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Rightcharge Raises €1.9M to Automate Fleet EV Charging Across Europe

London’s Rightcharge has raised €1.9 million (£1.6 million) in seed funding to tackle one of the biggest headaches in fleet electrification: paying drivers accurately for home charging. Led by Soulmates Ventures with backing from Blackwood Ventures, Unruly Capital, and Purple Ventures, the investment will fuel Rightcharge’s expansion across Europe and its mission to make fleet EV charging payments effortless.

The timing couldn’t be sharper. UK businesses buy more than half of all electric vehicles, yet fleet managers still struggle with spreadsheets and manual expense claims. The result? Costly delays, fraud risks, and fleets that lean too heavily on public chargers—sometimes ten times more expensive than home charging.

Automating Fleet EV Charging Reimbursements

Rightcharge links directly to drivers’ energy accounts, sending payments straight to their electricity bills rather than bank accounts. This keeps reimbursements accurate even when tariffs change and creates a transparent audit trail for tax compliance. Fleet vehicles connect to the platform with AI-driven validation that flags anomalies and cuts fraud.

“We’re building the payments infrastructure that will make EV charging effortless for fleets,” said Charlie Cook, founder and CEO. “The home is the quiet giant of electrification. Over 70 per cent of charging already happens there. Accurate, automated payments give businesses confidence to electrify faster, while cutting costs and carbon.”

A paired public charge card gives drivers access to more than 70 per cent of UK public chargers. All costs consolidate into one HMRC-compliant monthly bill. The Automobile Association reports savings exceeding £1,000 per vehicle annually and 64 per cent renewable energy usage through the platform.

European Push with Octopus Partnership

Rightcharge will channel the fresh capital into European expansion through a white-label partnership with Octopus Electroverse. The rollout targets Germany, France, the Netherlands, Belgium, Norway, and Ireland, with more markets to follow. By 2035, Rightcharge estimates more than 100 million drivers worldwide will need home charging reimbursement for work vehicles. The company aims to serve at least 10 million of them.

Hynek Sochor, founder and managing partner at Soulmates Ventures, noted the scale of the opportunity. “In Germany alone, 80 per cent of new high-end cars are company vehicles,” he said. “Rightcharge has scaled at impressive speed, combining rapid growth with virtually zero churn and a product that removes a key barrier to electrification.”

The platform already serves major UK fleets across construction, healthcare, and government sectors. With 10x ARR growth in 2025 and a product that slashes charging costs by up to 90 per cent while cutting carbon emissions by roughly 30 per cent, Rightcharge is positioning itself as the backbone for European fleet electrification.

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Fundraising 4 hours ago

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. The presence of the UK Sovereign AI Fund alongside Sequoia, Lightspeed and Nvidia is the clearest expression of that intent. The British government has publicly framed the investment as a bet on breakthrough AI that “can discover new knowledge”, positioning the country as a willing co-investor in domestic frontier laboratories. For Ineffable, the implication is access not only to capital but to compute, regulatory engagement and the still-resilient academic talent base around UCL, Oxford, Cambridge and Imperial. Founder pledge of historic scale Alongside the funding announcement, Silver disclosed that he is committing 100 per cent of any personal proceeds from his Ineffable equity to charity via the Founders Pledge network — described by the organisation as the largest pledge in its history. At the round’s $5.1 billion valuation, that commitment could ultimately exceed several billion dollars if the company succeeds. 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. Reinforcement learning at frontier scale has historically required years of careful environment design before producing competitive systems, and Ineffable’s “first contact” framing sets a high bar against which it will be judged. But for now, with a billion dollars on the balance sheet, four of the discipline’s most accomplished researchers in the founding team and a sovereign co-investor at its back, Ineffable Intelligence is the most heavily resourced new entrant in the European AI cycle. Sesamers covers European fundraising rounds across deeptech, fintech and AI. Source: tech.eu.

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