The Year Of EdTech

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December 2020    |    Did someone forward you this email? Subscribe Here
2020: The Year of EdTech
This year has been truly unprecedented. As the Covid-19 pandemic has swept across the world, it has resulted in seismic shifts in our everyday lives. 

Nowhere has this been seen more than in education, and in education technology in particular. Figures published in October by AdEPT Technology Group show that the adoption of educational technology has soared by 131% this year compared to the whole of 2019. The pandemic has also transformed the learning experience of so many - of all ages - emphasising and highlighting a growing desire for digital transformation. 

In many ways, as in other sectors, we are seeing an acceleration of changes that already existed. Online learning, for instance, previously a key point within a university’s five-year roadmap, has now become an integral part of courses underway right now. Jacqueline Daniell, Chief Executive of Wey Education, which runs online school InterHigh, believes the pandemic has accelerated global adoption of edtech in schools and colleges by about five years - while others suggest it may have advanced its development yet further still. 

With this acceleration, the benefits of edtech are becoming increasingly well-known. As our partners, Owl Ventures (the largest edtech focussed fund in the world), recently set out in their 2020 report, there is a digital revolution rapidly unfolding in the education and workforce-development sectors:

The global education market is set to rise from $6 trillion in 2020, to up to $25 trillion in 2030. It is estimated that the next decade will see an additional 800 million K-12 graduates and 350 million post-secondary-school graduates more than today; and — with unprecedented demand for upskilling and reskilling — there is a surge in the value of education in the workforce. With historic market challenges — of infrastructure, capital and talent — being rapidly removed, we are now in a time where there is a fundamental acknowledgment that education technology will have a profound effect on the billions of worldwide learners of all ages.

By the middle of this year, edtech funding for 2020 had already reached $4.1b. This doesn't include a recently closed $200 million funding round for India’s online education startup Byju’s,  from investors including BlackRock Inc. and T. Rowe Price Group Inc. as demand for such classes skyrockets during the coronavirus pandemic.

It is evident that edtech is highly in demand, and very much here to stay. Institutions will require yet more complex and sophisticated edtech solutions to make this work. This year's lessons won’t be quickly forgotten, and as we emerge from the other side of this health crisis it is very likely that we’ll see edtech used less as simply a means of ensuring education’s continuity, but instead realising its potential to enrich the learning experience of all students.

 
Owl's Emerging Trends in 2020 & it's impact on the EdTech ecosystem
 
The impact of the crises on ed-tech is far-reaching, and the importance for high-quality, scaled education technology has never been greater.
1. Increased demand for EdTech

Ed-tech startups have experienced explosive demand. As the US, Europe and Asia cancel in-person classes, traditional classrooms are rushing to implement comprehensive, remote-learning solutions. In U.S. K-12 schools, after pandemic-related school closures, there was a 90% average increase in tools accessed each month. In a Inside Higher Ed survey of 187 university presidents, 98% of respondents had moved a majority of classes online. Increasing unemployment rates have put renewed pressure on employers and individuals to focus on reskilling and upskilling.

2. Need to be nimble 

The COVID-19 pandemic marks a profound turning point in the market, as educational institutions from here on out will need to be prepared and ready to deploy technology at scale as they continue to leverage distance- and hybrid- learning models to support all their students. For those in the workforce, the current reality of working remotely has increased the need for online solutions that can support remote hiring, training and learning best practices.

3. Solving for the at-home digital divide 

Among the many inequalities exposed by the COVID-19 pandemic, the digital divide is not only one of the most stark, but also, among the most surprising. According to UNESCO, only 55% of households globally have internet, and that number drops to 19% in the least-developed countries. A recent, Pew Research Center study estimated that, in the United States, roughly one-third (35%) of households with children ages 6 to 17 and annual incomes below $30,000 a year do not have high-speed internet connections at home. It is clear that there is a digital divide globally and that the divide disproportionately affects learners from low-income families and persons of color — which further increases the achievement gap.

4. Addressing the mental health crisis

Remarking the new realities of the pandemic — working from home, temporary unemployment, home-schooling of children, and lack of physical contact — experts warn that a historic wave of mental-health problems is here. In a recent Kaiser Family Foundation poll, nearly half (45%) of adults in the United States reported that their mental health has been negatively impacted due to worry and stress over the virus. A Center for Promise survey indicated that more than one in four young persons reported an increase in losing sleep, because of worry, feeling unhappy or depressed, feeling constantly under strain, or experiencing a loss of confidence in themselves. It goes without saying that this data is both sobering, and worrying.

Watch an interview which is part of Learnerbly's Expert Interview Series: 
"This is a watershed moment for EdTech": A conversation with Bernhard Niesner on what businesses need to survive COVID-19
Challenge Investing

Within our universe, we have a significant number of companies that are helping to profitably address the global challenge of Education.

If you’d like to invest in some of the most promising growth companies based on top research then please don't hesitate to get in touch.

This comes with very best wishes from everyone at Future Planet Capital. 
 
Want to know more?
Contact Ed Phillips or Abi Wye at Future Planet Capital. 

 

This monthly digest is brought to you by Future Planet Capital

This information is being communicated by Future Planet Capital (UK) Limited which is an appointed representative of Midven Limited, which is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority.This email message and any files transmitted with it are intended solely for the addressee(s) and are considered privileged and confidential. If you have received this email in error please (i) delete it and all copies of it from your system and (ii) destroy any hard copies of it. You should not divulge, copy, forward, or use the contents, attachments, or information in any way. Any unauthorized use or disclosure may be unlawful. Future Planet Capital gives no warranty as to the accuracy or completeness of email messages and accepts no responsibility for changes made after dispatch.
 
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Longevity Forum: Prof. Sarah Gilbert Lecture

This week saw the First Annual Lecture of the Longevity Forum, delivered by Professor Sarah Gilbert, Person of the Year 2020 for her leadership of the research into a Covid-19 vaccine and her career-long dedication to combating deadly pathogens with pandemic potential. Professor Gilbert is the Oxford Project Leader for ChAdOx1 nCoV-19, a promising vaccine against the novel coronavirus, SARS-CoV-2. She is a Professor at Oxford University and Co-founder of Vaccitech.

The challenge of climate change - in the midst of a global pandemic

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November 2020    |    View this email in your browser
The challenge of climate change
- in the midst of a global pandemic 
As we live through the greatest health crisis of a generation, the COVID-19 pandemic continues to disrupt lives worldwide. At the same time, as a recent new multi-agency report from leading science organisations sets out, the heating of our planet and climate disruption has continued apace. 

Climate change has not stopped for COVID19. The environment from local to global scales has witnessed apparent positive and negative impacts of the pandemic - global lockdowns have drastically altered the patterns of energy demand while at the same time personal protective equipment (PPE) has driven increased plastic pollution. Hospitals in Wuhan, the original centre of the outbreak, produced more than 240 tons of single-use plastic-based medical waste (such as disposable face masks, gloves, and gowns) per day at the peak of the pandemic, 6 times more than the daily average before the pandemic occurred


Sadly, greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere are at record levels and continue to increase. Even within current UN treaties that limit temperature rises to 2°C, there will be harsh consequences including ocean acidification, sea level rises and mass extinctions. To have any hope of holding the rise to 1.5°C, at which a quarter of the world’s current GDP could be lost by the end of the century, we need to act within the decade.

As we are faced by a number of significant challenges – from health and the economy to climate change and inequality – now is a time to reassess our values and think about what we can all do, and how we can invest profitably, to be be more responsible and sustainable. 
FPC's Focus on Tackling Climate Change
 
Future Planet, working in partnership with scientists and founders emerging from the world’s top universities, is seeking those companies best able to meet this challenge and address the $50 trillion market opportunity created by the challenge of climate change.   

The very essence of capitalism is to make more from less and the essence of responsible capitalism is to reduce unnecessary consumption and waste.  A sustainable approach to emissions, consumption and the environment is not only profitable but will reduce untold suffering for billions of humans and their fellow creatures. 

Future Planet brings together the world’s leading thinkers in these spaces and identities companies in three focus areas most likely to make a valuable difference to climate change, reducing our environmental footprint and husbanding bio-diversity.
1. Energy & Emissions 
25% of greenhouse gases derive from fossil fuels for electricity & heat production. This stores up problems for the future with climate change but, right now, air pollution as a whole impacts 90% of the global population and causes over 7 million premature deaths a year. Advances in AI and hardware will drive both investor value and impact in these systems. Key focus areas include Smart Cities, Transport, Clean Energy and Renewables and more.
2. Sustainable Consumption 
Embracing a circular, sustainable economy and living within smart cities is a matter of survival. Resource productivity / efficiency and waste elimination will have enormous impact & externality benefits for investors able to deploy & scale physical, digital & biological solutions to recycling and upcycling. Creating sustainable supply chains and new manufacturing methods, value chains will allow us to maintain productivity and create new opportunities in everything from FMCG to fashion.
3. Environment & Agriculture 
Agriculture, food, deforestation and changes in land use are a top three contributor to climate change and are predicted to lead to the extinction of over a million species.  As humans encroach on more and more natural eco-systems there will be further pandemics and other diseases. Biotech, CRISPR & new deep tech are offering new opportunities to increase yields while lowering CO2 and waste in the global food value chain, in addition to new meat substitutes and advances in agri/aquaculture that maintain biodiversity and planet health.
In a speech to the United Nations Forum of Mayors in Geneva, Foster said that he believes the current pandemic will not have a long-term impact on cities but will accelerate current trends.

The London-based architect, and Chairman of the FPF Advisory Board, believes that the coronavirus pandemic could speed up the adoption of more sustainable buildings and transport.

"We now have scientific evidence to prove that green buildings with natural ventilation are not only good for your health, but they enable you to perform better," he said.

"These kinds of buildings are now the exception. But they could become mainstream. We also have proof that green spaces in cities – however big or small – contribute to health and wellbeing."

For transport, he said that current trends towards electric vehicles will continue as well as a rise in use of e-bikes and scooters, while charging on the move could be introduced and monorails could return.

He also said car parks could be obsolete and went on to predict that farming could make a return to cities as one of several ways that urban areas could become greener.

"The cumulative effect of just some of these many trends are transforming city centres and local neighbourhoods, making them quieter, cleaner, safer, healthier, more friendly, walkable, bikeable and, if the opportunity is grasped, to be greener," he said.

The architect concluded that the current crisis could lead to cities being improved to become places that are more appealing to live in and more resilient to future health issues.

"The pandemic is a tragic event for so many, we have all lost loved ones and for the moment the virus continues," he said.

"But stepping back, I am confident that cities will prove their resilience and appeal – they will bounce back stronger and better as a consequence."

What opportunities has this crisis revealed for how we can rethink public transportation and roadways to reduce congestion and pollution, and to make our cities healthier and more sustainable for the future? Listen to this conversation between FPF Advisory Board Member Robin Chase, founder of ZipCar and urban transportation visionary, and the Boston Globe's Editorial Page Editor, Bina Venkataraman. The conversation was recorded on 5/7/20. 
 
Challenge Investing

Within our universe, we have a significant number of companies that are helping to profitably address this significant and vitally important global challenge. If you’d like to invest in some of the most promising growth companies based on top research then please don't hesitate to get in touch.

This comes with very best wishes from everyone at Future Planet Capital. 
 
Want to know more?
Contact Ed Phillips or Abi Wye at Future Planet Capital. 

 

This monthly digest is brought to you by Future Planet Capital

This information is being communicated by Future Planet Capital (UK) Limited which is an appointed representative of Midven Limited, which is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority.This email message and any files transmitted with it are intended solely for the addressee(s) and are considered privileged and confidential. If you have received this email in error please (i) delete it and all copies of it from your system and (ii) destroy any hard copies of it. You should not divulge, copy, forward, or use the contents, attachments, or information in any way. Any unauthorized use or disclosure may be unlawful. Future Planet Capital gives no warranty as to the accuracy or completeness of email messages and accepts no responsibility for changes made after dispatch.
 
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The global challenge of food security & biodiversity

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October 2020    |    View this email in your browser
The global challenge of food security & biodiversity 
Food security is when all people are able to access enough safe and nutritious food to meet their requirements for a healthy life, in ways the planet can sustain into the future.

However, food security faces a number of significant challenges across both production and consumption. On top of this, many countries are facing the double burden of hunger and undernutrition alongside overweight and obesity, with one in three people across the globe currently suffering from some form of malnutrition. The estimated cost to the world economy of disease and death from overweight and obesity is $2 trillion.

At the same time, almost 800 million people face hunger on a daily basis and more than two billion people lack vital micronutrients, affecting their health and life expectancy.
Nearly half of all deaths in children under 5 are attributable to undernutrition. 
Watch the above video from Global Food Security, the UK's cross government programme on food security research
Climate change will only make things worse as elevated levels of CO2 reduce the nutritional content of grains, tubers and legumes. A growing population also means more mouths to feed and with the expanding global population getting wealthier, there will be more pressure on resource intensive produce, particularly meat and dairy.

It has been estimated that by 2050 we'll need to feed two billion more people. However, there is by good approximation no new land for agriculture, with increasing competition from urbanisation, sea level rise reducing land availability, and the growing need for land for bioenergy, carbon capture and storage. 

It is clear that we will need to use every technology available, alongside best practice farming to sustainably increase production. This also has to be accompanied by changes to food demand including measures on both consumption and waste.

A major challenge is understanding how can we re-design the food system to be healthy, sustainable, and more resilient to climate change, helping to meet both the Sustainable Development Goals and the Paris Agreement.
 
UN Warns Biodiversity Loss Is Endangering Food Security
 
Global loss of biodiversity is threatening the security of the world’s food supplies and the livelihoods of millions of people, according to a report by the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). Land-use changes, pollution, overexploitation of resources, and climate change were listed as the biggest drivers of this biodiversity loss.

The report examined biodiversity loss in 91 countries, including the plants, animals, and microorganisms that provide critical ecosystem services, such as keeping soils fertile, pollinating crops, cleaning water, and fighting pests and diseases. The study found that while more than 6,000 plant species have been cultivated for food, just 9 account for 66 percent of total crop production, indicating widespread monoculture on farmers’ fields. The FAO tallied 7,745 local breeds of livestock, 26 percent of which are at risk of extinction and 67 percent whose risk status is unknown. An estimated 24 percent of wild food species are decreasing in abundance, while the status of another 61 percent are not reported or known.
Hear Sir David Attenborough explain what biodiversity on our planet really means, and why it's so crucial to the survival of our natural world. David Attenborough: A Life on Our Planet was released earlier this month. 
MIT Solve - Sustainable Food Systems Challenge 

Over $2 million in prize funding is available for Solve's 2020 Global Challenges, including Sustainable Food Systems. The MIT Solve community - of which FPC is a Member alongside Nike, Microsoft and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation - is looking for technology-based solutions for a low-carbon global food system that provides nutrition with minimal environmental impact. 

Shortlisted companies for the Future Planet Prize 2020 within Sustainable Food Systems are: 
  1. Whole Surplus: provides digital surplus food management system prioritizing recovery solutions in line with the Food Recovery Hierarchy.
  2. eggXYt: Saving 8 billion male chicks, saving billions of dollars and adding 8 billion eggs to the global supply.
  3. Symbrosia: A novel seaweed feed supplement that solves climate change by reducing livestock methane emissions by over 90%
Douglas Hansen-Luke, Executive Chairman, Future Planet Capital announces the Finalists for the Future Planet Capital Prize at Virtual Solve Challenge Finals 2020
Challenge Investing

Within our universe, we have a significant number of companies that are helping to profitably address this significant and vitally important global challenge. If you’d like to invest in some of the most promising growth companies based on top research then please don't hesitate to get in touch.

This comes with very best wishes from everyone at Future Planet Capital. 
 
Want to know more?
Contact Ed Phillips or Abi Wye at Future Planet Capital. 

 

This monthly digest is brought to you by Future Planet Capital

This information is being communicated by Future Planet Capital (UK) Limited which is an appointed representative of Midven Limited, which is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority.This email message and any files transmitted with it are intended solely for the addressee(s) and are considered privileged and confidential. If you have received this email in error please (i) delete it and all copies of it from your system and (ii) destroy any hard copies of it. You should not divulge, copy, forward, or use the contents, attachments, or information in any way. Any unauthorized use or disclosure may be unlawful. Future Planet Capital gives no warranty as to the accuracy or completeness of email messages and accepts no responsibility for changes made after dispatch.
 
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The race to a COVID-19 vaccine

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September 2020    |    View this email in your browser
The race to a COVID-19 vaccine
Since the beginning of the year, coronavirus has wreaked havoc across the world. The pandemic, which was first detected in China, has infected people in 188 countries and lead to over 14 national lockdowns, something that previously would have been unimaginable.

Since 31 December 2019 (and as of 06 September 2020), 26,921,111 cases of COVID-19 have been reported, including 881,831 deaths worldwide. On top of this devastating loss of life, the pandemic has sent significant parts of the economy into turmoil and caused historic levels of unemployment in the United States and around the world. The World Economic Forum suggested COVID-19 pandemic will likely end up costing between $8.1 and $15.8 trillion globally.

In response to this crisis, the global innovation community mobilised quickly to initiate the development of a vaccine for COVID-19, the disease that coronavirus causes. Hundreds of individuals and institutions—in academia, biotechnology, government, and pharmaceuticals—embarked on one of the most consequential scientific endeavours in living memory.
 FPC is in the the thick of the race, at the final stages of executing investment in one of the leading companies.

Funding poured in from governments, multilateral agencies, not-for-profit institutions, and the private sector. Regulators showed uncanny speed in working with innovators. Now, months later, there are over 169 COVID-19 vaccine candidates under development, with 26 of these in the human trial phase, according to the World Health Organization.  
Watch Guardian Science Editor Ian Sample explain how vaccines work, run through some of the main obstacles to creating one for the coronavirus and to preparing it for public use, and telling us which scenario he thinks is most realistic in the next 18 months. Read the latest Guardian covid vaccine tracker here
Path to Development 
 
Vaccines mimic the virus – or part of the virus – they protect against, stimulating the immune system to develop antibodies. They must follow higher safety standards than other drugs because they are given to millions of healthy people.

Vaccines normally require years of testing and additional time to produce at scale, but scientists are hoping to develop a coronavirus vaccine within 12 to 18 months. This would make a COVID-19 vaccine the fastest developed vaccine in history. 
 
How are vaccines tested?

In the pre-clinical stage of testing, researchers give the vaccine to animals to see if it triggers an immune response.

In phase 1 of clinical testing, the vaccine is given to a small group of people to determine whether it is safe and to learn more about the immune response it provokes.

In phase 2, the vaccine is given to hundreds of people so scientists can learn more about its safety and correct dosage.

In phase 3, the vaccine is given to thousands of people to confirm its safety – including rare side effects – and effectiveness. These trials involve a control group which is given a placebo.

Five key updates on the COVID-19 vaccine race 
 
The WHO have this week published a document outlining the draft landscape of COVID-19 candidate vaccines - identifying some of the leaders in the race. 

To bring more clarity to the conversation, McKinsey have conducted an in-depth review of the COVID-19-vaccine pipeline and the range of potential immunization and demand scenarios. Here is what has been found:


1. Vaccine developers and government officials are publicly reporting timelines for potential emergency use of vaccine candidates between the fourth quarter of 2020 and the first quarter of 2021

2. The early data on vaccine trials are promising. Even though uncertainties remain, the first Phase 3 trial results should provide “valuable insights for the field and inform ongoing and future development activities aimed not only at controlling the current global pandemic but also for effective long-term immunization strategies against the disease.”


3. The discrete characteristics of the virus, the sheer number of development efforts, and innovators’ unprecedented access to funding all provide reasons to believe that a COVID-19 vaccine can be developed faster than any other vaccine in history. Historical attrition rates would suggest that the vaccine pipeline could yield more than seven approved products over the next few years

5. Vaccine manufacturers have announced cumulative capacity that could produce as many as one billion doses by the end of 2020 and nine billion doses by the end of 2021

4. A number of hurdles remain, including validating unproven platform technologies, demonstrating vaccine candidates’ safety and protection against COVID-19, and delivering the highest-impact vaccine profiles
Challenge Investing

Within our universe, we have a significant number of companies that are helping to profitably address this significant and timely global challenge. If you’d like to invest in some of the most promising growth companies based on top research then please don't hesitate to get in touch.

This comes with very best wishes from everyone at Future Planet Capital. 
 
Want to know more?
Contact Ed Phillips or Abi Wye at Future Planet Capital. 

 

This monthly digest is brought to you by Future Planet Capital

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What is Quantum Computing & how could it change the future?

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August 2020    |    View this email in your browser
What is Quantum Computing & how could it change the future?

In this issue of Future Thinking, we look at the state of the quantum computing universe as it stands today, and five ways that it's development can, and likely will, tackle significant global challenges.

There can be no doubt that quantum computing will dramatically change the landscape of the future - from multidisciplinary fields such as physics and chemistry to the pharmaceutical, security and transportation industries.  It also raises important philosophical and ethical questions. It is a technology that will likely revolutionise the way that we live our lives. 

Globally, research labs at companies like Google and IBM are spending extensive resources on improving quantum computers, and with good reason. At the end of last year, Google announced to much fanfare that it had demonstrated “quantum supremacy” – that is, it performed a specific quantum computation far faster than the best classical computers could achieve.

IBM promptly critiqued the claim, saying that its own classical supercomputer could perform the computation at nearly the same speed with far greater fidelity and, therefore, the Google's announcement should be taken “with a large dose of scepticism.”

What does this all mean, how can we make sense of it, and how could Quantum Computing define the future?
Watch the video above from the Institute for Quantum Computing to discover what makes quantum computers very different and a lot more powerful than the computer you use every day. This video is part of QUANTUM: The Exhibition, a traveling 4,000 square foot, bilingual exhibition

Thanks to advances at leading universities around the world and industry research centers, a handful of companies have now rolled out prototype quantum computers. But the field is still wide open on fundamental questions about the hardware, software and connections necessary for quantum technologies to fulfill their potential. 

One of our key partners, Oxford Sciences Innovation, is working with its academics - the University of Oxford has been a world leader for quantum computing research -   to build companies that are challenging the corporates in this space with incredible pace. OSI's portfolio includes four quantum companies - each using a different kind of qubit - and one quantum security company. 

So the quantum computing market is most definitely here - and is projected to grow strongly through the next decade. As PwC's report last year outlined, we have seen strong innovations in recent years and McKinsey suggests that some companies may reap real gains from quantum computing within five years. Quantum computing will enable industries to tackle global challenges they never would have attempted to solve before: quantum computers have the potential to revolutionise computation by making certain types of classically intractable problems solvable.

It is an incredibly exciting space - and this newsletter will explore five ways that Quantum Computing might just alter our future...

 
How will quantum computing change the world? | The Economist

Five ways that Quantum Computing can tackle global challenges
 
1. Create life-saving medicines and solve some of science’s most complex problems: Quantum computers can significantly shorten the AI learning curve. If technology becomes more intuitive it will create huge impact in every industry. We’ll be able to do things we never thought possible, from creating life-saving medicines to solving some of science’s most complex problems.
2. Significant advancement of AI: Quantum Computing will change artificial intelligence by giving massive computing power to enable a faster and more robust AI. An AI on a Quantum Computer has the potential to hold a real conversation with humans and actually understand what is being said - it is also possible for quantum computing to result in The Singularity, the hypothetical future creation of superintelligent machines.
 3. Industrial opportunities:  This “4th Industrial Revolution”, as dubbed by Morgan Stanley, will yield explosive opportunities. Immediate applications include more energy-effcient materials, as well as better weather forecasting, financial modeling, and other applications of AI. But as with any new technology, the most exciting applications are those which we cannot yet even conceive.
 
4. Significant threat to cyber-security: What is considered safe encryption today will soon be undermined by quantum computing. It has been estimated that it would take quantum power of 4,000 qubits to break today’s ”strong” encryption keys - the clock is clearly ticking on all of today’s methods.
5. Quantum technologies can help to save the world: Alongside improved modelling, the World Economic Forum has discussed how advances in quantum computing could help simulate large complex molecules. These simulations could uncover new catalysts for carbon capture that are cheaper and more efficient than current models.
 
Challenge Investing

Within our universe, we have a significant number of companies that are helping to profitably address this exciting global challenge. If you’d like to invest in some of the most promising growth companies based on top research then please don't hesitate to get in touch.

This comes with very best wishes from everyone at Future Planet Capital. 
 
Want to know more?
Contact Ed Phillips or Abi Wye at Future Planet Capital. 

 

This monthly digest is brought to you by Future Planet Capital

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Climate Change, COVID 19 & How do we Build Back Better?

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July 2020    |    View this email in your browser
Climate Change, COVID 19 &
How do we Build Back Better?

Over the last 4 months, COVID-19 lockdowns around the world have dramatically cut climate change emissions. Daily carbon emissions plunged 17% by early April compared with 2019 levels, according to the first definitive study of global carbon output this year.

The findings show the world has experienced the sharpest drop in carbon output since records began, with large sections of the global economy brought to a near standstill. When the lockdown was at its most stringent, in some countries emissions fell by just over a quarter (26%) on average. In the UK, the decline was about 31%, while in Australia emissions fell 28.3% for a period during April.

 
Our desire to stay safe has also been instrumental in some dramatic mass behaviour changes. Before the crisis, we accepted the dominance of traffic noise as an inevitable consequence of city living. We raced from one thing to the next, assuming that it was impossible to reduce the level of our local and international travel. We were too busy to take stock of our consumption and often had a poor awareness of our unnecessary waste.

Now, we have sampled a much more tranquil urban ambience. We have had imposed travel restrictions - and often managed to still work effectively and socialise, albeit remotely. We had a moment to take stock, and to focus on what’s truly important. 

Numerous studies - like the graph below - have shown that the vast majority of us now believe that climate change is as serious as coronavirus. It is clear that Future Planet's long held position is becoming increasingly mainstream. 
The significant disruption in our routines caused by the pandemic may present an opportunity for us to move to a more sustainable lifestyle. Indeed, what opportunities has this crisis revealed for how we can reduce congestion and pollution, and make our cities healthier and more sustainable for the future? Our Advisory Board Member, founder of ZipCar and urban transportation visionary, Robin Chase, recently discussed these very issues with the Boston Globe's Editorial Page Editor, Bina Venkataraman. Watch the full discussion here.  

However as good as our intentions as individuals, it will take determined moves by businesses, industry, national and local government to modify the environment to ensure that we can build on these behavioural and attitude changes. 

There are initial positive signs. We were delighted to learn about an initiative launched by Richard Curtis and ex-Bank of England governor Mark Carney, the Make My Money Matter campaign, which wants the £3trillion in UK retirement pots used to take on climate change. It is also encouraging that there is a significant movement among some business leaders and policy makers to “build back better” from the pandemic in a way that confronts the climate crisis (watch to the FT's Moral Money discussion below). 

This newsletter considers some of the emerging theme and trends as we work to solidify the progress that has been made - and ensure that some light emerges from the COVID-19 darkness. 
 
Watch FT's Moral Money - Responsible Business in the Age of COVID-19 

Climate Change & COVID-19: Emerging Trends and Opportunities 
 
1. What is important?: Over the last four months we have faced the greatest health crisis of a generation. We have lived through an experience that was previously unimaginable. It has caused many of us to reassess our priorities, consider core values and clarified what's really important - for many this means prioritising humanity and protecting the environment
2. Benefits of nature: Significant numbers of us have been enjoying and having a renewed appreciation for nature. A large-scale study found a positive correlation between exposure to the natural world and pro-environmental behaviours. Google Trends also shows that during worldwide lockdowns online searches for “bird sounds”, “identify trees”, and “growing plants” reached double what they were a year ago
 3. Steep reduction in long distance travel: National and international lockdowns have curtailed the vast majority of long-distance travel. As a consequence, there has been a massive reduction in traffic on the roads as well as in air transport (e.g. the number of European daily flights in March and April decreased by approximately 90% compared to last year). Our reduction in movement has led to the biggest carbon crash ever recorded 
4. Changing the way we travel: UK cycle-to-work schemes are up 200% in the number of bicycle orders, with car use roughly 40% less than what it was in mid-February. Mass transit is not an attractive option right now so there is a search for other sustainable alternatives to avoid people returning to their cars. For example, Paris is rolling out 650km of "corona cycle-ways" and Milan has introduced a programme to prioritise pedestrians and cyclists
5. Greater awareness of consumption: As we have been spending a much greater amount of time at home, we can see for the first time how much energy we are using or how much food is being thrown away. This will hopefully encourage us to stop, think and ultimately change our behaviour. 
 
Challenge Investing

Within our universe, we have a significant number of companies that are helping to profitably address this global challenge. If you’d like to invest in some of the most promising growth companies based on top research then please don't hesitate to get in touch.

This comes with very best wishes from everyone at Future Planet Capital. 
 
Want to know more?
Contact Ed Phillips or Abi Wye at Future Planet Capital. 

 

This monthly digest is brought to you by Future Planet Capital

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Founders Interview: Douglas Hansen-Luke

This week, we are interviewing Future Planet’s founder and Executive Chairman, Douglas Hansen-Luke. After a long career in Asset Management in the Middle East, Europe, Asia and Africa, Douglas founded Future Planet Capital to meet an unmet need in the market: impact and innovation at scale. We asked him what drove him to start Future Planet, successes to date, and what the future holds.

1. What prompted you to found Future Planet Capital?

Future Planet Capital was founded in 2016 to enable sovereign funds and other large investors to access the innovation coming out of the best universities in the world. Ventures created at the top universities make up a tremendous amount of today’s global economy.  The standout examples, of course, are Facebook emerging from Harvard and Google being founded by Stanford grad students. The idea for FPC stemmed from a desire to systematise this process and when we saw a small deal in 2014 between a sovereign wealth fund and Trinity College Dublin, I believed I could do that better!

Future Planet grew out of a desire to  build a fund that makes a difference. I wanted to dedicate all my energies to this and leverage my experience with institutional investors to make an impact and a profit.

After conducting in-depth research into whether this was going to be a viable business option, we concluded that there was an unfilled need in the market. Hence, we developed partnerships with the university managers based around the word’s most prolific centres of innovation: Berkeley, Cambridge, Harvard, MIT, Oxford, Tsinghua and the University California System.  We then took these partnerships and connected the brightest people to the world’s most prominent investors; the rest was history.

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“Future Planet grew out of a desire to build a fund that makes a difference. I wanted to dedicate all my energies to this and leverage my experience with institutional investors to make an impact and a profit.”

2. When did you first start seeing success with the fund?

We started this the fund in a research-based manner and subsequently surveyed twenty sovereign wealth and pension funds, asking these funds to detail what they want to do with their money. We did this because one of the goals of the fund is to be a good manager of people’s money. Hence, a logical step to managing their money well is to understand where they want it invested. 

As a result, we attained early success. In our first eighteen months, the fund managed to deploy one hundred million dollars in assets, twenty million for British Local Government Pensions, thirty million sub-advisories for the British Innovation Fund. Fifty million of co-investment from a Sovereign Fund in the Middle East and from one of the world’s largest technology companies.

The initial success was most definitely there. However, success had to be measured on the results of our investments. Three years later, following the initial ten investments made by our fund, we have nine companies still operating and growing and one unicorn. While there was one failure as the company is no longer trading today. We look upon this as a success; the venture industry is high-risk with up to forty per cent of endeavours failing. Our ninety per cent success rate is something we are incredibly proud to have managed. This is absolutely a testament to the innovation arising out of top universities and our investing strategy

On top of our initial successes, we have looked to expand the stream of investments coming into our Fund and portfolio companies.   Future Planet has a partnership with Barclay’s Private Bank that allows ultra-high net worth individuals to co-invest with us and likewise with Global Corporate Venturing for business investors and with Seedrs for individuals.  This last is very important to us.  Venture Capital investing has long been the preserve of the richest among us.  Through an online investment opportunity, we are trying to democratise the industry, offering individuals a chance to invest with far smaller amounts of money in a venture that would have previously been financially unattainable.

3. Future Planet has existed for four years, what have you learnt about the industry at this time?

There are three things that I have learned in the time since starting Future Planet. The first point we recognised early in the process, and this has been backed up by research conducted throughout the four years. We saw there would be an opportunity to arbitrage value, in the centres of innovation, for example, venture companies in Shenzhen and San Francisco are highly valued with those on the Amtrak corridor in the US being slightly cheaper and those in the UK cheaper still. The valuations of companies differ not because of the quality of their product but rather their local market size for both customers and investors. As a result, these companies are subject to the supply and demand of their local area, thus changing their value depending on where they are founded. We at Future Planet research the quality of the company and compared this to international competitors. We would invest in companies with potential and help these them to grow into more significant markets. We have had success with this model taking UK companies such as Congenica, Navenio and Oxford Flow and introducing them to the Middle and the Far East.

The second lesson we learnt while developing the fund is that the biggest brand investors, the Silicon Valley venture giants, are followed by the herd.  These firms have access to the best founders in centres of innovation and then often sell out at later stages to those who don’t have that access.  We invest at the same time as these investors and from the same pool of opportunity – the universities and their eco-systems. 

The third lesson follows on from the other, early-stage investment is abundant. Every Government and fund want people to become innovators. The most inefficient part of the market is stage B and C as it is not as flashy; this growth stage, however, is vital company growth. At the earliest angel, seed and Series A stages the technology and commercial opportunity have yet to be proved.  By the time they’re at Series B the technology is usually ready and they are on the cusp of commercial traction and are in a position where our network will be able to help them with the next round of growth.

 4. What advice would you give to someone wanting to start an impact fund today?

 The first and second generation of impact funds focused mostly on the developing world and real estate in the developed world, such as social housing projects and infrastructure. My view is that the biggest challenges facing the world are far more focused on technology; it is this combined with government policy that is going to make a genuine difference. Climate change is going to impact billions of people. It is a technology that may be able to turn the tide. It is technology medicine that will make a difference in people’s health outcomes once again; this can have an impact on a large portion of the world’s population. Unless you are healthy, it is very challenging for you to do anything else. Once the health is sorted, we can then look at education. Education technology is making learning far more accessible to people, particularly in the K1-K12 age group. 

I believe that the impact and innovation move together. There is not enough money focused on connecting these two things; individually, they are both quite niche. But, put these together there are substantial addressable markets. When we view our deals, based on the sustainable development goals, there is often a total addressable market of over one trillion dollars or challenges and solutions that will make things better for over 1 billion lives. COVID or climate change, for example, has undoubtedly changed the lives of all seven billion of us.  We could even look at the human error behind car crashes which cause over a million deaths.  The vast majority of these would be avoided with autonomous vehicles.  We are operating in a unique space and find that very few people are working on the same type of ventures. We encourage new entrants into this area as there is more than enough room to support more than one fund manager. Knowing one’s eco-system can bring particularly strong results, so we are particularly open to local partnerships in Canada, China and India.

5. Where do you see Future Planet and yourself in five years?

 Future Planet is one of the most exciting and fulfilling things I have done in my professional career. There is a very significant impact and profit opportunity, and I would be disappointed if, in five years, Future Planet was not managing at least five hundred million dollars of assets. Much more than that I want us to have had first look at the next Google or Facebook but as companies that make a real difference to climate change, education, health, security or sustainable growth. We are already invested in companies that are creating vaccines for some of the world’s most challenging diseases. We want to continue investing in companies that are changing the world. For myself, this would be adequate fulfilment of a life’s work. 

I can’t imagine not being involved in Future Planet but over time our team will grow and talent needs time and space to breathe.  To allow that in years to come, I plan to be fully supportive of the internal network and external early-stage investment partners we have built so far. Then I would love to use the experience gained bringing academia and private capital together to do the same with private finance, technology and the world of public policy where much work remains to be done.

Future Planet For All

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June 2020    |    View this email in your browser
Future Planet For All
At Future Planet we are outraged at the violence, brutality and unequal treatment experienced by black communities in America. But, we also acknowledge that unfortunately these acts of racism aren’t new and they take place around the world. 

We stand in solidarity with all those affected by this issue. Inequality is a global challenge, without addressing it sustainable growth cannot not be achieved.  

The events in America, and the attention they have received all around the world, mean this is a time that united action can make a real difference. 

We are joining with investment colleagues from around the world to commit to a more inclusive technology industry and to ensure equality of opportunity for underrepresented groups. We are starting with a small step, actively broadening our search for top applicants and investments from all parts of our community. 

Whether in recruiting, or investing, we want to champion ability and experience of all different kinds. We want to encourage diversity within our own ranks and the funds and founders we invest with.

FPC’s core thesis is profit with purpose - harnessing the power, resources and talent of everyone regardless of background, colour or creed to create a better Future Planet for all. 

We are pleased to use this newsletter to highlight three companies working on tackling inequality.  

 
Changing the world: Tackling Inequality 
1. Blavity: a tech company for forward thinking Black millennials pushing the boundaries of culture and the status quo. The company's vision is to economically and creatively support Black millennials across the African diaspora, so they can pursue the work they love, and change the world in the process.
2. LandIt: A one-size-fits-one career pathing platform, Landit increases the success of women and diverse groups in the workplace, and enables companies to attract, develop, and retain high-potential diverse talent. Founded by Lisa Skeete Tatum and Sheila Marcelo, backed by NEA and Xfund.
 3. RaiseMe: Equal access to higher education has become one of the greatest issues of our time. At RaiseMe, the company are expanding access so that every student, especially among low income and first generation students, has a shot at the American Dream. RaiseMe enables students to earn scholarships throughout high school, starting as early as 9th grade, for doing all the things that best prepare them to succeed.  
Challenge Investing

The fight against inequality is incredibly important. Within our universe we have a significant number of companies that are helping to profitably address this global challenge.

If you’d like to invest in some of the most promising growth companies based on top research then please don't hesitate to get in touch.

This comes with very best wishes from everyone at Future Planet Capital. 
 
Want to know more?
Contact Ed Phillips or Abi Wye at Future Planet Capital. 

 

This monthly digest is brought to you by Future Planet Capital

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Future Thinking: COVID Challenge

“At Future Planet we are committed to doing our bit to support the national and international effort to tackle the unfolding coronavirus global health emergency. The FPC network has come together with not just companies which could make a difference, but also academics and suppliers. We are pleased to be supporting Imperial College's NHS Trust Study and Oxford University's Study with Effective Giving. And we are participating and have partnered with MIT Solve on their COVID-19 Challenge.

Read this month’s Future Thinking now — Future Thinking: COVID Challange

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Future Thinking: Education

"Quality education for all creates resilient and self-sustaining populations. The truth is, at present, 55% of the world’s children and adolescents lack minimum proficiency in reading and mathematics, and in Africa and South Asia it's over 80%. For women the picture is even worse. Of the 750 million adults who lack basic literacy, two-thirds are female"

— This month we talked all things education. Check out Future Thinking: Education.

Future Thinking: Global Pandemics

“Dealing with the risk of infectious diseases most decidedly ranks within the global challenges that Future Planet addresses when it makes investments. And, as with so many of our challenges, it concerns more than one challenge area - viruses are not only a health, but a security challenge.”

Check-out the latest issue of our Future Thinking” Newsletter on Global Pandemics this month.

https://mailchi.mp/5c6896d0fd96/future-thinking-march-4817518?e=[UNIQID]

https://mailchi.mp/5c6896d0fd96/future-thinking-march-4817518?e=[UNIQID]

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