accounts for around 40 per cent of a clinical trial’s total cost. A considerable amount of that budget is wasted on inefficient screening — hundreds of phone calls to end up with a handful of eligible participants. Initially, TrialMe reaches out directly to research organisations and trial sponsors. Kalesse explained that if sponsors know they can access a verified, engaged community of women through TrialMe, they can significantly shorten recruitment timelines. "Once we prove this through pilot studies, sponsors will increasingly come to us. Many women are still afraid of clinical trials, and that fear is rooted in real history. My role is focused on education and trust-building: explaining what the gender health gap is, how it affects us, and what clinical trials actually look like in practice.” Testing the system from the inside To increase transparency, Kalesse is personally participating in a documented clinical trial, "so women can see what the process really involves — not just the theory.”She searched for a clinical trial for a medication she knew — as a chemist — would likely suit her better. “It was almost impossible,” she revealed. "“Websites were outdated, trials weren’t recruiting anymore, and many never replied at all. Eventually, I did find a trial, but it took an enormous amount of energy at a time when I was already unwell. That frustration became core market research for TrialMe.” The TrialMe mobile app is designed to be extremely simple. Instead of browsing endless listings or swiping like a dating app, users receive notifications when a clinical trial is suitable for them. “The idea is to remove friction,” shared Kalesse. “Women already carry a lot of cognitive and emotional load — participating in research shouldn’t add more.” TrialMe digitises pre-screening through the app, filtering out ineligible participants early. We don’t touch participant compensation — we make recruitment dramatically more efficient. That helps trials run faster, reduces costs, and ultimately brings safer, better-tested treatments to market sooner." ​ Through TrialMe, participants can earn points in exchange for things like gym memberships or therapy sessions. Even without points, participants gain early access to new women’s health products and discounts. Why one dose doesn’t fit every date TrialMe’s first pilots focus on menstrual cycles and medication interactions. According to Kalesse, there’s growing evidence that medication effects and side effects correlate with different phases of the menstrual cycle — but inadequate research. “We’re starting with depression and anxiety medications, which are already known for having side effects linked to hormonal changes. In my own case, antidepressants dramatically intensified my menstrual symptoms, including severe suicidal ideation just before menstruation. In an ideal world, this could lead to phase-specific dosing — adjusting medication depending on where someone is in their cycle. If the correlation is real, it would mean that many existing drugs need to be re-evaluated.” From at-home diagnostics to digital health However, Trialme is not only about drug trials. Many health products and services — including digital health tools — require testing, and women should be represented there too. For example, according to Kalesse, at-home endometriosis tests or at-home mammography tools still need validation. “TrialMe allows women to discover and test these products, which are often hard to find once they reach the market because they come from small companies.” TrialMe is looking global. Women aren’t the only underrepresented group in research — many minorities are systematically excluded. "If we want medical evidence that actually reflects real populations, we can’t limit ourselves to Europe. That said, we’re starting with smaller countries to get the model right before expanding internationally,” explained Kalesse. Clinical trials aren’t only for the ill Further, clinical trials aren’t only for people who are ill. Healthy volunteers are just as important — especially when testing new health products and services. “Most importantly, participation helps close the gender health gap. This isn’t a question of whether it should be solved — it’s a question of who will solve it first. And we believe TrialMe can lead that change.” TrialMe recently won a global pitch competition organised by Tesla Ventures ahead of Web Summit. As a result, its been invited to Ireland for a one-week programme and received a year-long mentorship — led by women. Its also currently part of two incubator programmes supporting its early growth. ​ For decades, women were missing from the data that shapes modern medicine. TrialMe is betting that rebuilding clinical research around real populations — not theoretical defaults — is how that gap finally closes.

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Enlightra exits stealth with $15M to power energy-efficient AI data centre lasers

Enlightra, a deeptech startup developing chip-scale multiwavelength lasers for next-generation data transmission, has raised a total of $15 million. Investors include Y Combinator, Runa Capital, Pegasus Tech Ventures, Protocol Labs, Halo Labs, Asymmetry Ventures, and TRAC VC, among others. Modern AI training increasingly depends on faster connections between GPUs, yet many systems still rely on copper links constrained by bandwidth and power consumption. As AI clusters and data centres scale, these limitations are becoming more pronounced. Enlightra’s approach uses multiwavelength lasers that consolidate many discrete lasers into a single integrated source, reducing power use, cost, and physical footprint. Each wavelength functions as an independent data channel, enabling multiple high-bandwidth connections from one laser source and supporting a shift from copper wiring to compact optical links. The world’s AI infrastructure is hitting the limits of copper. Our lasers unlock a new level of energy-efficient connectivity by turning light into the backbone of GPU communication, said Maxim Karpov, co-founder and co-CEO of Enlightra. Using additional wavelengths allows optical fibre networks to operate closer to their full capacity, co-founder and co-CEO John Jost explained. Our technology enables AI clusters and data centres to scale more efficiently by decoupling performance growth from energy and cost increases. Built using industry-standard silicon photonics fabrication processes, the lasers are designed for large-scale manufacturing, enabling production at volumes suitable for global data centre deployment. The company has developed 8- and 16-channel lasers aligned with customer requirements for AI chip interconnects and reports error-free data transmission at target speeds and power levels. Pilot production is planned for 2027. The company’s vision extends beyond AI clusters. Its scalable comb-laser platform could power future optical links across entire data centres, subsea cables, and even chip-to-memory interconnects, with potential applications in quantum and space-based communications. The funding will support Enlightra’s next steps to improve data-transfer speed and energy efficiency for AI infrastructure.

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Exein raises an additional €100M to expand its embedded cybersecurity platform

Italian-based Exein, a company focused on embedded cybersecurity for connected devices, has secured €100 million in new funding, following its €70 million Series C round in July 2025. This brings the company’s total capital raised in 2025 to €170 million. The round is led by Blue Cloud Ventures, with participation from HV Capital, Intrepid Growth Partners, Geodesic Capital, and J.P. Morgan. The €100 million comprises an equity investment alongside a financing facility led by J.P. Morgan. As cyberattacks increasingly affect physical infrastructure, disrupting hospitals and airports, interrupting transport systems, and compromising supply chains, manufacturers are placing greater emphasis on security embedded directly into devices, rather than relying primarily on perimeter-based defences. Exein’s platform integrates AI-enabled runtime security into firmware, enabling connected devices to detect, contain, and respond to threats in real time, including in environments where continuous connectivity is not available. This approach can support integrity and provenance checks across supply chains and help organisations meet requirements under frameworks such as RED 3.3, the forthcoming EU Cyber Resilience Act, and the US Cyber Trust Mark. The company says its embedded, hardware-agnostic platform currently protects more than 1.5 billion devices across sectors, including energy, healthcare, defence, automotive, aerospace, industrial automation, semiconductors, and robotics. Exein expects the number of devices running its software to exceed two billion in the first quarter of 2026, driven by new deployments, growth in active devices, and increasing regulatory focus on device-level security. Commenting on the product roadmap, Gianni Cuozzo, Founder & CEO of Exein, said: We’ll unveil the first wave of this breakthrough at RSAC in Q1, as we continue building the digital immune system that will protect the connected world for years to come. Exein plans to use the new funding to develop its next generation of embedded runtime security technology for connected devices, including AI-enabled protections for on-device AI and large language models, with an initial release expected to be presented at RSAC 2026. The company also intends to support a multi-transaction M&A programme in 2026 across Europe and the United States, and to accelerate international expansion, with a particular focus on the US and APAC markets. The company’s valuation increased significantly in the five months between the July fundraising round and this extension, reflecting changes in its commercial position and broader demand for device-level cybersecurity.

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The biggest European deeptech deals in H1 2025

In the first half of 2025, European deeptech is characterised by a strong emphasis on engineering, a focus on climate and industrial applications, and an increasing concentration on hardware-based solutions. The landscape is dominated by technologies that require long R&D cycles, specialised talent, and close ties to labs, pilot customers, and regulated markets, yet many ventures are clearly moving from prototype into industrialisation and early-scale deployment. A lot of effort is going into making core systems cleaner and more efficient, like energy, materials, and infrastructure that sit underneath everything else. At the same time, there is a growing focus on technologies that improve how industrial systems are monitored and managed, enabling organisations to gain clearer visibility into complex operations, identify issues earlier, and improve performance in reliability-critical environments. The following are the ten largest funding rounds in the European deeptech industry during the first half of 2025. Amount raised in H1 2025: €50M Marvel Fusion is a company focused on developing commercially viable fusion power systems. Founded in 2019, the company is pioneering a laser-driven approach to nuclear fusion that aims to deliver safe, reliable, and low-carbon energy at scale. Its technology combines intense, short-pulse lasers with advanced fuel targets to initiate fusion reactions, seeking a pathway to compact and efficient fusion power plants. Marvel Fusion collaborates with industrial and research partners as it works toward building the first generation of fusion energy facilities, positioning itself as a leader in the emerging private fusion energy sector. In March, Marvel Fusion secured a €50 million extension to its Series B round, bringing total funding in the round to €113 million, as the company moves from research and development toward industrial deployment. Amount raised in H1 2025: €36M H2SITE is developing advanced solutions to enable the sustainable production and transport of high-purity hydrogen. The company’s proprietary membrane reactor and separator technology uses highly selective palladium-alloy membranes to extract and purify hydrogen from a range of feedstocks, including ammonia, methanol, syngas, and biogas, as well as from mixed gas streams. Founded in Bilbao in 2020 as a deep-tech spin-off, H2SITE’s innovations are designed to address key challenges in the hydrogen value chain by making hydrogen more accessible and cost-effective for a range of uses. In January, H2SITE raised €36 million to support the next phase of development of the company’s hydrogen technology, including plans to increase purification capacity to more than 20 tons per day by 2026. Amount raised in H1 2025: £17M Intelligent Energy is a hydrogen fuel cell manufacturer that develops and produces proton-exchange membrane (PEM) fuel cell power systems. The company offers zero-emission fuel cell products ranging from approximately 800W to over 300kW for various applications, including automotive, aerospace, stationary power, telecommunications, marine, rail, unmanned aerial vehicles, and materials handling. Headquartered and manufacturing in the UK, Intelligent Energy works with partners and customers globally to support the deployment of hydrogen-powered solutions. Intelligent Energy received £17 million in government-backed funding in June. Amount raised in H1 2025: €18M KEEY Aerogel is a materials company founded in 2015 that develops and manufactures aerogel-based thermal insulation solutions. The company produces sustainable silica aerogel using a patented process that upcycles construction waste, positioning its material as a local, competitive alternative to conventional insulation products. KEEY Aerogel also provides R&D support and scale-up services to adapt and industrialise aerogel products for customer needs, with a stated goal of building a network of local production facilities in Europe. In January, Keey Aerogel raised €18 million in Series A to scale Europe’s first green aerogel. Amount raised in H1 2025: €17.5M SemiQon is a quantum hardware company developing silicon-based quantum processors designed to support the scale-up of quantum computers toward the “million-qubit era.” The company builds quantum integrated circuits using standard semiconductor materials and manufacturing methods to improve scalability, cost efficiency, and sustainability. In addition to quantum processors, SemiQon develops cryogenic CMOS (cryo-CMOS) chips for next-generation technologies that require reliable performance at very low temperatures. SemiQon raised €17.5 million in funding in February to boost its cryogenic CMOS technology. Amount raised in H1 2025: $17M Chipiron is a French medical imaging company developing an ultra-low-field, portable MRI system designed to make MRI more accessible and easier to deploy. The company’s approach uses very low magnetic fields and aims to reduce the size, cost, and infrastructure requirements of conventional MRI, while targeting diagnostic-quality imaging for broader screening and clinical use. In April, Chipiron raised $17 million in a Series A round to complete the development of its compact and lower-cost MRI system. Amount raised in H1 2025: $15M ATLANT 3D is a deeptech advanced manufacturing company developing atomic-scale fabrication technologies for microelectronics, optics, photonics, sensors, and other high-precision industries. Its proprietary Direct Atomic Layer Processing (DALP) platform enables atomically precise material deposition and patterning, supporting rapid innovation across the full value chain from materials R&D and prototyping to scalable production of micro- and nano-devices. ATLANT 3D’s tools and services aim to reduce design iteration time, lower costs, and expand manufacturing capabilities for complex applications, while maintaining compatibility with semiconductor industry standards. In March, ATLANT 3D secured $15 million for space manufacturing, with support from NASA and ESA. Amount raised in H1 2025: $13.5M Lidrotec is a laser systems company focused on high-precision wafer dicing and micromaterial processing for the semiconductor industry. Its technology combines ultrashort-pulse laser processing with controlled fluids to cool and clean the cutting zone, aiming to reduce heat damage, particle defects, and material waste while improving yield and cut quality. The company develops equipment for cutting and structuring microchips and other high-tech components, with applications also extending to areas such as electronics, energy, and medical technology. In June, Lidrotec raised $13.5 million to tackle semiconductor yield bottlenecks. Amount raised in H1 2025: €8.5M FononTech is an advanced manufacturing company developing Impulse Printing, an additive manufacturing technology designed for high-volume assembly of complex 2D and 3D microelectronic structures used in semiconductor and display manufacturing. The company’s core products (including an impulse printhead and plate system) are built for integration into production environments and aim to enable smaller, higher-performance electronics while reducing material waste, energy use, and the overall manufacturing footprint. In May, FononTech raised €8.5 million to finalise the development of its first product and accelerate customer acquisition efforts. Amount raised in H1 2025: €6M Axiles Bionics is a company that designs and develops next-generation bionic prosthetics for lower-limb amputees. The company focuses on intelligent ankle-foot prostheses that aim to better replicate natural movement by combining biomechanics with technologies such as robotics and artificial intelligence to support improved mobility and comfort in everyday use. In June, Axiles Bionics closed the first €6 million of its €8 million Series A round to globalise its biomimetic prosthetic foot.

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Destinus raises €50M facility to expand autonomous flight production

Dutch aerospace and defencetech company  Destinus has secured a €50 million financing facility from Commerzbank, marking the company’s first commercial bank facility and supporting the next phase of its industrial expansion across Europe.   The Commerzbank facility complements €140 million in recently completed convertible instruments and shareholder loans, following the company’s earlier equity financing.  Together, these new financings build on more than €200 million in previously raised equity, bringing Destinus’ total capital raised to nearly €400 million to date. Check out an earlier interview we did with Martina Lofqvist, Senior Business Development Manager at Destinus. From fast hypersonic flight to dual-use tech When Destinus launched in 2021, it captured my attention with a highly ambitious vision: hydrogen-powered hypersonic aircraft capable of flying at Mach 5+, potentially cutting intercontinental journeys such as Europe to Australia from around 20 hours to four. Early experimental aircraft, including the Jungfrau and Eiger demonstrators, were explicitly designed to test aerodynamics, propulsion concepts, and materials for a future hypersonic “hyperplane,” positioning Destinus as one of Europe’s boldest bets on green, ultra-high-speed aviation. Over the past two years, however, the company has recalibrated toward more immediate and commercially viable opportunities. Rather than prioritising a full-scale hypersonic passenger aircraft, Destinus has shifted its centre of gravity to near-term, dual-use aerospace technologies, particularly autonomous and uncrewed systems. Its current portfolio includes UAV platforms such as LORD, RUTA, and Hornet, aimed at surveillance, mapping, rapid response, and defence applications. This strategic refocus was reinforced in 2025 with the acquisition of Swiss AI avionics specialist Daedalean in a deal reported at around $220–225 million, signalling that Destinus now sees its competitive edge less in raw speed and more in AI-driven autonomy and deployable systems — especially in defence and security markets where demand and timelines are clearer. Destinus is strengthening its role within the Dutch and broader European defence industrial base. With 750 engineers and specialists across Europe, the company combines AI-driven engineering, vertical integration, and large-scale production to design and manufacture autonomous systems and effectors at an industrial scale. “Securing this facility is an important milestone for Destinus and a strong signal of confidence in Europe’s ability to build high-performance autonomous flight systems at scale. It reinforces our production roadmap and accelerates the industrialisation of our platforms for European and allied customers,” said Mikhail Kokorich, Founder and CEO of Destinus.  The new capital will accelerate the expansion of Destinus’ production lines, integration facilities, and testing infrastructure, enabling the company to supply scalable, cost-efficient autonomous systems that reinforce European defence readiness and strengthen sovereign industrial capacity across allied nations.

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ÄIO wins €1.2M grant to scale fermentation-based flavoured fats for food

Tallinn-based ÄIO, a biotechnology company developing sustainable, non-animal fats and oils through fermentation, has been awarded a €1.2 million grant from Enterprise Estonia to advance its FERM-OIL project. The total project budget is €2.3 million. Founded in 2022 as a spin-off from TalTech (Tallinn University of Technology), ÄIO produces food-grade fats and oils by using specialised yeast to convert wood and agricultural by-products, such as sugars derived from sawdust. The approach is designed to reduce reliance on animal fats and palm oil through a faster, lower-impact production process. To date, the company has raised €6.8 million in seed funding and secured around €3 million in grants from Enterprise Estonia, the Environmental Investment Centre, and the EU CBE-JU programme. While alternative and plant-based proteins have seen rapid progress, the food industry continues to face a shortage of sustainable lipid ingredients that complement these products. Many early-stage lipid alternatives struggle to scale or meet industrial and regulatory requirements. FERM-OIL aims to address this gap by supporting the transition from laboratory development to industrial food production. As explained by Dr Mary-Liis Kütt, ÄIO’s Chief Innovation Officer and lead of the project, FERM-OIL focuses on one of the most challenging steps in food innovation: moving from lab-scale validation to factory-scale manufacturing. We already know that our Flavoured Fat performs well in prototypes, from replacing cocoa powder and brown sugar to adding a silky texture to broths and sauces. This project allows us to validate the process on industrial lines, generate robust safety data for the novel food dossier, and better understand consumer responses to these new lipid ingredients. Over the next three years, the project will advance ÄIO’s Flavoured Fat, a lipid-rich yeast biomass designed to deliver umami flavour and functional mouthfeel, from lab and pilot stages to validated industrial production. The work will include optimising the fermentation process, validating second-generation feedstocks sourced from food, forestry, and agricultural side-streams, and transferring production to an industrial contract manufacturing facility. Test batches will be used for downstream processing optimisation, quality and shelf-life studies, and novel food safety assessment. By the end of the project, ÄIO aims to reach TRL6, demonstrating readiness for industrial-scale production. This will include confirming process requirements at scale and completing the safety work needed to submit a novel food dossier to the European Commission. The project is also expected to support follow-on investment plans for a 4,000-tonne-per-year production facility and potential large-scale licensing agreements. Fermentation gives us a way to turn side-streams into stable, nutritious, functional lipids that are not dependent on climate, seasons, or fragile global supply chains. This grant allows us to demonstrate that our process can operate at industrial scale and that novel lipids can become a reliable part of future food systems, said Nemailla Bonturi, co-founder and CEO of ÄIO. Within FERM-OIL, ÄIO will also evaluate Flavoured Fat across savoury, bakery, and beverage applications, working with potential customers to assess performance in their processes and gather feedback on taste, texture, and consumer acceptance. The broader aim is to enable local production of key lipid ingredients using manufacturers’ own side-streams, reducing dependence on animal fats and land-intensive tropical oils.

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Cowboy seals majority-stake deal with ReBirth to restart production and stabilise operations

Brussels e-bike company Cowboy has officially closed its deal with ReBirth Group Holding SA — the French mobility group behind renowned cycling brands including Peugeot, Gitane, and Solex.  This agreement signals a significant new phase for Cowboy, bringing together the company’s design, software, and product expertise with ReBirth’s robust industrial and recapitalisation capabilities. ReBirth’s proven experience in supporting and scaling mobility brands gives Cowboy the new operational foundation it needs to stabilise production, increase delivery reliability, and move toward long-term sustainability.  The combined transaction, including new capital from ReBirth and reinvestment from existing shareholders (€15 million) for a majority stake in the company. In addition to the conversion of legacy obligations into equity, are new financial measures designed to stabilise and strengthen Cowboy for the long term.  The transaction includes a full financial restructuring with Cowboy’s primary lender, providing a stronger balance sheet and a clean slate.  New funding will be received in several stages and is primarily dedicated to supporting the restart of the production and delivery of spare parts.  The move has been received positively by Cowboy’s existing shareholder base, with both investors and the Crowdcube community voting overwhelmingly in favour of this new chapter and endorsing the long-term vision shared by both companies.  A partnership built on shared expertise  ReBirth contributes deep expertise in industrial operations, supply chain management, and a robust distribution network in France. In turn, Cowboy brings into the ReBirth Group a market-leading connected platform, award-winning design DNA, and one of the most engaged rider communities in the urban e-bike segment.  Cowboy’s digital expertise and platform capabilities will also support innovation across other ReBirth brands, applying the same data-driven systems and tools that have defined Cowboy’s approach to connected mobility.  This vertical integration enables greater production efficiency, cost optimisation, and shared innovation across ReBirth’s ecosystem of brands – with Cowboy maintaining its distinct design and technology-driven identity. A stronger foundation for customers  With the transaction now complete, Cowboy reaffirms that its community of over 80,000 riders will continue to receive full support on the road. All existing bikes remain operational, with hardware, software, and customer services operating as normal.  The ongoing recall programme that has expanded its efforts into major cities around Europe and the UK already, will also continue, with a detailed progress update to be shared in the New Year.  Backed by ReBirth’s industrial strength, Cowboy’s production will restart at its French assembly facility in the New Year. A reinforced manufacturing schedule is now in motion, in addition to a comprehensive production plan of over 1,500 bikes in January, which will support the fulfilment of the existing backlog and beyond. In the coming weeks, all waiting customers will receive updated delivery timelines aligned with this new plan.  Operational planning for 2026 is being built around significantly improved capacity, predictability, and access to components. This enhanced industrial foundation allows Cowboy to operate with greater resilience and consistency, ensuring riders receive their bikes faster and enjoy the high-quality experience the brand is known for.  Marta, Head of Customer Success at Cowboy, said:  ‘We previously set a high benchmark for after-sales service, and this new chapter allows us to return to that standard. With stronger operational capacity and clearer timelines, we’re focused on rebuilding trust and delivering the consistent support our customers expect from Cowboy.”  Industrial integration and supply chain excellence   While Cowboy bikes have already been assembled in ReBirth’s French production facilities, this next phase marks a deeper operational integration – improving quality control, lead times, and scalability across ReBirth’s established European and Asian supplier networks.  This increase will enable Cowboy to offer shorter, more competitive lead times for new customers from Spring 2026 onward.  This integration provides Cowboy with the industrial leverage necessary to return to stable, large-scale production, positioning the brand to achieve sustainable profitability.  Expanding retail and after-sales support  Leveraging ReBirth’s extensive retail and service network – including 95 Oxygen and 10 Ovelo bike stores as well as 500 Independent Bike Dealers – Cowboy will significantly strengthen its physical presence in France.  Plans include the rollout of new retail and service points in major cities, improving local availability, after-sales care, and visibility. Currently, Cowboy’s fourth-largest market behind the Netherlands, Belgium, and Germany, France is expected to become its fastest-growing market, supported by ReBirth’s infrastructure and logistics expertise.  Leadership for the next chapter As part of this transition, Cowboy’s leadership team is now working in close alignment with ReBirth Group leadership. Together, they will guide the brand into its next phase, with a focus on operational excellence, customer satisfaction, and continued innovation.  Adrien Roose, Founder and outgoing CEO, has supported the transition period and has now left the company.  Grégory Trébaol, CEO of ReBirth Group Holding SA, said:  “I would like to thank Cowboy’s founders for their vision, ambition, and the remarkable company they have built in a difficult market. This transaction opens a new chapter for Cowboy. Following Peugeot, Gitane, and Solex, Cowboy now stands as Rebirth Group’s fleuron for connected urban mobility, completing a string of pearls of iconic brands. Combining our industrial capabilities with Cowboy’s innovation will enhance efficiency, reinforce margins, and create a strong foundation for long-term growth.”   Adrien Roose, Founder of Cowboy, said:  “My hope is that this new partnership will make Cowboy more reliable for riders in the long term. To keep them on the road and supported in the best way possible.”  Cowboy will continue to operate independently from its Brussels headquarters, maintaining its in-house design, engineering, and software teams. Working hand-in-hand with ReBirth, the company’s priorities are now to strengthen production, optimise supply chains, and expand its retail and service footprint across Europe.  Together, the two companies are building a more resilient foundation for the future, one that prioritises reliability, efficiency, innovation and rider satisfaction. 

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Trade Republic confirms decacorn status, following secondary share sale

German stock trading app Trade Republic has confirmed a €12.5 billion ($14.7bn) valuation, following a secondary share sale which saw Peter Thiel’s Founders Fund and Sequoia buy more shares.The new €12.5bn valuation propels Trade Republic to decacorn status (privately held company valued at over $10bn), more than doubling its 2022 approximate valuation of €5bn.Investors sold shares worth €1.2bn to existing investors, including Founders Fund, Sequoia, Accel, TCV and Thrive Capital, Trade Republic said.New investors in Berlin-based Trade Republic include Wellington, Fidelity and Khosla Ventures, it said. The deal doesn’t bring any new capital into Trade Republic.Christian Hecker, co-founder and CEO, Trade Republic, said: ‘“This transaction underlines that the cultural shift to retail investing in Europe is only starting. Especially since governments such as Germany start meaningful pension reforms to foster private stock ownership in the broader public.” 

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Small business tech tips: A guide to getting more done with Zoom Workplace [Sponsored]

As a small business owner, you have to be scrappy. You need to find ways to break out in today’s crowded market — reach new audiences, automate processes, improve efficiencies, and do more with less — without overextending your team. The right technology can unlock all that, and then some. A 2024 study by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce reported that 99% of small-business owners use at least one tech platform or tool to run their business, with 47% using four or more platforms. Two out of five small business owners (40%) said they were using generative AI, nearly double the percentage of generative AI users in 2023 (23%). But some may not realize that they only need one platform for their communication and collaboration needs, with generative and agentic AI built in. Zoom Workplace with AI Companion brings together phone, team chat, whiteboard, meetings, smart documents, and supported third-party integrations into a single user experience. Whether you’re looking to get more done for your current customer base or actively grow your business, check out the tips below to see how Zoom Workplace can help you save more time while getting the biggest bang for your buck. 1. Boost productivity with AI Companion The U.S. Chamber of Commerce small-business survey reports that 91% of businesses said they were optimistic that AI would help their business grow in the future. However, 22% of businesses that don’t use AI cite concerns about cost as a barrier to adoption. While some companies charge a premium for AI capabilities per user, Zoom AI Companion is included at no additional cost with your eligible paid Zoom plan.* Just click the AI Companion sparkle icon when you’re hosting a Zoom meeting. This will allow you to turn on meeting summaries or ask a question like “catch me up” to get the details on what has been discussed so far. In addition to summarizing meetings, AI Companion can also help you compose emails and chat messages, brainstorm and organize content on a whiteboard, and prioritize your voicemails and summarize phone calls on Zoom Phone. You can ask AI Companion to pull insights from your meeting transcripts to jumpstart a project brief, blog post, or other content in Zoom Docs. You don’t need to spend time going through colleagues’ calendars to schedule your next check-in — AI Companion can check availability and schedule that meeting on your behalf. These capabilities enable you to be more efficient, which means you can spend your valuable time doing more meaningful work. Visit our AI Companion page to learn more about specific ways your small business can use AI to improve your workday. 2. Cut down on app switching You might be familiar with Zoom Workplace as the app you use to join Zoom Meetings. But there’s so much more you can do from the Zoom Workplace desktop app: Chat with teammates on Zoom Team Chat, which is included with all Zoom accounts — you can create channels with groups of people or send direct one-on-one messages. You can even add external contacts and chat with them, for communication that feels easier, faster, and more organized than email. Connect your Google or Microsoft calendar with your Zoom account to see all your meetings in the Calendar tab. You can join Zoom Meetings with a few simple clicks (you won’t have to hunt for the meeting link anymore!), schedule meetings directly in the Zoom Workplace app using AI Companion, and more. Connect your Google or Microsoft email account with your Zoom account (or set up a free email address with Zoom Mail) to easily access email messages without having to navigate to a different app. You can even use AI Companion to help you compose emails. If you have Zoom Phone, use the softphone interface in the Zoom Workplace app to make calls, view and listen to voicemails, send text messages, and more. AI Companion can help out here, too, with post-call summaries and the ability to prioritize and extract tasks from your voicemails. Access a suite of built-in productivity tools to create notes, video clips, and whiteboards, which you can easily share with your colleagues. If you have Workvivo, you can access it directly in the app to view colleagues’ posts, give kudos to a teammate, read company news, and explore different department spaces. If you haven’t already, download the latest version of the Zoom Workplace app and explore the tabs in the top navigation bar to see how you can get more out of Zoom while you work. 3. Streamline your appointment scheduling Appointment scheduling apps can help your team cut down on the time spent setting up meetings with prospects, customers, and clients. Instead of emailing back and forth to schedule an appointment, all your customer needs to do is click on a scheduling link and select a date and time that works for them to book a spot on your calendar. If you have a Zoom Workplace Business or Business Plus account, you get access to Zoom Scheduler right in your desktop or mobile app at no additional cost. Zoom Scheduler syncs with your Google, Microsoft, or Zoom Calendar to make booking easy, and you don’t have to worry about sending an email with a Zoom meeting link — it’s all taken care of automatically. If your Zoom Workplace plan doesn’t come with Scheduler, you can add it on for less than other scheduling apps like Calendly. Learn more about how Zoom Scheduler stacks up against Calendly. 4. Keep the conversation going after meetings Important conversations don’t end when a Zoom meeting is over. In fact, a lot of critical action items, discussions, and decision-making actually happen once you leave your Zoom call. Learning how to use Zoom Workplace throughout the meeting lifecycle (the time you spend before, during, and after your meetings) is key to spending your time more efficiently. When you schedule a meeting in the Zoom Workplace app, click the option to enable continuous meeting chat. This lets you start a group chat with meeting attendees beforehand to align on agenda items or share pre-meeting materials for review. Once the meeting starts, you can refer back to those messages and continue chatting in the meeting. After the meeting is over, continue the conversation in Team Chat. You can share the AI Companion meeting summary and revisit discussion threads to close the loop on outstanding items. 5. Work on the go with Zoom Phone According to a 2024 Morning Consult survey commissioned by Zoom, 82% of small-business owner respondents said they use phones to stay connected, versus 70% of respondents at companies with over 1,000 employees.** Even in the digital age, phone communication is still critical — but it needs to fit your business’s on-the-go or hybrid work style. Zoom Phone brings your phone communications into the cloud, letting you and your employees access your business phone from the Zoom Workplace desktop or mobile app. That means you can make and receive calls from any compatible device, whether you’re in the office, at home, or on the go. You can keep your existing compatible desk phones if you want, or choose supported desk and conference phones from our leading hardware partners. Here are just a few ways Zoom Phone helps improve communications among your employees and customers: Employees can save time by leveraging AI Companion for Zoom Phone to summarize calls and text messages, prioritize voicemails, and more. You can use your favorite business tools in tandem with Zoom Phone. Our phone solution integrates with essential applications like Salesforce, Google G-Suite, ServiceNow, and HubSpot. It’s easy to add and manage users in Zoom Phone. This makes it especially great for small business owners who might wear many hats and lack the IT resources to manage a more complex solution. You can set up call queues to help lessen response times. Divide and conquer customer inquiries by routing calls to a designated group of users, such as a sales or support team, so the first person available can answer the phone. Employees may be on a phone call and want to draw a quick sketch or pull up a document to review with the other people on the phone. With Zoom Workplace, they can easily go from a phone call to a video meeting when the situation requires, giving them more ways to have a productive conversation. Get more tips for running your small business If you want more tips for running your small business with Zoom, check out our on-demand webinar. It breaks down the top 10 time-saving Zoom Workplace features to help small business leaders like you improve how you work.

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