Today, Propeller pushed an update to our website, revealing for the first time the portfolio we’ve been busy building. It’s an exciting day for us because what makes our work so satisfying is backing founders and the important work they’re doing.
We’d been planning this announcement for some time, but when Sightline Climate recently shared the most active climate investors of 2023 in their CTVC newsletter, we realized that we (quietly) were one of the most active climate tech VCs of 2023. In fact, if we’d announced all of our investments earlier in 2023, and been listed in BlueX’s “2023 BlueTech Year in Review," Propeller would have been the second most active investor in the growing category of ocean investing.
You’ll notice that our new portfolio page profiles each startup we’ve backed (we’re leaving a couple in stealth for now). Of course, these investments are just outputs in a process that involves meeting with hundreds of passionate founders every year and investing in the most promising of them. We feel good about where we’ve landed, but our work is only starting.
We formed Propeller in early 2022 and began gathering capital commitments from investors who saw promise in our vision to create a leading venture fund investing in the ocean-climate nexus. We were pleased to see strong deal flow, but to take it up a level we created and ran our first Ocean MBA (more on this later) at MIT. We followed with our first investments in the fall of ’22 and formally announced Propeller in October of ’22. We continued raising the fund and took in our last commitments in fall of ’23. Propeller Fund I, a $117MM fund includes commitments from a number of high net worth individuals, family offices, and strategic and institutional capital. We’re lucky and delighted to have their backing.
So, how do we invest? Let’s begin with our thesis. Propeller is a climate fund focused on the ocean. To us, the ocean is a climate superhero capable of reigning in and maybe even reversing some of the effects of anthropogenic climate change. The ocean already absorbs ~93% of anthropogenic warming, captures about a third of our GHG emissions annually, and stores about 60 times more carbon than the atmosphere.
But we believe (and science supports) that the ocean can and will do more. We also believe the unexplored ocean is the source of new biological, chemical, and material discovery that holds promise for consumer and industrial innovation and that can help humanity achieve its net zero goals. And lastly, coastal areas support 40% of the world’s population and a massive amount of the global economy. Maritime shipping transports over 80% of all freight. Around 1 billion people rely on the ocean as its primary source of protein. Trillions of dollars worth of real estate is built on our coasts. These industries - shipping, ports, infrastructure, fisheries, and energy – are all being transformed by the forces of climate change requiring transformative strategies centered on mitigation of climate emissions or adaptation against the forces unleashed by climate change.
Our investment thesis is organized into three investment themes: Carbon, Organics, and Industrials. We find these are a good way (for now) to capture the broad set of companies and founders we encounter as we look to invest into our thesis. As you know (and many of you have heard us say) the ocean is really wide, and really deep. So simplifying into just three sectors for investment almost doesn’t do it justice, and these categories may change or expand over time. For now however, we find it’s an elegant way to categorize our work.
Our fund size is geared to invest in and support founders primarily at the pre-seed, seed, and Series A stage. So far, we’ve found some interesting (to us, at least) trends in our investing.
This is exciting momentum, but we’re not getting ahead of ourselves. We realize we are still new, our portfolio is still young, and there are many more founders out there that we’ve yet to meet. Meanwhile, the climate crisis is accelerating, technology is evolving and changing just as quickly, and industries are figuring out how to adapt. There will be more to share as we grow our portfolio.