Displaying 1 - 25 of 27
1
Article
After a slow start to the year, funding in climate tech startups returns to the financial highs of 2021’s bull market.
by Leah Garden
2
Article
PwC reveals a slowdown in venture capital and private equity climate tech investment, but the sector keeps outperforming the wider market.
3
Article
Journalist Esha Chhabra discusses her new book, 'Working to Restore: Harnessing the Power of Regenerative Business.'
5
Article
Silicon Valley Bank’s crash may be the catalyst supporters of democratized financing were hoping for.
by Leah Garden
6
Article
New report says venture capital investment in low-carbon building startups hit a record $2.2 billion in 2022.
by Amber Rolt
7
Article
As a venture capital firm focused on investing in climate change solutions, Galvanize prioritizes diversification within its portfolios and its executive leadership.
by Leah Garden
8
Article
In the first half, climate tech startups raised around $19 billion across 500 venture deals, but will that rate continue or slow down?
by Leah Garden
9
Article
New revenue-based loan programs from Los Angeles Cleantech Incubator, Enduring Planet offer alternatives.
10
Article
It’s time for the venture capital community to bone up on environmental, social and governance issues.
11
Article
Climate fintech companies raised $1.2 billion in 2021, three times the amount of previous years.
12
Article
From alternative fuels to advanced recycling technologies, director Emily Landsburg chats about what drives the private equity fund's investment decisions.
by CJ Clouse
13
Article
The VC models for start-up software companies won't cut it when it comes to hardware-heavy cleantech.
14
Article
Why do some green buildings perform as designed or better, while others might barely make the grade, even if certified? It turns out that even the most sustainably designed, intelligent building is only as smart and green as the people who occupy and operate it.
15
Article
Despite the well-trod cliché that a journey to sustainability is a marathon and not a sprint, Nike, with its Considered design ethos, shows all the signs of being in it for the long haul.
by Marc Gunther
16
Article
Although Seth Goldman says the company is still his baby, the planned full acquisition of the organic tea company will be another interesting experiment in how a smaller company can help shape the values and performance of its much bigger owner.
by Marc Gunther
17
Article
At the State of Green Business Forum in Washington D.C. today, the TeaEO of Honest Tea announced that Coke has decided to purchase the remaining 60 percent of the company, three years after it bought 40 percent of Honest Tea.
by Adam Aston
18
Article
Method's Adam Lowry describes how his company's innovations build on making life easier for their customers, and reducing environmental impacts at the same time.
19
Article
For a company with more than 115 years of history under its belt, Underwriters Laboratories is making big plans for the future, and its environmental wing has set its sites on meeting the market for reliable sustainability certifications.
20
Article
Lorrie Vogel, the head of Nike Considered, talked about the company's closed-loop ethos, why sustainability has to start from within, and how the company turned 13 million plastic bottles into World Cup jerseys.
21
Article
The Eco Index, launched last summer by a coalition of companies in the apparel industry, is shaping up to be a useful tool for companies across the spectrum, from wool socks to haute couture.
22
Article
Despite the wide array of sustainability initiatives companies are undertaking on their own operations, perhaps the biggest challenge to scaling up global sustainability efforts is convincing end users to reduce their own impacts.
23
Article
In an interview with BSR Senior Vice President Eric Olson, Clorox CEO Don Knauss described the sustainability journey of a company better known for its bleach than its green cleaning products.
24
Article
A renaissance in biology, chemistry and nanotechnology is breeding innovations in technologies that can address environmental problems, such as efficiency or recycling.
25
Article
In the first of our series on the biggest trends in green business practices in 2010, we look at the ways the world's biggest consumer brands -- P&G, Unilever, Kraft and others -- have stepped off the sidelines and into the green arena.
by Joel Makower