Climate change has now become an inevitability and the clock is still ticking to solve the much more catastrophic climate crisis. But despite the mounting urgency, leading governments are falling behind in reaching the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 2030. A major gap stalling meaningful and impactful change in the timeframe given by climate scientists is funding and monetary allocation to vital projects.
The estimated funding gap for green projects is $50 trillion over the next decade. And as the window of opportunity closes, the imperative of finding an effective solution to mobilize the necessary resources becomes more pressing every day. For projects that rely on outside investment, funding pipeline blockages are causing critical initiatives like climate adaptation infrastructure to receive under 10% of the estimated $340 billion in support it requires. To ensure that funding goals are met, worthy projects of all scopes working in climate development and humanitarian aid must now seek different avenues to attain funds.
Bitgreen responds to this critical shortfall with a novel infrastructure for grassroots-level sustainability and impact projects to find a global investor community. Powered by Polkadot, the leading sustainable blockchain network, Bitgreen enables backers to finance sustainability projects, including conservation, clean infrastructure, and empowerment initiatives for vulnerable communities. On the heels of winning the 29th parachain auction, Bitgreen has activated its chain for its token holders to stake their assets, connect with projects, and utilize dApps launched natively on the network.
We sat with Adam Carver, CEO and co-founder of Bitgreen, to outline his journey to sustainable blockchain development, Bitgreen’s mission, and tips for founders and entrepreneurs entering the impact investing space.
Tell us about your background.
It may sound like heresy but my background is in traditional finance. I began my career in structured finance at Morgan Stanley and the Royal Bank of Scotland. That makes me a bit of an oddity in DeFi, but that formal training guides how we address Bitgreen as a financial platform irrespective of our use of blockchain as an enabling technology. We keep a keen eye on credit-risk assessment, deal quality, knowing our customers, and regulatory compliance.
Anyway, after Morgan Stanley, I pursued an MS in Sustainable Systems at the University of Michigan. Post graduation, I returned to New York and started working in venture capital, eventually working as Director at AngelList and then as Co-founder/Managing Director at TheFund.vc. I left AngelList in 2018 to leap into the wild world of crypto.
