InnoEnergy’s plan confirms the solid pipeline of clean industrial ventures that will play a critical role in driving Europe’s competitiveness and economic growth, as captured in the European Union’s Clean Industrial Deal. The confirmed 2040 climate targets, and adjacent regulations, provide long-term investment certainty for the sector and strengthen Europe’s appeal as a key destination for clean tech capital.
“We know first-hand that the energy transition and industrial transformation are not a ‘walk in the park’” said Diego Pavia, CEO of InnoEnergy. “Our growth strategy sends a clear signal: we are staying the course, tackling the complexities of industrialising clean technologies head on. Europe has a unique single market, a strong industrial base, and the most ambitious and stable regulatory framework reaffirmed by the Clean Industrial Deal. With a maturing pipeline of clean industrial newcomers ready to scale and serve the domestic demand, growth financing is critical, and our ambitions directly address this opportunity.”
Starting this year, InnoEnergy is preparing to continue its role as a leading early-stage impact investor, raising additional capital and co-establishing new funds to bridge Europe’s ‘growth equity’ gap. The company also plans to launch additional strategic value chain initiatives in emerging sectors to accelerate the development of new clean tech markets, building on its strong leadership in the battery, PV and green hydrogen value chains. This growth plan aims to mobilise up to 160 billion euros in clean tech investment by 2030, covering equity, debt, grants, and project finance.
“The energy transition is more than an environmental imperative – it’s the basis for a profound industrial, economic and societal transformation that requires bold action to ensure clean tech innovation is scaled at speed” added Elena Bou, Innovation Director at InnoEnergy. “Through our new brand, we are signalling to investors, innovators, policymakers, and industrial leaders: we are here to continue leading, to partner, and to make the hard things happen.”
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