Could deeptech serve as Europe’s path to autonomy from the US?

Date:

Share post:


Amidst geopolitical tensions and volatile markets, the question of Europe’s ability to weather the storms ahead, especially as President Trump seems intent on having his pound of tariffs from the continent, is looming large.

But an extensive new report claims deeptech is poised to become a key pillar of Europe’s security, defense, and future autonomy, in particular from the U.S. 

Deeptech attracted €15 billion ($16.3 billion) in venture investments in 2024, according to a 184-page report by venture firms Lakestar, Walden Catalyst, Dealroom and the deeptech conference, Hello Tomorrow. The report also found that nearly one-third of all venture capital invested in Europe is now going to deep tech.

M&A activity in the space increased to $12.2 billion last year, the report said, but it also found that European deeptech startups still rely on the U.S. for exits. Furthermore, 50% of the growth capital raised by deeptech startups comes from outside the continent.

Still, deeptech could also be seen as a hedge against normal “momentum investing” amongst venture capitalists, said the report. 

The report’s co-author Lukas Leitner, also a deeptech investor at Lakestar, told TechCrunch that while geopolitical tensions pose significant challenges, Europe needs to embrace the moment, and deeptech could be the key that unlocks future resilience for the continent.

However, the road ahead is not without challenges. The U.S. has a “flywheel effect” in deeptech while Europe’s ecosystem is still immature, Leitner noted. “We have a flywheel in the ‘shallow’ tech scene. You see a lot of second-time founders, coming out of Revolut and so on, building great companies. But not yet from deeptech companies.”

“Europe has strong research institutions, engineering talent, and supportive public sentiment for deeptech, but there need to be policy changes to foster a culture that supports taking risks,” he added. 

Arnaud de la Tour, the CEO of Hello Tomorrow, said that the notion that compute-poor Europe would always lag in AI was recently challenged by the appearance of open-source DeepSeek: “It’s a huge opportunity for Europe, because we have great AI talent […] Many are looking to come back to Europe because of the geopolitical landscape. But we definitely need to have the right policy framework in order to unlock the kind of potential that we have.”

Leitner pointed out that Europe’s relative weakness in computing power is offset by its strengths in photonics computing, which offers major advantages in speed and efficiency. “We’re really good in Europe with photonics, because we have good laser systems, and we have good fundamental research on the photonic side,” he said.

De la Tour added that Europe could also take advantage of a brain-drain in the U.S. as science is defunded by the Trump administration. “The National Science Foundation, which is the biggest supporter of founder-applied research in the U.S. has had its budget cut by half. A lot of those great scientists don’t have a job anymore, and many could come to Europe,” he said.



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

Kerry Washington invests in wedding marketplace Cheersy

Kerry Washington is expanding her angel investment portfolio, serving as lead investor in the pre-seed round of...

UK’s secret iCloud backdoor order triggers civil rights challenge

The U.K. government’s secret order to Apple demanding it backdoor the end-to-end encrypted version of its iCloud...

Trump family is reportedly in talks to acquire stake in Binance’s US arm

President Trump’s family has been weighing an investment in Binance.US, according to a report from the Wall...

Waymo was slapped with nearly 600 parking tickets last year in SF alone

Waymo now has more than 300 driverless vehicles zipping passengers around San Francisco, but while they follow...

Anti-aging zealot Bryan Johnson wants to start ‘foodome sequencing’

In the same way that genome sequencing determines the genetic makeup of an organism, Bryan Johnson —...

Sesame, the startup behind the viral virtual assistant Maya, releases its base AI model

AI company Sesame has released the base model that powers Maya, the impressively realistic voice assistant. The model, which is 1...

Rad Power Bikes already has a new CEO

Rad Power Bikes has named a new CEO, just a few days after its previous leader stepped...

Y Combinator’s police surveillance darling Flock Safety raises $275M at $7.5B valuation

Flock Safety and one of its long-time VCs, Bedrock Capital, announced Thursday that the startup raised a...