| Investor Type | Firm |
| Industries | Other • Education • CleanTech • HealthTech (& Fitness) • Healthcare (& Wellness) • Investment Management • Life Science |
| Stages | Angel |
| Investing | Belgium |
Inventures Investment Partners, based in Brussels, Belgium, is a venture capital firm that specializes in growing healthcare and technology companies. As an angel investor, the firm operates with a clear focus on producing both attractive financial and social returns.
Inventures Investment Partners manages two impact venture capital funds known as Inventures I and Inventures II, with a vision rooted in the startup revolution, which is seen as an ongoing transformation of our world. They have been innovators in Impact Finance since 2011, committed to building responsible finance by selecting sustainable projects. The firm reconciles profitability with sustainability, ensuring the inheritance and preservation of our blue planet and humanity in harmony for future generations.
Inventures I is a 15 million venture capital fund managing a portfolio of 12 early-stage and scale-up companies with societal goals including health, education, environment, economic growth, and social progress, though it is now closed for new investments. Conversely, Inventures II SDG Growth, with a target size of 35 million, actively invests early-stage capital in smart and innovative European SMEs that address at least one of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
They encourage co-investments, fostering participation and growth in the economy.
They strongly align investment strategies with SDGs, requiring portfolio companies to contribute positively and measurably to global challenges. This includes companies that integrate impact directly into their core business model, ensuring that as they scale operations, their impact scales as well.
Inventures Investment Partners' values include innovation, collaboration, sharing success, positive energy, and a commitment to Sustainable Development Goals that tackle issues like climate change, healthcare access, and rapid urbanization.
