Rolls-Royce and Qatar Foundation have formed a partnership to create a global centre for climate technology innovation.
This news comes as Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, amir of Qatar, and UK prime minister Boris Johnson met at COP26.
As partners, Rolls-Royce and Qatar Foundation will develop two campuses dedicated to launching, investing in and growing businesses that can accelerate the global energy transition.
The centre will help entrepreneurs create and grow new climate technology businesses, aided by academic leadership, funds for R&D and early-stage venture capital investment. Businesses will be able to use infrastructure on the campuses to test, prove and scale their technologies, enabling them to have a rapid impact.
Rolls-Royce and Qatar Foundation will work in partnership to build the campuses, generating up to 1,000 jobs in the centres, and at least 10,000 within the related start-up companies and broader ecosystem by 2040.
A substantial investment pool will be created for venture funding at the scale needed to create global climate tech businesses with real impact and in anticipation that third-party investors will co-invest.
The partnership has a target to grow up to five unicorns (a privately held start-up company valued at over $1 billion) by 2030, and up to 20 by 2040, driving significant economic value for investment partners.
A detailed analysis will be completed to finalise the design of the centre and select locations for campuses in both countries. This is expected to conclude in mid-2022.
The North of England has been identified as a location to reflect the scale of the intended physical campus, alongside access to necessary skills and to manufacturing infrastructure.
Rolls-Royce will provide research, engineering and high-end manufacturing support. It will spin out some of its own nascent technologies in the field of climate tech – outside its existing activities in aerospace, defence and nuclear – that could benefit from the additional capabilities and financing the centre will bring.
The centre will be underpinned by Rolls-Royce’s physical testing expertise and ability to leverage its relationships with Qatari State Owned Enterprises.
Qatar Foundation will serve as the operating partner for Qatar, working with Rolls-Royce to establish and operate the innovation campuses by drawing on its expertise and experience in large-scale research and education collaborations.
The project is forecast to generate as many as 1,300 new high-value jobs in Qatar by 2040, as well as new investment opportunities for Qatari businesses and investors via dedicated funding vehicles.
This global centre will ensure innovation has a clear and practical route to market, whilst bringing together the key stakeholders and capabilities to create a fundamentally innovative way of developing climate tech businesses. The network will launch virtually in 2022, with campuses launching as early as 2023.
Warren East, chief executive of Rolls-Royce, said: “For us, the transition to net zero is both a societal imperative and an excellent commercial opportunity. This partnership with Qatar Foundation will enable us to accelerate progress in clean energy, including by allowing us to fully take advantage of nascent technologies that could have a significant impact on tackling climate change.”
Hind bint Hamad Al Thani, vice chairperson and CEO of Qatar Foundation, added: “Today’s most pressing problems: climate change, soil restoration, water resources, animal welfare and human health are all inextricably linked. We stand ready to work together with our partners Rolls-Royce in developing innovative solutions and clean energy technologies. The expansion of Education City’s research ecosystem will inevitably further Qatar Foundation’s mission to pave the way to a better future.”
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