
How a $475M Climate VC Investor Picks Winners | Voyager Ventures
Voyager Ventures backs early-stage climate companies at seed and Series A with ~$475M AUM. Leo Banchik shares how they evaluate opportunities across unit economics, technology risk, and founder-market fit in a capital-constrained environment.
In this episode:
Unit economics > climate narrative - Companies like Arbor stand out because they work without subsidies. That’s becoming table stakes.
Clean-sheet innovation still wins, but only selectively - Conifer’s motor redesign shows VCs will back first-principles tech, but only when the performance delta is clear and defensible.
Battery assumptions are being reset - Investors are revisiting prior “no-go” categories as chemistries and cost curves shift.
“No” is often provisional - Voyager tracked companies like Electroflow over time. Relationship building can convert early rejection into later investment.
AI is now embedded, not differentiated - Tools like Allie AI show that automation is expected. It’s not a moat unless tied to proprietary data or workflow lock-in.
Founder profile: conviction + adaptability - Best teams combine strong technical beliefs with a willingness to update assumptions quickly.
Key decision for founders
Build a climate company that needs subsidies to survive… or one that works on pure economics?
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Work with me (EFI)
Private CEO group (capped at 50) for climate tech founders navigating capital, strategy, and scale → entrepreneursforimpact.com
Newsletter (Climate CEOs)
3 decisions per week on climate finance, strategy, leadership → entrepreneursforimpact.substack.com
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