African climate-tech startup, Amini has announced raising $2 million in pre-seed funding aimed
at solving the continent’s environmental data gap through Artificial Intelligence and satellite technology.
The funding was led by Pale Blue Dot, a leading European Climate Tech fund, along with other investors including Superorganism, RaliCap, W3i, Emurgo Kepple Ventures, and a network of angel investors from the global technology community.
Kate Kallot, the CEO and founder of Amini who announced the funding on Friday, said the startup has also become the first African company to be accepted into the highly selective Seraphim Accelerator program, which scouts from the top 2% of global early-stage space companies.
She boasted that the funding was secured following a decade of leadership experience in driving global innovation in artificial intelligence and machine learning at renowned technology companies like Intel, Arm, and NVIDIA.
“We are building the single source of truth for environmental data across Africa,” she said.
“Data has the potential of transforming livelihoods by enabling everything from climate resilience to sustainable value chains,” Kallot said.
The Amini platform provides access to valuable environmental data analytics, including drought, flood, soil and crop health.
The data can also be processed to forecast crop yields for millions of smallholder farmers in mere seconds, as well as measuring the impact of natural disasters across the region.
While the company initially focused on the insurance industry, they are now experiencing rapid expansion into supply chain monitoring, specifically at the “last mile,” or the initial stages of the global supply chain.