What would you do if you had S$1 million to invest in a solution to make cities more sustainable? Would you choose to back greener batteries for electric vehicles? Develop a new supermaterial to replace plastic? Or a paint that keeps cars, buildings and ships cool all day long?
This 7 June, six teams will pitch their clean energy and circular economy solutions for cities in the tropics at The Liveability Challenge Grand Finale 2019. You're invited to join us at Marina Bay Sands to witness this battle of ideas.
Following a 5-month journey and beating more than 300 other applicants, finalists will fight to convince a panel of Asia's most renowned investors and changemakers that they deserve the ultimate prize of up to S$1 million in grant funding and other exclusive opportunities.
Who will walk away as the Grand Winner of The Liveability Challenge 2019? Come witness history in the making on 7 June, 3pm at Marina Bay Sands.
Hear from the region's leading opinion leaders in innovation and venture capitalism at an intimate fireside chat at the event, and network with 200 C-suite/senior leaders from the finance, business and policy sectors.
This event is by invite-only with a passcode. If you are interested to join, please contact The Liveability Challenge at tlc@eco-business.com.
TV Host and Actor
Six grand finalists will pitch their solutions for 7 minutes to a panel of Asia's most sought after investors and changemakers. After their 7 minutes pitch, judges will post questions to the teams.
The finalists:
1. Companies: Biomass Energy Systems Inc, Dewcon Instruments Inc, Flexi Systems Singapore (United States)
Idea: Saving air conditioning energy and harvesting water using ion deposition membrane technology
2. Company: Chitonous (Singapore)
Idea: The beginning of a new manufacturing age
3. Company: Cloud&Heat Technologies (Germany)
Idea: Green data centres for smart cities
4. Company: Neuto HEEV (Singapore)
Idea: Turning Every Diesel Engine Green
5. Company: Revolv (Hong Kong)
Idea: Building a network of tech-enabled packaging for the to-go economy
6. Company: Sophie’s Kitchen (Singapore)
Idea: Sustainable urban plant protein
The six judges:
Co-Founder, GoImpact
Executive Director and Co-Founder, FundedHere
Board Member, BANSEA/BANSEA TWO Fund & Managing Director, Harbourfront Ventures
Founder, CircleWerkz & Circular Economy Club Country Organiser for Singapore
Head of Programmes, Temasek Foundation
Chief Executive Officer, RWDC Industries
Rapid change calls for rapid disruption, and no sector embodies the spirit of innovation and transformation than tech start-ups. Pioneering unicorns like Grab and Airbnb have demonstrated how quickly societies can adapt to new ways of doing things by working with popular opinion, not against. But disruption doesn't necessarily lead to positive change. The successive collapse of bike-sharing companies, once hailed a green force for good, has led to massive waste and a return to old, polluting ways of transport.
In a sector rife with hope and hype, is technological disruption leading us to a better future? What are the risks of rapid social and technological transformation, and how can we innovate and scale to achieve the impact we need? With 12 years to avoid sealing our fate of runaway climate change, how do we deploy technology for the greatest good with the least social disruption?
Director, China Programs, Closed Loop Partners
Vice President, Business Development and Ecosystem, Asia Pacific and Japan, Envision Digital
This event is by invite-only with a passcode. If you are interested to join, please contact The Liveability Challenge at tlc@eco-business.com.
This event is by invite-only with a passcode. If you are interested to join, please contact The Liveability Challenge at tlc@eco-business.com.