A prototype of an AI chip Photographer: Kiyoshi Ota/Bloomberg A recent MIT study made waves with a striking conclusion: 95% of corporate AI pilot projects fail to deliver a return on investment. Bloomberg journalists are looking to connect to employees that have found practical and creative ways to leverage AI technology into real business value. If that is you, share your experience with us in a brief survey. By Coco Liu Global investment in green technology for the first three quarters of the year has already surpassed all of 2024. The fortunes of the sector have been in decline for three years, but explosive energy demand fueled by data centers has sparked a reversal. Private and public investors worldwide channeled as much as $56 billion into green businesses ranging from clean energy to storage and electric vehicles during the nine months ending in September, according to a new BloombergNEF report. By contrast, the climate tech industry snagged less than $51 billion in 2024. The renewed interest is being driven by clean energy and power storage deals, and comes despite the Trump administration’s backpedaling on climate policy. Major deals include Chinese battery giant Contemporary Amperex Technology Limited, which raised about $5 billion from its Hong Kong initial public offering in May. The country’s electric car maker BYD also raised $5.2 billion in share sales in March, while Spanish renewable energy giant Iberdrola sold $5.9 billion worth of shares in July. Nuclear energy drew a fifth of all climate venture capital funding, in a large part “driven by the AI hype,” said Musfika Mishi, a BNEF analyst. That includes a $863 million raise by Commonwealth Fusion, which drew funding from Nvidia’s venture arm. But it remains to be seen whether the uptick will continue into 2026, Mishi added. She expects Trump’s assault on renewable energy projects will weigh on investors’ confidence. BNEF projects VC investment — which makes up a portion of the climate funding the group tracks — to stand at around $25 billion by the end of 2025, compared to last year’s $31.7 billion. Read the full story on Bloomberg.com. To stay up to date on the latest climate tech funding trends, please subscribe. A northern white rhino fetus produced using invitro fertilization and embryo transfer techniques. Source: Colossal Biosciences Inc. Colossal Biosciences, the Dallas-based company that aims to bring long extinct animals such as woolly mammoths back to life, is working with researchers from countries including Kenya, Germany, Italy, Japan and the Czech Republic to produce a northern white rhino. The goal is to start bringing back the species from the brink of extinction within four years. There are just two northern white rhinos left in the world, the females Najin and Fatu, that live at a reserve in Kenya’s Rift Valley region. If that attempt is successful others will follow. “This is three to four years away,” said Matt James, Colossal’s chief animal officer, in an interview. “It will be easier and cheaper to recover the population today than it would be if we lost the species altogether and then we tried to bring it back from extinction.” Gene editing, and the aim to bring animals back from extinction, is a new and controversial tool in the battle to protect the planet’s dwindling biodiversity as human activities damage ecosystems and deprive them or the organisms to keep them functioning. Still, some scientists have cautioned that bringing animals back into existence could have unpredictable consequences. Read the full story on Bloomberg.com CO2 emissions from human activities and wildfires rose by an unprecedented amount last year, while the land and oceans’ ability to absorb carbon diminished. Brazil is working with Japan and Italy to win support for a global pledge to quadruple sustainable fuel production by 2035 ahead of the COP30 summit. The UK should brace for warming of at least 2C by 2050 and as much as 4C by the end of the century, as the world will likely miss the Paris Agreement’s target, the government’s official climate adviser said. Greg Jackson Photographer: Hollie Adams/Bloomberg The UK used to be a shining example of how to act on climate change. It created one of the world’s first climate laws in 2008, which bound the government to reduce emissions on tight deadlines. That law used to have cross-party support, but that’s no longer the case with politicians trying to make climate a wedge issue. Greg Jackson, chief executive officer of the UK’s largest energy retailer, Octopus Energy, joins Akshat Rathi on the Zero podcast to discuss his plan to bring down bills and keep the public on the green side. Listen now, and subscribe on Apple, Spotify or YouTube to get new episodes of Zero every Thursday. |