KoBold used AI to find copper. Now investors are piling in to the tune of $537M

Date:

Share post:


KoBold Metals closed a $537 million Series C round on Wednesday to help build a multi-billion dollar mine to exploit a copper deposit it found using AI.

The new funding round, which was led by Durable Capital Partners and T Rowe Price, will be used to expand the company’s exploration efforts on five continents and develop a massive copper deposit in Zambia. The funding round pushed KoBold’s valuation to $2.96 billion, according to the Financial Times.

The final close of the round netted the company $10 million more than it initially expected to raise. TechCrunch exclusively reported on the fundraise in October.

Few industries are as ripe for technological disruption as mining. The business is famously risky: only about three in every 1,000 potential deposits are commercially viable. 

KoBold, which was founded in 2018, uses AI to comb through massive geological data sets in an attempt to improve the success rate. The company’s decision to develop the Zambia resource, which it estimates is among the largest found, suggests that approach could pay off handsomely.

Critical minerals have grown in importance in recent years as the U.S. and China have clashed over supplies. China has already banned shipments of antimony, gallium, and germanium to the U.S., and today it proposed restricting technologies for processing lithium and gallium.

Andreessen Horowitz, Bond, Breakthrough Energy Ventures, Earthshot VC, Equinor, July Fund, Mitsubishi, Standard Investments, StepStone, and WCM Investment Management also participated in the round. Previous investors include Bill Gates, Jeff Bezos, and Jack Ma.



Source link

Lisa Holden
Lisa Holden
Lisa Holden is a news writer for LinkDaddy News. She writes health, sport, tech, and more. Some of her favorite topics include the latest trends in fitness and wellness, the best ways to use technology to improve your life, and the latest developments in medical research.

Recent posts

Related articles

Anker shows off its solar beach umbrella at CES 2025

At CES 2025, Anker unveiled its first solar umbrella, designed to charge electronic devices — like coolers...

Samsung will unveil the Galaxy S25 on January 22

In what was an otherwise uneventful CES 2025 press conference, Samsung on Monday announced January 22 as...

Consumer tech spending will break records in 2025 if Trump’s tariffs don’t squash it, CTA predicts

American consumers will spend a record-breaking $537 billion on new apps, devices, and gadgets in 2025, according...

Sierra Space CEO Tom Vice steps down, CNBC reports

Tom Vice, the CEO of private space technologies company Sierra Space, has left the company, according to...

Flying Flea electric motorcycles will feature connected services powered by Qualcomm 

Flying Flea is the latest electric two-wheeler manufacturer to embrace the connected vehicle trend. At CES 2025,...

Google is forming a new team to build AI that can simulate the physical world

Google is forming a new team to work on AI models that can simulate the physical world....

TechCrunch Space: New year, new milestones

Hi, and welcome back to TechCrunch Space. Happy New Year! And…surprise!: This will be the last edition...

RoboForce raises $10 million to create a robot workforce 

Last summer, when RoboForce founder Leo Ma visited a solar farm outside Phoenix, the ground was hot...