SA国际传媒

Agriculture & foodtech Artificial intelligence Clean tech and energy Health, Wellness & Biotech Robotics Startups Venture

5 Interesting Startup Deals You May Have Missed In April: Firefighting Robots And Animal-Free Eggs

Illustration of a robot arm/wrench turning a nut in the middle of the number 5.

This is a monthly column that runs down five interesting deals every month that may have flown under the radar. Check out our March entry here.

Spring is here, baseball鈥檚 back and days are longer, so it鈥檚 pretty easy to miss some of the more intriguing rounds announced by startups in April.

Don鈥檛 worry, we selected a quintet of eye-catching startups raising cash that will keep you up on what you may have missed in the past month.

Fighting fire with 鈥 robots?

California has seen 13 of the state鈥檚 20 in history since 2017. Perhaps it’s not surprising, then, that a startup nestled in San Francisco is looking at ways to prevent such disasters.

raised $20 million in financing led by last month. The robotics startup says it has developed remote-controlled vehicles 鈥 which look basically like a Zamboni 鈥 that can eat up and burn away plants or other dry vegetation that fuel destructive wildfires.

The idea is a good one as it tries to move the fire-prevention industry away from more dangerous or slow-moving solutions such as grazing away the vegetation with goats, burning it off or using toxic herbicides.

California aims to treat 1 million acres annually and the has a goal of treating 50 million acres over the coming decade. Maybe a vegetation-eating Zamboni is just what鈥檚 needed.

Better diagnoses

All parents want what鈥檚 best for their children. But getting the right diagnoses and the proper care can be difficult the younger a child is, especially for developmental issues such as autism.

Decatur, Georgia-based raised cash last month to help, locking up a $21.5 million Series B co-led by , which focuses on companies trying to treat brain disorders, and .

The startup says it can diagnose children as young as 16 months old. That鈥檚 important since studies suggest the earlier a child gets diagnosed the better the developmental outcomes.

EarliTech uses an FDA-authorized approach in which a child watches videos of social interactions on a screen and AI tracks the child鈥檚 eye movements to assess the level of function on characteristics of autism 鈥 social disability, verbal ability and nonverbal learning.

Autism is on the rise, with 1 in 36 children in the U.S. diagnosed with it 鈥 up from the previous rate of 1 in 44 鈥 . Getting earlier diagnoses may not stop that trend but could certainly help with care and development.

Animal-free eggs and ham?

Well, folks looking for animal-free eggs likely won鈥檛 be pairing them with ham, but they may soon be able to find such a thing more easily.

Helsinki-based raised a big $40 million round last month led by Japanese-Nordic VC . The startup aims to manufacture real egg protein entirely animal-free.

While animal-free meat has been a thing for a while, we are not as familiar with animal-free eggs. The startup uses fermentation to manufacture real egg protein entirely animal-free using聽 their ingredient, Bioalbumen.

Onego claims the product results in identical taste and nutrition, and more than a 90% smaller environmental footprint, compared to eggs from chickens. The company plans to use the fresh cash to scale up its North American go-to-market strategy, so it may be in the grocery store aisles on this side of the Atlantic sooner rather than later.

Let it rain

This is definitely the first time two Finnish startups have made this list.

snatched up about $2.4 million in a round led by . The Finland-based startup has developed hardware for the collection and recycling of nutrients from wastewaters such as rain. The company plans to use the cash to build its first commercially ready 鈥淣utrient Catcher,鈥 which will be installed at its clients鈥 facilities.

The startup says its treatment equipment is able to separate and collect all excess nutrients from wastewaters 鈥 mainly ammonia salt 鈥 which can then be recycled and used in fertilizer.

Getting the most out of wastewater to help with food insecurity isn鈥檛 necessarily a new idea, but this method is novel.

Breaking down plastic

鈥 which is trying to solve de-extinction 鈥 has made this list before, but now the Dallas-based unicorn is incubating companies making this list.

, a plastic degradation and synthetic biology company, launched in April and announced it鈥檚 already raised a $10.5 million seed round from the likes of , , and .

The Boston-based company says it has discovered a microbe, called X-32, that destroys multiple types of plastics by quickly breaking down hydrocarbon chains across different chemical structures.

According to the company, the microbe can degrade 90% of polyolefins, polyesters and polyamides 鈥 leaving behind carbon dioxide, water and biomass 鈥 in as little as 22 months.

Plastics are a growing environmental problem 鈥 5 billion tons of plastic are sitting in landfills, oceans and our ecosystems, per Breaking 鈥 so a new microbe that can make it degrade faster may be part of the solution.

Related reading:

Illustration:

Stay up to date with recent funding rounds, acquisitions, and more with the SA国际传媒 Daily.

67.1K Followers

CTA

Find the right companies, identify the right contacts, and connect with decision-makers with an all-in-one prospecting solution.

Copy link