Industrial decarbonisation has become Europe’s most pressing infrastructure challenge, with regulatory pressure mounting across the continent. Against this backdrop, Cambridge-based Immaterial has secured €15.4 million in Series A2 funding to advance its monolithic metal-organic framework (MOF) systems. Led by SLB, this round signals growing confidence in breakthrough materials science as a pathway to industrial net-zero.
The timing reflects Europe’s regulatory advantage in clean technology adoption. With the EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism reshaping industrial economics, companies developing enabling technologies like Immaterial are attracting serious capital attention.
MOF technology funding attracts strategic industrial backing
SLB’s leadership of this round represents more than capital deployment—it signals validation from one of the world’s largest industrial technology companies. The energy services giant, with operations across 120 countries, brings immediate market access that European deeptech startups typically struggle to achieve independently.
“Industrial decarbonisation requires materials innovation at unprecedented scale,” noted an SLB investment representative. “Immaterial’s monolithic MOF approach addresses fundamental limitations in existing carbon capture systems while offering manufacturing scalability.”
This strategic backing follows a pattern of industrial majors entering European climate tech. Unlike Silicon Valley’s software-first approach, European investors increasingly recognise that climate solutions require patient capital and industrial partnerships—exactly what SLB provides.
Scaling MOF manufacturing across fragmented European markets
Immaterial’s technology addresses a critical bottleneck in industrial carbon capture: the powder-to-pellet problem that has limited MOF deployment. Their monolithic approach eliminates traditional binding agents, potentially reducing costs by 40% while improving performance—crucial advantages in Europe’s cost-sensitive industrial landscape.
The company plans to utilise funding for manufacturing scale-up across multiple European jurisdictions, each with distinct regulatory frameworks. This fragmentation, often seen as a European disadvantage, actually benefits Immaterial’s modular approach to system deployment.
Founded in Cambridge’s thriving materials science cluster, Immaterial leverages the UK’s research excellence while maintaining EU market access—a positioning that’s become increasingly valuable post-Brexit for deeptech companies.
The industrial decarbonisation market represents a €500 billion opportunity across Europe by 2030, driven by regulatory mandates rather than voluntary adoption. Companies like Immaterial that can demonstrate both technical superiority and manufacturing scalability are positioned to capture disproportionate value as this transition accelerates.