An Era of Venture Investing Ends
The oil giant established its venture capital unit in 2006. Over the course of nearly two decades, the division placed capital into many sectors, many of them tied to the shift toward cleaner energy - such as green hydrogen, e-mobility, ride-hailing, self-driving cars, private jet booking, and geothermal power.
But BP announced earlier this year that it was pivoting away from clean energy. Shuttering the venture arm and selling off the portfolio is the clearest sign yet of that shift.
The company is offloading the bulk of its venture portfolio - comprising equity in more than 10 startups, as BP confirmed - to Verdane, a Scandinavian private equity firm that frequently acquires specialized technology portfolios.
This sale underscores BP's retreat from the startup ecosystem it had cultivated for nearly two decades. Many of the investments were in early-stage clean-energy technologies that now face an uncertain funding future without corporate backing from a major oil player.
Last year, the portfolio's approximate worth was $1.2 billion, which matched the total capital BP had invested since the unit's inception. For the startups involved, the transition to a private equity owner could mean a shift in strategic priorities, as Verdane typically looks to monetize its holdings within a set timeframe.
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What Happens to the Money and the People
As reported by Axios's Alan Neuhauser, the portfolio's value stood at around $1.2 billion last year - essentially the same sum the company had contributed to the unit from its founding in 2006 onward.
BP will not walk away entirely. The company said in a press release that it will "keep ownership stakes in a limited number of investments where the technology has the potential to create value for its businesses." BP declined to name which companies it would be keeping.
What happens to the people who ran BP Ventures is less clear. Asked about the employees, a BP representative declined to disclose details regarding the BP Ventures team, citing local legal and regulatory obligations. Job cuts appear probable.
The focus on core oil-and-gas operations means BP is abandoning the venture-capital approach that once made it a notable investor in next-generation energy. Verdane, the buyer, will now manage the acquired stakes, which include companies in mobility, hydrogen, and geothermal sectors.
What This Means for Your Portfolio
For investors, this is a signal worth watching. BP's retreat from venture capital is part of a broader pullback from clean energy across the oil and gas industry. When the biggest players stop funding startups, those startups have to find money elsewhere.
Verdane, the buyer, is a Nordic private equity firm.
If you own energy stocks, this is a reminder that the big oil companies are repositioning. BP is choosing to focus on its core business.
For everyone else, the lesson is simpler: when a company like BP walks away from nearly 20 years of venture investing, it is not just a footnote.
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