since 2001
It’s an international “concert tour” even an environmentalist like Greta Thunberg could get behind.
JVP, Margalit Startup City, Mini and URBAN-X launched their “2023 World Climate Tech Tour” in New York City last week, aiming to identify and showcase promising startups and relevant technologies that can help to combat climate change.
The tour will visit five cities – in addition to New York, Jerusalem, Paris, Munich, Stockholm and Bahrain are coming up – before concluding at the COP28 climate change conference in the United Arab Emirates in December.
The New York launch event was attended by Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine and international figures including Ambassador Shaikha Aysha Ahmed Saqer Alkhalifa from Bahrain, Deputy Consul General Wolfram von Heynitz from Germany, Martin Kaspar representing the European Union, and Swedish head of sustainability and strategic communications Sofia Hedstrom de Leo.
The World Climate Tech Tour comes on the heels of September 2022’s launch of the Margalit Startup City-International Climate Tech Center in Manhattan’s trendy Soho neighborhood.
The tour’s emphasis is on multidisciplinary solutions to the biggest challenges facing the planet today.
“We need to join forces from core industries – fintech, cyber, ag-tech, food-tech and artificial intelligence – to create a new ‘firewall’ that will protect our cities,” said Erel Margalit, founder and chairman of JVP and his eponymous Margalit Startup City.
“We cannot continue to address climate change in isolation or from a single perspective. The complex nature of the issue requires a multidisciplinary approach, where experts from different industries come together to create innovative solutions.”
The International Climate accelerator has attracted so far around 400 applicants, from pre-seed to Series A, from 40 countries around the globe.
Among the startups that were part of the launch event in New York were several Israel-based companies:
Several companies based in New York also participated in the launch:
“The key to success is the connection between policy and tech, and together we can join forces to make a meaningful impact on our planet.” Margalit said.
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