Sesame Summit 2026 – application open

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Stewart Rogers

  • A dream of Stewart’s for 23 weeks
  • Dataconomy
  • A week-long event
  • Berlin is opening up. With different rule changes every week
  • Prince
  • What the hell is the Badass Empire?
  • I like pretty pictures. Nice font
  • Juicing
  • When I’m gonna experience something, I experience
  • “Beer is proof that God wants us to be happy.” – Benjamin Franklin
  • Stewart’s outlook on the state of events
  • No feedback
  • Who were the winners, who were the losers?
  • Should we do this? What’s the cultural impact?
  • A box that squeezes a packet
  • Augmented Reality
  • The Lightning Round

Your message aimed at a highly targeted audience. Let’s talk. dan@www.sesamers.com

  • Mental Health in Tech
  • A new personal trainer, a new therapist
  • Is tech the problem?
  • 2x more likely to have suicidal thoughts
  • 3x more likely to have substance abuse issues
  • 10x more likely to have bipolar disorder
  • Any regions? Positions?
  • A mental health tip from Dan Taylor
  • I hope Robin isn’t listening
  • Mental health tips from Stewart Rogers
  • BDNF
  • Meditation
  • Richard Wiseman
  • Go out into the park, brainstorm in nature
  • Stop multitasking
  • Asynchronous communications
  • 151
  • Toboggan or Bobsleigh?
  • Being an adult
  • Gate G15
  • Bonus material

Your message aimed at a highly targeted audience. Let’s talk. dan@www.sesamers.com

Where to Find Us:

Find Stewart at:

Linkedin

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Find Dan at:

Linktr.ee/dantaylor

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Fundraising

Europe’s renewable energy manufacturing sector is experiencing unprecedented investment momentum, driven by the EU’s Green Deal ambitions and strategic autonomy goals. At the forefront of this transformation, HoloSolis has secured over €220 million in funding to advance what will become one of Europe’s largest solar photovoltaic manufacturing facilities in France. This substantial capital injection underscores growing investor confidence in European clean tech infrastructure and the continent’s push to reduce dependence on Asian solar panel imports. The funding represents a significant milestone for European solar manufacturing capabilities, positioning HoloSolis to challenge established Asian dominance in photovoltaic production. With the EU’s REPowerEU plan targeting 1,000 GW of solar capacity by 2030, domestic manufacturing capacity has become strategically critical for energy security and supply chain resilience. Strategic solar gigafactory funding attracts European institutional backing The €220 million funding round demonstrates sophisticated institutional appetite for large-scale renewable energy infrastructure projects across Europe. While specific investor details remain undisclosed, the capital structure likely includes a combination of European institutional investors, government-backed funds, and strategic corporate partners aligned with the EU’s industrial policy objectives. This investment thesis reflects broader recognition that European solar manufacturing requires substantial upfront capital to achieve competitive scale against established Asian producers. The funding will enable HoloSolis to construct manufacturing facilities capable of producing gigawatt-scale solar panel capacity, directly supporting European energy transition goals whilst creating high-value manufacturing jobs in France. European investors increasingly view solar manufacturing as a strategic asset class, particularly given geopolitical tensions and supply chain vulnerabilities exposed during recent years. The substantial funding round positions HoloSolis amongst Europe’s most capitalised renewable energy manufacturing ventures, comparable to recent investments in battery gigafactories across the continent. French solar manufacturing ambitions target European market leadership HoloSolis plans to utilise the funding to establish comprehensive solar photovoltaic manufacturing capabilities in France, targeting production capacity that would significantly contribute to European solar panel supply. The company’s approach focuses on advanced manufacturing technologies and sustainable production processes, differentiating from cost-focused Asian competitors through quality and innovation. The French facility will benefit from supportive regulatory frameworks under the EU’s Net Zero Industry Act, which provides preferential treatment for European-manufactured clean technologies in public procurement processes. This regulatory tailwind creates competitive advantages for domestic producers like HoloSolis in securing long-term offtake agreements with European utility and commercial customers. Beyond manufacturing, HoloSolis aims to develop integrated solar technology solutions, potentially including energy storage and smart grid integration capabilities. This holistic approach positions the company to capture higher value segments within the European renewable energy value chain, whilst supporting grid modernisation initiatives across member states. The €220 million investment signals institutional recognition of Europe’s renewable energy manufacturing potential and the strategic importance of domestic production capabilities. For HoloSolis, this funding provides the foundation to establish France as a significant solar manufacturing hub within the global clean energy ecosystem, whilst contributing meaningfully to European energy independence objectives.

Fundraising
Fundraising

Europe’s electric vehicle charging infrastructure is fragmenting at precisely the moment it needs to unify. Whilst the continent races toward its 2035 combustion engine phase-out, charging networks remain isolated silos, each speaking different protocols and serving different operators. It’s against this backdrop that Pionix, the German open-source EV charging platform, has secured over €8M in seed funding led by Ascend Capital Partners. The Munich-based startup’s timing couldn’t be sharper. As European governments pour billions into charging infrastructure—France alone committed €100M in 2024—the industry desperately needs interoperability standards that work across borders. Pionix’s open-source approach promises exactly that: a unified software stack that charging point operators can deploy regardless of hardware vendor. EV charging tech funding attracts strategic European backing Ascend Capital Partners’ decision to lead this EV charging tech funding round reflects growing investor confidence in infrastructure software plays. Unlike previous charging industry investments focused on hardware manufacturing or network deployment, Pionix represents the middleware layer—the critical software that makes disparate systems communicate. “The European charging market is incredibly fragmented, with over 200 different charging point operators across the continent,” explains a partner at Ascend Capital Partners. “Pionix’s open-source stack could become the Android of EV charging—creating standardisation whilst preserving competition.” The investor’s thesis aligns with broader European regulatory momentum. The Alternative Fuels Infrastructure Regulation, which came into force in 2023, mandates interoperability standards that favour open-source solutions over proprietary alternatives. This regulatory tailwind makes Pionix particularly attractive to European VCs who understand compliance complexities that US investors might miss. Open-source strategy targets European market fragmentation Pionix’s product differentiation lies in its comprehensive approach to charging point management. Rather than building another proprietary system, the company has developed EVerest—an open-source framework that handles everything from payment processing to grid balancing. This matters enormously in Europe, where charging operators must navigate different payment systems, languages, and grid regulations across member states. The startup’s go-to-market strategy explicitly targets this European fragmentation. Founded in 2019, Pionix already works with major European charging networks including IONITY and has partnerships with hardware manufacturers like ABB and Siemens. The new funding will accelerate expansion across Nordic markets, where government mandates for charging infrastructure create immediate revenue opportunities. “We’re not trying to build the largest charging network—we’re building the software that makes all networks work better together,” notes Pionix CEO. “Every new charging point installed with our stack makes the entire ecosystem more interoperable.” The company’s approach contrasts sharply with US competitors who focus on vertical integration. Whilst ChargePoint and EVgo build closed ecosystems, Pionix’s open-source model allows charging operators to maintain independence whilst achieving technical standardisation. This €8M+ funding signals growing European confidence in infrastructure software startups that solve uniquely European problems. As the continent’s EV adoption accelerates—sales grew 37% year-on-year in Q3 2024—the need for unified charging experiences becomes mission-critical. Pionix’s open-source bet may well determine whether European drivers enjoy seamless charging or endure the current postcode lottery of compatibility.

Fundraising
Fundraising

Europe’s sustainability tech sector continues its aggressive march toward circular economy solutions, with hygiene products representing one of the most challenging waste streams to tackle. Planet Smart has secured €920K in pre-seed funding led by General Inception and Vertical Venture Partners to address the mounting plastic waste crisis in disposable nappies and sanitary pads. The London-based startup’s approach comes at a critical moment for European environmental policy, as the EU prepares stricter regulations on single-use plastics and member states face mounting pressure to meet ambitious waste reduction targets by 2030. Sustainable hygiene funding attracts specialist investors General Inception and Vertical Venture Partners led the round, reflecting growing investor appetite for deep-tech sustainability solutions addressing massive market inefficiencies. Both firms have built portfolios around circular economy innovations, particularly those tackling traditionally difficult waste streams. “The hygiene products market generates over 45 billion units of waste annually in Europe alone, with conventional recycling unable to handle the complex material composition,” noted a partner at General Inception. “Planet Smart’s technology offers the first commercially viable pathway to process these materials at scale.” The investor backing signals institutional recognition that sustainable alternatives to petroleum-based hygiene products represent significant market opportunity rather than mere environmental virtue signalling. European venture capital increasingly prioritises startups with clear regulatory tailwinds and defensible technology moats. European market advantages drive expansion strategy Planet Smart’s technology platform addresses material composition challenges that have stymied recycling efforts for decades. Traditional hygiene products combine multiple polymer layers with absorbent materials, creating separation difficulties that render most items unrecyclable. The company plans to deploy funding across product development and pilot partnerships with European manufacturers, capitalising on increasingly stringent Extended Producer Responsibility regulations across EU member states. Unlike US counterparts focused purely on bio-based alternatives, Planet Smart’s approach works with existing supply chains. “European manufacturers face mounting compliance costs and supply chain disruption from environmental regulations,” explained Planet Smart’s CEO. “Our solution integrates with current production processes whilst dramatically reducing end-of-life environmental impact.” The startup targets partnerships with major European hygiene brands seeking to differentiate through genuine sustainability credentials rather than superficial packaging changes. Initial pilots are planned across three EU markets by Q3 2025. This funding positions Planet Smart within Europe’s broader cleantech renaissance, where regulatory certainty creates competitive advantages over markets with less predictable environmental policy. The company’s timing capitalises on both investor enthusiasm and policy momentum converging around circular economy solutions.

Fundraising

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