Crypto

Sectors where New Zealand startups are poised to win

Comment

New Zealand Flag and the Beehive
Image Credits: PA Thompson (opens in a new window) / Getty Images

As a remote island nation in the middle of the South Pacific, New Zealand is experiencing the stirrings of a burgeoning startup scene. The country has historically been capital-starved, but recent investments from the government and foreign investors have significantly increased access to early-stage venture capital funding. Now, certain industries are emerging as potential areas where New Zealand can win in the tech space.

Deep tech, medtech/biotech, climate tech, and crypto and blockchain are all areas that investors say they’re either actively investing in or watching for signs of scale.

Note: All monetary amounts are listed in New Zealand dollars unless otherwise stipulated. 

Deep tech

New Zealand has the right mix of deep tech-focused capital and resources, strong engineering schools and major success stories that are helping create technologically sophisticated, globally scalable startups.

During the first half of this year, total investment in New Zealand’s early-stage sector increased 78% from the first half of 2020, 42% of which went directly to deep tech startups, according to PwC. Much of that funding came from New Zealand Growth Capital Partners (NZGCP), a government entity established to create a vibrant early-stage environment in New Zealand, via its Elevate fund of funds program that provides capital to New Zealand VCs investing in Series A and B rounds.

Last October, Elevate allocated $20 million to a fund managed by deep tech VC firm Pacific Channel. More recently, Elevate committed $17 million to Nuance Connected Capital’s fund focused on deep tech innovations, as well as $45 million to GD1’s Fund 3, which focuses on deep tech as well as connected hardware, enterprise software and health tech.

Then there are groups, like Outset Ventures, formerly LevelTwo, that are geared toward helping seed and pre-seed deep tech startups get going. Outset is home to New Zealand’s only two deep tech unicorns, Rocket Lab and LanzaTech, both of which have spun out numerous other deep tech companies. Outset continues to be a resource for seed-stage startups that need not only money, but also connections to larger companies and access to workshops and labs. Just last year, Outset and Icehouse Ventures, a VC firm, partnered to raise a $12 million fund, which launched this April, for early-stage science and engineering startups. Imche Fourie, CEO of Outset, said the company has already made 17 investments from that fund.*

Notable deep tech companies out of New Zealand include Foundry Lab, a startup that creates metal castings quickly and cheaply with a microwave; Soul Machines, a platform that creates lifelike digital avatars that animate autonomously, responding to interactions and interpreting facial expressions, with personalities that evolve over time; and Dennisson Technologies, a wearables company that’s developing soft exosuits that incorporate 4D material technology to actively assist people with limited mobility due to physical or neurological disability.

The most Kiwi of deep tech startups, however, is Halter — a company that spun out of Rocket Lab and produces solar-powered smart cow collars that allow farmers to remotely shift and virtually fence and monitor cows in order to optimize pasture time. Founder Craig Piggott grew up on a dairy farm watching his parents struggle with the relentless work. After studying engineering at Auckland University of Technology and working at Rocket Lab, Piggott combined his experience to come up with a somewhat wacky and ambitious hardware and software play. Rocket Lab founder Peter Beck, who backed Halter, told TechCrunch he thinks it will be a globally scalable billion-dollar company.

The epitome of New Zealand’s deep tech scene is its over $1.75 billion space industry. Rocket Lab, which is now a U.S.-owned company after a SPAC merger, put New Zealand on the map as a place with minimal air traffic, clear skies and favorable aerospace regulations. As a result, companies are forming that can either send payloads into space or provide services to existing space companies.

Outset-backed Zenno Astronautics, for example, is developing a fuel-free satellite propulsion system that uses magnets powered by solar panels. Dawn Aerospace is working toward a remotely piloted aircraft that could take off like a normal airplane, drop a satellite payload and be back home in 15 minutes. And Astrix Autonautics, a startup founded by three Auckland University students, is being trialed by Rocket Lab to see if they can more than double the power-to-weight ratios of solar arrays used today.

Biotech and medtech

Because New Zealand’s deep tech scene is so robust, it’s producing strong startups out of the biotech and medtech worlds, some of which cross over both industries. For example, Aroa Biosurgery, which is publicly listed on the Australian Stock Exchange, is considered to be one of New Zealand’s rising stars. The company is commercializing regenerative tissue repair substitutes to sell to hospitals.

Many medical technology companies in New Zealand emerge from the country’s universities. Chitogel, which has developed a bioresorbable hydrogel tech that improves surgical outcomes after endoscopic sinus surgeries, came out of the University of Otago; Ferranova, a technology that traces and visualizes the pathways of cancer spreading to lymph nodes and Rekover Therapeutics, a startup that’s exploring treatments to repair nerve damage caused by neurodegenerative diseases such as multiple sclerosis, both came out of Victoria University of Wellington.

According to Biotech New Zealand’s 2020 report, there are over 200 biotech companies in New Zealand producing around $2.7 billion in revenue. New Zealand stands to gain much from homing in on the biotech space because it already has a robust agriculture-based economy and is in line with the government’s overall strategy of moving industries from volume to value.

“Tapping into this area will open new and diversified revenue streams for farmers, which will lead to more resilient and prosperous rural communities,” Karen Adair, deputy director of general agriculture and investment services for the Ministry of Primary Industries, wrote in the report.

Humble Bee, for example, is using biomimicry to create a bioplastic that is produced by a specific type of solitary bee; Cannasouth was the first medicinal cannabis company to list on the New Zealand Stock Exchange; and Helico Bio is testing the growth of human insulin in plants.

Climate tech

“New Zealand’s economy is dominated by heavy emitting sectors (farming, dairy, livestock), which should position us well to trial new ways to address them,” Derek Handley, CEO of Aera VC, a sustainable tech fund based in New Zealand, told TechCrunch.

“We have a culture of working with and adapting to nature, so our mindset, as well as indigenous Māori ways of thinking, will produce novel ambitions and approaches as Allbirds has already shown us all.”

New Zealand is known for its 100% renewable energy grid and total love affair with its own natural landscapes, so it makes sense that some of the world’s next hot climate tech startups will come from there, and many investors see the climate tech space being one where New Zealand can win in the next decade. A recent report from Callaghan Innovation, a Crown Research Institute, found nearly 100 clean tech businesses funded by Callaghan had generated $334 million in revenue. However, the report also found that New Zealand’s clean tech innovators (surprise!) are struggling to keep up with foreign competition because they can’t attract the same level of investment.

The scene does have at least one success story to speak of, a company that got out of New Zealand and shifted its head office to the U.S. so it could actually scale. LanzaTech, which was founded in 2005, uses microbial technology to convert industrial pollution and waste carbon into fuel and other climate-safe materials that go into everyday products.

When LanzaTech relocated its main operations to the U.S. in 2015, out popped Mint Innovation, an electronic waste recycling company founded by ex-LanzaTech employees that recovers precious metals like gold from landfills or urban mines. The company uses a proprietary form of biometallurgy that relies on a microorganism to dissolve, absorb or accumulate metals.

More recently, new climate tech startups have come to the fore with seed rounds like EnergyBank, which is developing a low-cost scalable electricity storage technology; Seachange, which is creating clean energy hydrofoil car and passenger ferries with an eye toward reducing emissions in open-sea car ferry and container ship markets; and Nilo Global, which converts waste plastics into commercial resins to replace harmful chemicals like formaldehyde.

Other notable companies include Hiringa Energy, which could be New Zealand’s first zero-emission hydrogen company, and Stevenson Concrete, a 100-year-old company that now wants to come up with a carbon-friendly way of producing concrete.

Cryptocurrency and blockchain

If there’s any industry where being super remote doesn’t matter, it’s crypto and blockchain. Despite a lack of clear, crypto-specific regulation or guidance from the government, the country’s got a rather thriving scene, complete with companies covering everything from cryptocurrency trading to decentralized finance (DeFi) to NFT production to blockchain-enabled supply chain logistics.

“The thing that underlies New Zealand’s competitive advantage is the innovativeness, the willingness, the ability to be nimble and move fast,” Janine Grainger, co-founder and CEO of EasyCrypto, a cryptocurrency wallet and trading platform, told TechCrunch. “That really is the underpinning of all blockchain. Speed of movement, and understanding what the customer really wants, whether that customer is a retail user or a business, that’s all stuff New Zealand does really well. We like to think we have that number 8 wire mentality of just trying something, making it happen and seeing if it works.”

(Number 8 wire is a gauge of steel wire used in rural fencing, and the associated mentality denotes a Kiwi style of resourcefulness, adaptiveness and innovativeness, borne mainly out of isolation.)

The top player in New Zealand’s web3 world is by far Veve, a company investors in the space say will be New Zealand’s next unicorn. The company makes and sells NFTs for enterprise and just signed a deal with comic book giant Marvel. As part of the partnership, Veve will use Marvel’s 8,000 copyrighted characters, including Black Widow, Iron Man, Thor and Captain America, to create future NFTs for the company — the founders told Stuff the partnership will also allow Veve to produce limited-edition digital comics that could someday be as collectible as the real thing. Over the past year, Veve has sold over 580,000 NFTs and reported sales of over $40 million.

Another standout in the blockchain space is Trackback, a startup that’s formed a consortium of top New Zealand companies and organizations to share data and provide a blockchain-based supply chain provenance solution. Trackback comes out of Centrality.AI, a venture studio dedicated to the blockchain sphere and run by Aaron McDonald, who says he manages two $100 million funds that are geared toward fintech and web3 tech, as well as tokens and decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs).

McDonald is also behind two NFT mindfucks, Fluf World and Altered State Machine. Fluf World is a metaverse space made up of 3D animated rabbits with their own personalities. The rabbits, which come with a multimedia experience that include “dope beats,” are more advanced NFTs than your standard GIF. So far, more than USD $42 million has been spent on primary and secondary sales of Flufs. Altered State Machine takes it a step further and allows users to add AI to NFTs. Basically, you can own your own AI.

McDonald says the company is just finishing a round now with some “pretty heavyweight VCs over in the states,” and signing onto some big content deals with major global brands.

“There’s such a big vibe around New Zealand in the metaverse space I think in part because we’ve had such a creative center here with the film industry and now that’s translating into talent and capability that can explore this new medium,” McDonald told TechCrunch.

That ‘number 8 wire mentality’

“New Zealanders make really good founders, I think,” Bryan Ventura, chair of Blockchain NZ, an advocacy group, told TechCrunch. “There’s something about just growing up on a farm or, you know, playing beer float out in the lakes and rivers; New Zealand is just really resourceful. A lot of our companies are at a stage where they’re ready for the next stage of capital from outside investors.”

When there was no other way to scale properly, New Zealand startups focused on software as a service, with massive wins like Xero, an accounting software platform, giving the country an entry into the VC world. Now as the scene matures and more money comes in, startups are thinking about how to solve global problems. If the early-stage funding we’re seeing from the government and foreign investors today continues into follow-on funding in New Zealand’s most promising industries, more of the world might just get the chance to experience that number 8 wire mentality.

*Correction: A previous version of this article stated that Outset Ventures had made 40 investments to date from its deep tech fund. It has made 17 investments to date. The article has been updated to reflect new information provided by the organization. 

More TechCrunch

The push to produce a robotic intelligence that can fully leverage the wide breadth of movements opened up by bipedal humanoid design has been a key topic for researchers.

Generative AI takes robots a step closer to general purpose

A TechCrunch review of LinkedIn data found that Ford has built this team up to around 300 employees over the last year.

Ford’s secretive low-cost EV team is growing with talent from Rivian, Tesla and Apple

The most critical systems of our modern world rely on GPS, from aviation and road networks to emergency and disaster response, from precision farming and power grids to weather forecasting…

Tern AI wants to reduce reliance on GPS with low-cost navigation alternative 

Since fintech startup Brex’s inception in 2017, its two co-founders Henrique Dubugras and Pedro Franceschi have run the company as co-CEOs. But starting today, the pair told TechCrunch in an…

Fintech Brex abandons co-CEO model, talks IPO, cash burn and plans for a secondary sale

Hiya, folks, and welcome to TechCrunch’s regular AI newsletter. This week in AI, Apple stole the spotlight. At the company’s Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) in Cupertino, Apple unveiled Apple Intelligence,…

This Week in AI: Apple won’t say how the sausage gets made

360 One WAM, India’s largest wealth manager focused on ultra-high-net-worth individuals, has agreed to acquire popular Indian mutual fund investment app ET Money for about $44 million. 360 One, earlier…

India’s 360 One acquires mutual fund app ET Money for $44M

Helen Toner, a former OpenAI board member and the director of strategy at Georgetown’s Center for Security and Emerging Technology, is worried Congress might react in a “knee-jerk” way where…

Helen Toner worries ‘not super functional’ Congress will flub AI policy

Layoffs are tough. This year alone, we’ve already seen 60,000 job cuts across 254 companies according to layoffs.fyi. Looking for ways to grow your network can be even harder during…

Layoffs Got You Down? Get a Half-Price Expo+ Pass at Disrupt 2024

YouTube announced this week the rollout of “Thumbnail Test & Compare,” a new tool for creators to see which thumbnail performs the best. The feature first launched to select creators…

YouTube creators can now test multiple video thumbnails

Waymo has voluntarily issued a software recall to all 672 of its Jaguar I-Pace robotaxis after one of them collided with a telephone pole. This is Waymo’s second recall. The…

Waymo issues second recall after robotaxi hit telephone pole

The hotel guest management technology company’s platform digitizes the hotel guest journey from post-booking through checkout.

Insight Partners backs Canary Technologies’ mission to elevate hotel guest experiences

The TechCrunch team runs down all of the biggest news from the Apple WWDC 2024 keynote in an easy-to-skim digest.

Here’s everything Apple announced at the WWDC 2024 keynote, including Apple Intelligence, Siri makeover

InScope leverages machine learning and large language models to provide financial reporting and auditing processes for mid-market and enterprises.

Lightspeed Venture Partners leads $4.3M seed in automated financial reporting fintech InScope

Venture fundraising has been a slog over the last few years, even for firms with a strong track record. That’s Foresite Capital’s experience. Despite having 47 IPOs, 28 M&As and…

Foresite Capital raises $900M sixth fund for investing in life sciences companies

A year ago, Databricks acquired MosaicML for $1.3 billion. Now rebranded as Mosaic AI, the platform has become integral to Databricks’ AI solutions. Today, at the company’s Data + AI…

Databricks expands Mosaic AI to help enterprises build with LLMs

RetailReady targets the $40 billion compliance market to help reduce the number of retail compliance losses that shippers incur annually due to incorrectly shipped packages.

YC grad RetailReady raises $3.3M for an AI warehouse app that hopes to save brands billions

Since its launch in 2013, Databricks has relied on its ecosystem of partners, such as Fivetran, Rudderstack, and dbt, to provide tools for data preparation and loading. But now, at…

Databricks launches LakeFlow to help its customers build their data pipelines

A big shoutout to the early-stage founders who missed the application window for the Startup Battlefield 200 (SB 200) at TechCrunch Disrupt. We have exciting news just for you! You…

Bonus: An extra week to apply to Startup Battlefield 200

When one of the co-creators of the popular open source stream-processing framework Apache Flink launches a new startup, it’s worth paying attention. Stephan Ewen was among the founding team of…

Restate raises $7M for its lightweight workflows-as-code platform

With most residential solar panels installed by smaller companies, customer experience can be a mixed bag. To try to address the quality and consistency problem, Civic Renewables is buying small…

Civic Renewables is rolling up residential solar installers to improve quality and grow the market

Small VC firms require deep trust, mutual support and long-term commitment among the partners — a kinship that, in many ways, resembles a family dynamic. Colin Anderson (Palantir’s ex-CFO and…

Friends & Family Capital, a fund founded by ex-Palantir CFO and son of IVP’s founder, unveils third $118M fund

Fisker is issuing the first recall for its all-electric Ocean SUV because of problems with the warning lights, according to new information published by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration…

Fisker’s troubled Ocean SUV gets its first recall

Gorilla, a Belgian company that serves the energy sector with real-time data and analytics for pricing and forecasting, has raised €23 million ($25 million) in a Series B round led…

Gorilla, a Belgian startup that helps energy providers crunch big data, raises $25M

South Korea’s fabless AI chip industry saw a slew of fundraising events over the last couple of years as demand for hardware to power AI applications skyrocketed, and it seems…

Fabless AI chip makers Rebellions and Sapeon to merge as competition heats up in global AI hardware industry

Here’s a list of third-party apps that were Sherlocked by Apple at this year’s WWDC.

The apps that Apple sherlocked at WWDC 2024

Black Semiconductor, which is developing a chip-connecting technology based on graphene, has raised $273M in a combination of private and public funding. 

Black Semiconductor nabs $273M in Germany to supercharge how chips work together

Featured Article

Let there be Light! Danish startup exits stealth with $13M seed funding to bring AI to general ledgers

It’s not the sexiest of subject matters, but someone needs to talk about it: The CFO tech stack — software used by the chief financial officers of the world — is ripe for disruption. That’s according to Jonathan Sanders, CEO and co-founder of fledgling Danish startup Light, which exits stealth…

12 hours ago
Let there be Light! Danish startup exits stealth with $13M seed funding to bring AI to general ledgers

Fresh off the success of its first mission, satellite manufacturer Apex has closed $95 million in new capital to scale its operations.  The Los Angeles-based startup successfully launched and commissioned…

Apex’s off-the-shelf satellite bus business attracts $95M in new funding

After educating the D.C. market, YC aims to leverage its influence, particularly in areas like competition policy.

Washington’s political class doesn’t know Y Combinator exists —  yet

Lina Khan says the FTC wants to be effective in its enforcement strategy, which is why it has been taking on lawsuits that “go up against some of the big…

FTC Chair Lina Khan tells TechCrunch the agency is pursuing the ‘mob bosses’ in Big Tech