EchoVC has a $2.5m fund and it’s not for fintech startups

EchoVC, considered one of Nigeria’s oldest indigenous enterprise capital companies, needs to seed early-stage power, agri-tech and climate-tech startups, two years after it co-led the $85 million sequence B of Gro-Intelligence, the US-based local weather and agri-commodity startup.

The ‘pilot’ $2.5M fund will give attention to corporations constructing options that enhance agricultural productiveness, assist farmers entry new markets and convey new cooling and power storage applied sciences to the market. Kenya and Nigeria get a particular deal the place EchoVC will look to again electrical 2 and 3-wheelers. Each nations have giant and rising city populations with poor city transportation infrastructure. In Nigeria, dependable grid electrical energy is non-existent, and Kenya’s authorities has flagged off an e-mobility marketing campaign that has seen electrical bus corporations like Basigo arrange store within the nation.

Vitality and climate-tech startups have attracted extra investments from enterprise capital companies this yr, displacing investments into fintech corporations. The $2.5 million fund dubbed Eco Pilot Fund I’ll make investments as much as $200,000 in promising local weather tech. Backed by two undisclosed DFIs, the Eco Pilot Fund I’ll put money into 8 to 10 climate-tech and power startups throughout Africa. 

“As we see extra mid-sized and huge funds coming to market to again local weather and power startups, we have now struggled to search out any which can be set as much as take first cash danger or do the work to assist kickstart the businesses that may later be candidates for funding by these funds,” Taiwo Kamson, a principal funding officer at EchoVC identified. “The continent wants these pre-seed stage corporations to create and deploy the options mandatory to fulfill market demand.” By being the primary investor for goal corporations, EchoVC needs to construct a pipeline of pre-seed that may obtain investments from greater funds that focus on local weather, agri-tech and power in Africa. 

“When you get out of the fintech world you actually wrestle [to raise funds]… like desert work proper there, ” Eghosa Omoigui, founder and managing companion of EchoVC advised TechCabal on a name. “That was attention-grabbing to us as a result of we realised that when you fund founders who’re working in these areas, they’re extra seemingly than to not be mission-driven,” Omoigui mentioned.

Being the primary institutional investor means taking up extra danger and ready for longer durations to understand revenue from profitable investments. 

Based in 2011, EchoVC has deployed roughly $41 million throughout a number of funds and returned nearly half (up to now) from exited corporations, per disclosures on their web site. Earlier this yr, the agency launched an $8 million blockchain fund to put money into founders constructing African options on the blockchain. Omoigui mentioned on the time that backing blockchain-powered corporations at a time when traders had been retreating from the sector, allowed his agency to, “make investments at decrease entry valuations on common than in prior years.” That’s one technique to say ‘we had been fortunately late and may decide up the gems left behind within the mess.” With this eco-friendly fund, nonetheless, EchoVC needs to get forward of the hype cycle, which is already constructing. In African VC circles, EchoVC is seen as an investor that’s each powerful in due diligence and prepared to roll up their sleeves and get into the weeds of working a fledgling enterprise with founders. 

EchoVC can be elevating a further fund which it is going to use to again essentially the most promising companies from its preliminary pilot investments. “We anticipate that our learnings from this car will feed into our investments to be comprised of our bigger 2024 Eco Fund,”  Omoigui mentioned in a press assertion shared with TechCabal.

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