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Climate Tech

Camouflage, clouds, and birds.
Technology

The Defense Department Still Needs Climate Tech

It’s useful for more than just decarbonization.

Technology

One Big Climate Investor Is Bullish About 2025. Another Sees Disaster Brewing.

Obvious Ventures’ Andrew Beebe and Generate Capital’s Scott Jacobs reflect on the past, present, and future of climate tech.

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Technology

Climate Tech Companies Plan For Survival Under Trump

They grew up on Biden-era climate regulations and tax credits. What happens now?

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Money and disasters.

As Disasters Strike, Investors Turn to Adaptation Tech

The more Hurricanes Helene and Milton we get, the harder it is to ignore the need.

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Revolving doors.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Ten years ago, if you were a hotshot senior advisor in the Obama administration, odds are good you exited the revolving door of the White House straight into a job in Big Tech. But there’s a new career trajectory that’s looking pretty good these days: federal government to climate tech. Since the latter Obama years and increasingly with the passage of the Inflation Reduction Act two years ago, former government employees are popping up at some of the most important companies and venture capital firms in the climate ecosystem.

That’s a testament to how far we’ve come since clean tech 1.0 in the 2010s, when Solyndra’s bankruptcy was blowing up headlines and the shale revolution was starting to derail renewable energy investment. As a more durable market started to rise from the ashes, a growing number of industry experts jumped into government to help fuel the revival — and then often back into industry to take advantage of a more favorable policy environment and an increased focus on corporate sustainability.

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Technology

Only You (and AI) Can Prevent Wildfires

One VC dedicated to funding tech-based fire solutions has already found hundreds of potential investments.

Ones and zeroes and a forest fire.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

In a warming world where winter snow is melting earlier and rain is arriving later, “wildfire season” has become somewhat of a misnomer. Some parts of the country now see blazes popping up practically year round. This, combined with decades of fire management policy that promoted suppression over natural and controlled burns, has turned certain states — California, most famously — into tinderboxes.

With wildfire smoke becoming a standard component of Silicon Valley summers, it’s probably no surprise that numerous data analytics and artificial intelligence-focused startups have sprung up to address the issue. There’s even a San Francisco-based venture capital firm, Convective Capital, devoted solely to funding wildfire solutions.

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