

It was wonderful to meet you in London on November 20th.
Using the form below, please indicate who you would like us to facilitate a meeting with.
Underneath the form, you will find information about Clean Growth Fund and each of the companies that presented.
We look forward to a continued collaboration between the UK and Japan.
Clean Growth Fund

Clean Growth Fund is a £101m climate venture capital fund. We empower UK clean tech entrepreneurs with the expertise and capital that they need to tackle the climate crisis. We have made 14 investments so far in exciting low carbon innovations.
Above Surveying

We have worked on over 5000 solar surveys and are supporting customers across six continents. We work with many of the world’s leading solar energy companies to deliver solar plant data and analytics through our interactive platform, SolarGain.
measurable.energy

Our plug sockets minimise your carbon emissions, helping you to achieve your net zero goals, whilst reducing your electricity costs by at least20%.
Nuada

Nuada is a vertically integrated carbon capture company that strives to decarbonise hard-to-abate sectors through our next-generation carbon capture technology. We are already building concrete foundations of our vision with the backing of the Global Cement & Concrete Association (GCCA) and leading cement companies.
Sunswap

A zero emission transport refrigeration unit that doesn’t compromise on performance, efficiency or reliability. We’ve combined outstanding performance, efficiency and reliability with zero emission to create the ultimate transport refrigeration solution. This is an electric transport refrigeration unit you can rely on to deliver.
Vector Photonics

Vector Photonics is commercialising PCSELs (Photonic Crystal Surface Emitting Lasers) with the aim to revolutionise laser manufacture and performance. This new class of laser offers high speed and power and can be manufactured at low cost – three characteristics not simultaneously achievable with current semiconductor lasers.
The world relies on lasers. Datacentres use lasers to power their communications networks to access, share and retrieve the vast data volumes required by an internet-enabled world. Globally, these datacentres account for 2-3% of electricity usage and this demand is forecast to grow by up to 400% by 2030.