Anjali Bansal, an early-mover in climate tech investments through her venture capital fund Avaana Capital, believes that women should dream big, network and find their tribe early
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Anjali Bansal has, for years, been asking young people: ‘What are you most excited about? And what are you most worried about?’ For the first, they talk about various things. For the second, until about two to three years ago, “they would say, perhaps, worried about jobs and so on. Then it started shifting to, I’m worried about the environment. That to me was a personal ‘aha!’ moment,†says the founding partner of climate tech venture capital (VC) fund Avaana Capital.
There were a couple of other moments like that, one of them being a side effect of Covid—“the sky was blue and I saw colour in the sea off the coast of Mumbai, which in the 20 years of living here I’ve never seen. So it just goes to show that there is a better world that can be lived inâ€. And another being her son choosing a college based on the fact that it offered a climate course.
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Though Avaana Capital, founded in 2018, was always focussed on sustainability and inclusion, over the last few years, the team has further sharpened the focus to working on climate solutions. “Seventy percent of our portfolio has been in sustainability. We have now just chosen to define it,†says Bansal, adding that for Avaana, climate means three things. “These three areas constitute 90 percent of emissions in India. Energy transition, which includes everything from energy access to renewables, to land and resources for land, air, water waste. The second is mobility and supply chain. And the third is resilient agriculture. So mitigation, adaptation, and resilience.â€
(This story appears in the 16 December, 2022 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)