EIT InnoEnergy Highway®

Part of How Governments Support Clean Energy Start-ups

How Governments Support Clean Energy Start-Ups highlights and unpacks government initiatives that help entrepreneurs get new clean energy technologies to the market, and offers recommendations to inspire innovation policy for net zero emissions. Read the report, and explore the case studies.


Government: European Commission

Responsible government entity: European Institute of Innovation and Technology (EIT)

External partner: EIT InnoEnergy

Target type of innovator: Early-stage start-ups with a proven concept and high potential to scale up, make a positive impact on the pace of energy transitions globally and bring value to European economies

Links: https://bc.innoenergy.com/for-start-ups

Key elements:

  • Provides financial support and services in exchange for an equity stake in ventures.
  • Recipients participate in an acceleration programme tailored to each start-up’s needs and based on a mutually agreed roadmap.
  • Services are delivered by an in-house team based in Europe and the United States as well as trusted EIT InnoEnergy partners around the world that commit to providing in-kind support to the programme in return for access to the network. While the focus is on delivering EU objectives, the scope of the network is global to identify overseas talent that can operate in Europe and help EU talent succeed abroad.

Summary of the types of support provided or enabled by the policy initiative

Type of support

Financial

Infrastructure

Services

Networking

Indirect: EIT InnoEnergy is publicly co-funded to support start-ups (including with cash transfers), which it does in exchange for equity investments

Indirect: access to laboratory equipment via InnoEnergy partners, plus office space is provided in Europe and the United States

Indirect: EIT InnoEnergy is publicly co-funded to provide acceleration services in-house or via third parties

Indirect: InnoEnergy is publicly co-funded to build and manage a network including private and public investors, companies, research centres, universities and public institutions


In 2009, the European Institute of Innovation and Technology (EIT), an agency of the European Union established in 2008, launched the Knowledge and Innovation Community (KIC) InnoEnergy as one of the first three KICs selected for co-funding (from among 20 proposals) to “strengthen cooperation among businesses (including SMEs), higher education institutions and research organisations [and] form dynamic pan-European partnerships.” The KICs cover training and education programmes as well as thematic business acceleration programmes. As of 2022, there are eight KICs.

The consortium that was awarded the grant to run KIC InnoEnergy incorporated itself as “EIT InnoEnergy” to be able to act as a single legal entity with the strategic and financial outlook of a private company. EIT InnoEnergy’s mission is to help companies and innovators accelerate energy transitions by making energy more affordable, secure and sustainable, including as the recipient of an EU grant that covers up to 25% of the costs of operating KIC InnoEnergy. Its 26 shareholders represent a range of educational, research and business entities. It is also financed by other public European programmes as well as having its own resources, which it plans to increase through returns on its equity investments.

The EIT InnoEnergy Highway programme is one of the ways in which EIT InnoEnergy executes its commitment to support early-stage start-ups to make their technology-based businesses reach the market “bigger, sooner and safer”, for example by reducing the risk they present to customers and investors. This commitment is set out in the grant agreement with EIT (which governs EIT InnoEnergy’s EU public funding) and is met through a combination of funds that come directly from that EU grant, plus other sources and in-kind contributions from partner organisations. In addition to Highway, EIT InnoEnergy runs educational programmes for students and other learners, for which it receives some income from course fees. In 2017, the European Commission gave it a mandate to lead the European Battery Alliance, and it also supports other industrial value chains initiatives such as the European Solar Initiative and the Green Hydrogen Acceleration Center. Furthermore, it supports and invests in innovative companies beyond the Highway programme, some of which are more mature than Highway start-ups. For example, EIT InnoEnergy has invested since 2017 in Northvolt, a Swedish company seeking to scale up lithium-ion battery manufacturing in Europe that is now valued at over USD 10 billion.


How support is made available and allocated

Start-ups may apply to Highway at any time, and EIT InnoEnergy also scouts for relevant start-ups, including through referrals from contacts in its network. In 2018, a technology-specific call was used to attract innovators in the area of batteries for electricity storage in response to rising interest from the investment community and strong performance of battery-related start-ups already in the EIT InnoEnergy portfolio.

EIT InnoEnergy evaluates Highway applicants according to criteria including technology quality, novelty, market potential, team competence, potential to scale-up and potential impact on greenhouse gas emissions and consumer energy costs.

Innovators can apply to Highway before they incorporate a company. In such cases, EIT InnoEnergy can assist with incorporation.

Applicants, who can be located anywhere in the world, are selected for their potential future contribution to EU energy and economic objectives. However, to receive support measures that are funded via the EU public grant to EIT InnoEnergy, non-EU start-ups are assisted to establish EU subsidiaries. For example, Principle Power, initially a US-based developer of floating wind technology, was helped to establish a Portuguese subsidiary.

Financing

Recipients of Highway support receive dilutive equity investment (a minority stake) in exchange for acceleration support. The nature of the support services, including milestones and objectives, is detailed in a “roadmap” that is agreed after the signing of the Highway contract between the start-up and EIT InnoEnergy.

While many services are provided in-house or procured for start-ups, some support is provided to start-ups by transferring funds for the purchase of certain services or equipment identified in the start-up’s Highway roadmap. These “sub-grants” are public funds stemming from the EU public grant, and, while EIT InnoEnergy can allocate the funding at its discretion, they are nonetheless bound by public procurement rules. Therefore, the sub-grants may only be used by start-ups for technology development, equipment purchases, entrepreneurial skills training (for example, in sales, finance, pitching or negotiation, depending on needs) and team creation, including recruitment.

Infrastructure

Through its partners, EIT InnoEnergy can facilitate access to research facilities or laboratories for technology development and testing for recipients of Highway support. These partners include universities that commit annually to making laboratories available to Highway start-ups or commit to providing laboratory access at a discount. For example, CorPower Ocean, a developer of wave energy devices, accessed KTH Royal Institute of Technology laboratories in Stockholm.

For start-ups in proximity to one of EIT InnoEnergy’s eight premises in the European Union or its one location in the United States (Boston, MA), office space can be provided.

Services

Recipients of Highway support are provided with a tailored set of services that reflect EIT InnoEnergy’s investment case for each start-up and responds to the start-up’s needs. The services to be provided are in the roadmap. The support lasts two and a half years on average, a period that is longer than typical incubation programmes, in order to respond to the longer development times of clean energy hardware.

Nine different types of services are possible:

  • access to finance
  • access to market
  • access to talent
  • citizen engagement
  • governance
  • product and intellectual property
  • regulation
  • sales
  • supply chain management (industrialisation).

Networking

Recipients of Highway support benefit from access to the many connections managed by EIT InnoEnergy among more than 700 stakeholders from the education, research, industry and investor communities in Asia, Europe and the United States. Over more than ten years, a system has been developed for stakeholders to gain access to EIT InnoEnergy events, knowledge and talent (including students, graduates, start-ups and potential project partners) in return for making a contribution to the support provided by EIT InnoEnergy. The 26 EIT InnoEnergy shareholders are among these partners. The support is generally “in-kind support” and can include laboratory access, services (either free of charge to the start-ups or at a discounted price) or participation in advisory committees. The resulting network – a so-called trust-based, open innovation ecosystem managed by a private company – is a first of its kind.

EIT InnoEnergy organises an annual event, The Business Booster, to convene stakeholders. It has attracted over 1 000 attendees in past years and includes pitching competitions and other opportunities for start-ups to introduce themselves to investors and corporate representatives.

Evaluating and tracking impacts

The aggregate impact of the Highway portfolio of start-ups is measured with the EIT InnoEnergy impact framework. This framework estimates economic, environmental and social impacts.

Economic:

  • direct and indirect jobs created
  • external funds raised by portfolio companies
  • revenue generated by portfolio companies.

Environmental:

  • carbon dioxide (equivalent) avoided
  • energy costs saved
  • energy generated from clean energy sources.

Social:

  • households with access to energy in developing countries
  • number of female entrepreneurs
  • different nationalities supported (and nationalities per company).

Experiences and learnings so far

In total, EIT InnoEnergy screened over 5 000 start-ups, supported over 480 of them, and invested in over 250 between 2010 and December 2020. Participants in in the Highway programme represent a large share of investees, but not all. The 480 companies have collectively raised EUR 3.4 billion (USD 3.8 billion) in external funds, filed 269 patents, launched over 300 products and averaged 16 months to reach market after EIT InnoEnergy investment. More than nine out of ten of the companies are still active and four of them have launched initial public offerings. While two have been valued at over one billion dollars, the support they received from EIT InnoEnergy was not via Highway.

EIT InnoEnergy judges its experience with running a technology-specific call on the topic of batteries positively. In addition to meeting its objectives of raising the number of energy storage start-ups being screened, it complemented EIT InnoEnergy’s involvement in the European Battery Alliance. Technology-specific calls may be used again for Highway for similar aims, but such initiatives increase the administrative effort required and are not needed to ensure a sufficient and manageable flow of interest in Highway.

Since 2009, the situation for clean energy start-ups in Europe has improved dramatically, with much greater public and private attention being given to the topic. This has raised the dynamism of the investment market, which is now more highly capitalised. As a result, start-ups developing certain technologies – such as battery factories or biowaste converters – can navigate the early stages of growth without public support more easily. However, at the same time, the range of technologies that are considered for support has expanded considerably with a firmer European policy focus on the needs for net zero emissions.

EIT InnoEnergy has identified a range of issues that continue to hinder the success of start-ups participating in the Highway programme. It is working to address some of these through its own activities, including:

  • Initiatives such as Battle of Green Talent, and its educational courses, through which EIT InnoEnergy seeks to raise the entrepreneurial ambitions of young innovators and address the continuing need to foster female entrepreneurs in the energy sector.
  • By engaging with European Commission policy makers, it promotes dialogue about the difficulty for start-ups in certain technology areas to establish EU businesses in the absence of a common regulatory framework among countries, which dis‑incentivises non-EU innovators from locating in the European Union.
  • Through continual improvement of the Highway programme, EIT InnoEnergy aims to reduce the period for many companies after the earliest stages when they are not considered to be “bankable” by private investors and lenders and cannot scale-up without public support such as investment.

In addition, other issues sit further outside the control of EIT InnoEnergy, but if they were successfully addressed then this would complement Highway and make it more impactful. These include:

  • Energy technologies are capital‑intensive and are still not well served by the current investment landscape.
  • Early-stage energy technology start-ups struggle to participate in long tendering processes for public procurement and secure performance guarantees.
  • Compared to the situation in some other major economies, high potential graduates from overseas have fewer opportunities to remain in Europe and become innovators.
  • Europe suffers from a lack of local suppliers that can quickly develop supply chains for new technologies.
  • Large corporations such as utilities are slow to adopt new technologies from start-ups, which reflects low risk appetite in the energy sector more widely

Complementary and related programmes

The EIT also funds EIT Climate KIC, which provides grants, incubation, hackathons and prizes. One such initiative is Climate Launchpad, a competition run by an expansive international community.

The European Commission established the European Innovation Council (EIC) Fund in 2020 to allow direct equity and quasi-equity investments in “European high-impact and deep-tech start-ups and scale-ups” to be accepted into the EIC Accelerator. In 2021, the EIC prioritised applicants with Green Deal innovations for economic recovery.


This publication has been produced with the financial assistance of the European Union as part of the Clean Energy Transitions in Emerging Economies programme. This publication reflects the views of the International Energy Agency (IEA) Secretariat but does not necessarily reflect those of individual IEA member countries or the European Union (EU). Neither the IEA nor the EU make any representation of warranty, express or implied, in respect to the article's content (including its completeness or accuracy) and shall not be responsible for any use of, or reliance on, the publication.

The Clean Energy Transitions in Emerging Economies programme has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 952363.

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