100×100, a Singapore-based climate company builder and venture capital fund, announced Wednesday the launch of its second fund (Fund II) targeting $100 million.
The fund that was launched by the team that co-founded Wavemaker Impact said in a statement that it will deploy this capital to create and scale 50 more high-impact, high-growth companies designed to address the planet’s most pressing emissions challenges.
It is noted that energy, food, materials and supply chains are being reshaped by rising demand, geopolitical fragmentation, resource constraints and the need for national self-sufficiency.
100×100 aims to close the gap between readiness of low-emissions technologies and large-scale commercial deployment.
Rather than funding existing startups, 100×100 works alongside experienced entrepreneurs to build companies from the ground up in Southeast Asia and India.
It noted that every 100×100-built company has the potential to abate 100 million tons of carbon dioxide equivalent and achieve $100 million in revenue.
“We believe that solving the world’s most pressing emissions challenges also represents a significant economic opportunity,
“Our name reflects our conviction that profit and carbon reduction are not a trade-off, but a multiplier. With Fund II, we are doubling down on a demonstrated strategy with a platform that is ready-to-go,” said Marie Cheong, Founding Partner, 100×100.
The launch of Fund II follows the success of the firm’s initial fund, which hit its hard cap at $60 million in 2023, and attracted backing from institutional, strategic and family office investors, including the US Development Finance Corporation (DFC) Singapore Economic Development Board (EDB), British International Investment (BII), Triple Jump, Qarlbo Energy, JG Digital Equity Ventures, Kajima Corporation and Beacon Ventures.
Since then, the firm has co-founded 27 companies across eight countries, maintaining a portfolio survival rate nearly double the median venture capital average.
This commercial resilience is driven by tight operational alignment; 100×100 holds significantly higher equity stakes than traditional venture capitals, while its portfolio companies operate at 1.5 times greater capital efficiency, positioning Fund I as on track for top-quartile performance.
The firm said its unique operating model involves a structured venture-building process to identify “white spaces” in high-emissions sectors.
It noted that every venture is intentionally built to capture a ‘green discount’ — delivering cost or economic advantages while driving down emissions.
To execute this, the firm speaks to over 1,000 experienced founders per year to identify entrepreneurs with the expertise and track record required to build and scale businesses from day one.
To date, 100×100’s Fund I portfolio companies have raised over $28 million from 16 external investors, and the majority have generated revenue in less than six months of launch.
A prime example of this scaling velocity is a portfolio company Rize, which reduces methane emissions in rice cultivation and serves smallholder rice farmers.
The company successfully generated $11 million in revenue in 2025, growing at an extraordinary 550 percent year-on-year growth rate whilst improving the livelihood of over 40,000 farmers.
Another company, Helios – a residential solar company in the Philippines – has consistently grown at over 40% month-on-month for the past 12 months.
The fund is led by six partners – Guillem Segarra, Marie Cheong, Paul Lam Wai, Quentin Vaquette, Steve Melhuish, and Subhadeep Sanyal – with experience spanning venture creation, climate technology and institutional investing across Asia.
Collectively, the team has built 58 companies, invested in 73 climate businesses and realized 19 exits.
“Southeast and South Asia sit at the intersection of the world’s most urgent challenges — holding a disproportionate share of global emissions while increasingly becoming a key region for manufacturing reshoring, artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure buildout, and food system redesign,
“By deploying our venture-building infrastructure here, with a target of reducing 10% of global emissions collectively, we are building the very companies the world needs right now — and that will become the most compelling investment opportunities of this decade,” added Quentin Vaquette, Founding Partner, 100×100.
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