Empowering Indonesia’s climate innovation ecosystem

We support climate tech entrepreneurs, startups, policymakers, and communities with the resources and expertise to scale climate solutions and drive the clean energy transition.

Accelerate your climate tech solution with us.

 

Since 2019, we’ve been building an inclusive ecosystem through incubation, acceleration, and funding programs tailored to support clean energy and climate startups across Indonesia.

We’re working to serve not only innovators, startups, and entrepreneurs, but also a wider network of stakeholders and policy makers in the clean energy and climate solutions space.

3,200+

entrepreneurs supported

US$
125.6
M

mobilized in funding

855

women entrepreneurs

30,700+

participants in ecosystem support programs and events

What we do

We support climate tech entrepreneurs while also building the ecosystem that supports them. Our work focuses on three key areas: climate & clean energy innovation, knowledge & policy advocacy, and energy equity & inclusion.

Key focus areas
Entrepreneur support
Ecosystem building
Key focus areas

We support climate tech entrepreneurs  while also building the ecosystem that supports them.

  • Climate & clean energy innovation
  • Knowledge & policy advocacy
  • Energy equity & inclusion
Key focus areas
Entrepreneur support
Ecosystem building
Entrepreneur support

Backing bold ideas and building the next generation of climate innovators through:

  • Incubation & acceleration programs: From business idea to scale
  • Capacity building: Training, mentoring, and leadership development
  • Funding access: Grants and catalytic investments to help startups pilot their prototypes
Key focus areas
Entrepreneur support
Ecosystem building
Ecosystem building

Creating the environment for climate solutions to thrive through:

  • Outreach & engagement: Meet ups, hackathons, and festivals
  • Policy & knowledge work: Research, youth participation in the policy sector, and inclusive policy platforms
  • Cross-sector collaboration: Engaging government, funders, and civil society; training media and journalists
Supported by