A $239 million climate tech investment fund brings an atypical structure — and ambitious goals — to the startup arena.

Driving the news: Azolla Ventures, launched out of the nonprofit Prime Coalition, focuses on early-stage hardware startups with outsized impact if their tech scales.
- It’s designed to back firms that can “significantly alter the trajectory of climate change, but are overlooked by traditional capital sources,” they said.
- Thursday brings the first details about Azolla’s size and structure.
How it works: It blends “catalytic, charitable capital” — think grant-making arms of philanthropies and corporations, to name two — with traditional sources like endowments and family offices.
- It’s focused on “impact-first” investing, which has more risk tolerance and a longer time horizon for commercial success.
Zoom in: Prime works with Azolla to assess potential investments’ emissions-cutting potential and the (low) likelihood of attracting support from conventional investors. Then, it helps bring in philanthropic capital.
- Capital amounts will vary, but Azolla co-founder Johanna Wolfson says initial investments will average in the $1 million to $2 million range.
Why it matters: Azolla is thinking big as it stakes very small players. Investment criteria include solutions that can ultimately cut or remove emissions at the gigaton scale.

