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Mondra raises €11.8M Series A for food emissions tech

The European food industry’s sustainability transformation is accelerating, driven by both regulatory pressure and genuine consumer demand. Against this backdrop, Mondra, a London-based platform tackling food supply chain emissions, has secured €11.8 million in Series A funding to expand its carbon management technology across Europe’s fragmented food sector.

The round was led by AlbionVC and Planet A Ventures, two investors with distinctly different but complementary approaches to the European sustainability market. This investor combination signals growing confidence in food tech solutions that address both environmental impact and operational efficiency.

Food emissions Series A attracts European sustainability specialists

AlbionVC’s participation represents a strategic bet on B2B climate solutions within their established enterprise software thesis. The firm, which previously backed European success stories like Cazoo and Zopa, sees food supply chain optimisation as a massive addressable market ripe for digitisation. “Food companies are facing unprecedented pressure to demonstrate genuine sustainability credentials, not just marketing speak,” noted an AlbionVC partner familiar with the deal.

Planet A Ventures brings complementary expertise as one of Europe’s most active climate-focused VCs. Their portfolio approach targets solutions addressing specific carbon reduction challenges, with food systems representing one of their core investment themes. The firm’s backing suggests Mondra’s technology has demonstrated quantifiable emission reductions rather than theoretical projections.

This investor mix—traditional enterprise VC plus climate specialist—reflects the maturation of European sustainability investing. Companies like Mondra no longer need to choose between commercial viability and environmental impact; the best solutions deliver both.

European food sector embraces digital carbon management

Mondra’s platform addresses a distinctly European challenge: managing sustainability compliance across multiple jurisdictions whilst maintaining operational efficiency. Unlike US food companies operating within relatively uniform regulations, European food businesses navigate a complex web of national and EU-level requirements, from farm-to-fork strategies to upcoming corporate sustainability reporting directives.

The startup’s technology enables food companies to track, measure, and reduce emissions across their supply chains through real-time data integration and automated reporting. This approach resonates particularly well with European food manufacturers who face increasingly stringent sustainability disclosure requirements under incoming EU legislation.

“We’re not just measuring emissions—we’re helping companies fundamentally rethink their supply chain decisions to achieve genuine reductions,” explains Mondra’s CEO. “European food companies understand that sustainability isn’t optional anymore; it’s becoming a competitive advantage.”

The funding will primarily support product development and European market expansion, with plans to establish operations in key food manufacturing hubs including Germany, France, and the Netherlands. This geographic strategy acknowledges that European food supply chains are inherently cross-border, requiring solutions that work seamlessly across different regulatory frameworks.

Mondra’s Series A reflects broader momentum in European food tech, where regulatory tailwinds and corporate sustainability commitments are creating genuine market demand for solutions that deliver measurable environmental impact alongside commercial returns.

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London-based AI laboratory Ineffable Intelligence has emerged from stealth with a $1.1 billion seed round at a $5.1 billion post-money valuation, the company confirmed on 27 April 2026. The financing is the largest seed round ever raised by a European company and one of the largest first-money-in rounds in the global history of artificial intelligence. The round was co-led by Sequoia Capital and Lightspeed Venture Partners. Participating investors included Nvidia, DST Global, Index Ventures, Google, and the UK Sovereign AI Fund, the British government’s recently established vehicle for backing strategic AI capacity on home soil. A bet on a different path to general intelligence Ineffable Intelligence was founded in 2025 by David Silver, the former Vice President of Reinforcement Learning at Google DeepMind and the principal architect of AlphaGo, AlphaZero and AlphaStar. He is joined by three further DeepMind alumni: Wojciech Czarnecki, Lasse Espeholt and Junhyuk Oh. All four have spent the past decade at the frontier of reinforcement learning research, the discipline behind some of the most consequential demonstrations of machine learning over the past ten years. The company describes its objective as building a “superlearner” — an AI system capable of acquiring knowledge directly from its own experience rather than from human-generated text or imagery. “Our mission is to make first contact with superintelligence,” Silver said in a statement accompanying the launch. “We are creating a superlearner that discovers all knowledge from its own experience, from elementary motor skills through to profound intellectual breakthroughs.” The framing is a deliberate departure from the dominant industry trajectory. Most leading AI laboratories, including OpenAI, Anthropic and Google DeepMind itself, have built large language models trained primarily on the corpus of the internet, then refined that training with human feedback. Ineffable’s wager is that the marginal returns on scaling text-based pretraining are diminishing and that the next leap in capability will come from agents that learn endlessly from the consequences of their own actions, in much the same way AlphaZero learnt the game of Go without studying any human matches. Why $1.1 billion at seed The size of the round is unusual even by the inflated standards of the 2026 AI capital cycle. Two factors appear to explain it. First, frontier reinforcement learning at the scale Ineffable describes is computationally extraordinarily expensive: the company will need to operate vast simulation environments and train very large models against them, an undertaking that consumes capital at a rate closer to physical R&D than to traditional software. Second, the round signals a strategic move by Europe’s investor and policy ecosystems to retain the most ambitious AI researchers on the continent. 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It is a meaningful gesture in a sector where the reputational stakes around concentrated AI wealth are escalating, and one likely to be referenced in subsequent founder-led commitments. Implications for the European AI landscape Ineffable’s emergence reshapes the European AI map in three concrete ways. It establishes London as the home of the continent’s largest-ever seed-stage company, complicating Paris’s recent narrative of frontier-AI primacy after Mistral’s earlier rounds. It validates a thesis — that reinforcement learning, not transformer scaling, is the next frontier — that has lately been losing capital share to language-model incumbents. And it confirms that the UK government is now willing to act as a balance-sheet co-investor in domestic AI laboratories, a posture much closer to the French model than to the predominantly grant-based regimes elsewhere in Europe. The execution risk is non-trivial. 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