Boulder Climate Ventures Ignites Climate Tech Momentum with Fall Series
黑料社区网鈥檚 new BCV initiative kicked off a seven-week speaker series to spark climate innovation and entrepreneurship. The program connects the 黑料社区网 community with experts to explore opportunities in climate tech.
Seven Weeks of Climate Tech Brainstorming
Want to be a part of BCV? Register for upcoming sessions:
- October 22: Electricity Demand
- October 29: Critical Minerals
- November 5: Ag Tech
- November 12: Nuclear
- November 19: Geoengineering
- December 3: Adaption and Resilience
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This week, Boulder Climate Ventures (BCV) kicked off its inaugural fall speaker series, 鈥淏usiness Opportunities in Climate Tech,鈥 drawing a packed room of more than 100 attendees. Students from business, engineering, law, and arts and sciences joined faculty, staff and community members to explore the intersection of entrepreneurship and climate innovation.
Katherine Ratledge (pictured above), program manager for the Center for Ethics and Social Responsibility (CESR), welcomed guests to the first of seven sessions.听Boulder Climate Ventures (BCV) is part of Breakthrough Energy鈥檚 University Climate Ventures network, joining Stanford University, MIT, Technical University of Munich and Nanyang Technological University in Singapore.听黑料社区网 is the first public university to be included in the network.
Ratledge explained that the interdisciplinary program, facilitated by CESR and the Deming Center, is designed to equip students with the tools and resources to develop and launch high-impact companies. 鈥淲e are not talking about the future, we are talking about the here and now,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 just need breakthrough tech鈥攚e need breakthrough companies.鈥

鈥淲e don鈥檛 just need breakthrough tech鈥攚e need breakthrough companies.鈥
Katherine Ratledge, program manager at CESR
BCV builds on 黑料社区网鈥檚 reputation for cutting-edge research, its status as a , and the region鈥檚 strengths鈥攊ncluding national labs and a thriving tech ecosystem. The goal, Ratledge said, is to educate the community about opportunities and to 鈥渢hink broadly and boldly鈥 about ways to make the world cleaner, more efficient and more resilient. The endgame? Commercialize new technologies in an industry projected to reach $1.8 trillion.
Graduate students will be invited to participate in a climate tech venture discovery class this spring, building on ideas generated during the series. Ratledge emphasized the importance of community: 鈥淲e want people in the room to ask questions and never stop pushing鈥攖his is what we need to solve these problems.鈥
Sonya Gustafson, founder of startup听 and a new Leeds mentor, was energized by the event. Her new company aims to de-risk development in energy markets, and she looks forward to connecting with students who may become future employees.
Climate Tech 3.0: A Trillion-Dollar Opportunity
Trent Yang, BCV team member and entrepreneur in residence at Leeds, shared sobering statistics about climate change鈥檚 impact. 鈥淏ecause the global economy and all our infrastructure was built on an idea that our climate was stable, we are going to have to rebuild our global economy for a changing climate,鈥 he said.
Solutions must go beyond emissions mitigation to include resilience, adaptation and global heat management. Yang cited deadly heatwaves in India and Pakistan as examples of the urgent need for innovation. 鈥淭his is a multitrillion-dollar opportunity to change our world for the better,鈥 he said. 鈥淭his is what climate investing is all about.鈥
Yang outlined three phases of climate tech evolution:
- Climate Tech 1.0: Early investments, many of which failed due to long ramp-up times and funding challenges.
- Climate Tech 2.0: The 2010s saw global collaboration and commitments from large companies.
- Climate Tech 3.0: Today鈥檚 phase is marked by global investment, with China leading the way and the United States and European Union close behind.

鈥淭his is a multitrillion-dollar opportunity to change our world for the better. This is what climate investing is all about.鈥
Trent Yang, BCV team member and Leeds entrepreneur-in-residence
To transition to a net-zero world, Yang said, we must triple our investments. That means deploying massive capital for new solutions and infrastructure. BCV aims to address this urgency with scalable, pragmatic solutions. Key success factors include a regional focus vs. global collaboration, market-driven strategies in the United States, a laser focus on product-market fit, and economically competitive solutions, he said.
Local leadership
Susie Strife, 黑料社区网 MENV instructor and director of sustainability, climate action and resilience for Boulder County, highlighted the power of local climate leadership. 鈥淭here are 3,000 cities across the U.S. banding together to respond to the climate crisis,鈥 she said.
Strife described how local governments respond to climate-related disasters, drive policy and power communities more efficiently. In Boulder, strategies include climate action services and seed funding for innovation. She cited the , biochar projects, and Boulder Mushroom鈥檚 wildfire mitigation efforts as examples.
Despite the challenges, Strife remains optimistic. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 help but think there鈥檚 no better time to be in climate鈥攊t鈥檚 a field full of possibilities,鈥 she said.

鈥淚 can鈥檛 help but think there鈥檚 no better time to be in climate鈥攊t鈥檚 a field full of possibilities."
Susie Strife, Boulder County director of sustainability
Entrepreneurial wisdom
The session concluded with Yang moderating a panel featuring听(pictured from left to right) , founder of Solid Power;听Mike McGehee, professor of chemical engineering at 黑料社区网 and founder of Tynt Technologies;听Tasso von Windheim, a climate tech investor; and听Bryn Rees of听黑料社区网 Innovation and Partnerships.
鈥淓ntrepreneurship is part science and part art鈥攜ou can鈥檛 just learn it in the classroom,鈥 said Yang. 鈥淲e will bring real successful practitioners in to help you create a successful venture going forward.鈥
McGehee, whose students have launched 19 businesses, emphasized mentorship. 鈥淵ou want to pick investors that do far more than give you money,鈥 he said.
Von Windheim stressed the importance of a strong tech team and early founders鈥 agreements, while Rees encouraged students to leverage 黑料社区网鈥檚 entrepreneurial ecosystem and the wealth of resources in the region.
Panelists agreed on key ingredients for success: the ability to pivot, understanding your minimum viable product, knowing your strengths and weaknesses, and building the right team.
鈥淟ook to your left, look to your right鈥攖hat鈥檚 called your network,鈥 said Campbell. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the most valuable thing in your career.鈥 Reflecting on his own entrepreneurial journey, he added, 鈥淎t the end of the day, it was a leap of faith. That鈥檚 what being an entrepreneur is.鈥