The Climate Finance Accelerator Pakistan, implemented by DAI with support from the UK Government, has revealed the five remaining businesses from its 2026 cohort, completing the introduction of all eleven startups now receiving expert guidance as they prepare to pitch to climate investors later in the year. The five newly announced cohort members span solar energy access, artificial intelligence-driven building efficiency, organic waste conversion, integrated recycling infrastructure, and climate-resilient composting, collectively representing a cross-section of Pakistan’s most urgent environmental and energy challenges addressed through commercially viable, technology-driven approaches.
GoSeedIT is a green technology company providing a Pay-As-You-Go solar energy product specifically designed for the mid-market segments that have been excluded from conventional solar ownership by the upfront capital costs that rooftop solar installations typically require. Under the model, customers pay only for the electricity they consume with no upfront costs, while multi-layered technology controls mitigate the repayment, theft, and fraud risks that make this customer segment difficult to serve profitably through conventional financing. The Pay-As-You-Go solar model has demonstrated significant success in sub-Saharan African markets where similar affordability barriers have historically kept clean energy out of reach for lower and middle-income households, and GoSeedIT’s application of the model to Pakistan’s context addresses a market gap that the country’s ambitious renewable energy targets will require closing at scale.
EcoEdge AI develops energy optimization systems for buildings and industrial facilities, using sensors, Internet of Things devices, and machine learning models deployed on edge hardware to automatically optimize heating, ventilation, air conditioning, and building management system performance in real time. The system reduces power consumption without requiring building operators to manually adjust settings or interpret complex energy data, creating an automated efficiency layer that delivers measurable reductions in both energy costs and carbon emissions across the commercial and industrial building stock. As Pakistan’s energy costs remain a significant burden for businesses and the built environment contributes substantially to the country’s total energy consumption, the commercial case for EcoEdge AI’s technology aligns directly with both the financial interests of building operators and the climate objectives that the CFA Pakistan programme is designed to advance.
The WasteBusters and Entertech joint venture is developing a national organic waste management approach in Pakistan alongside operating a facility that converts organic waste into high-value agricultural products using Black Soldier Fly larvae. The process produces frass fertilizer, insect protein, and insect oil across 45-day production cycles, diverting organic waste away from municipal landfills while generating commercially valuable outputs that address both waste management and agricultural input supply challenges simultaneously. Trashit is a climate adaptation social enterprise that converts organic waste, food waste, and crop residues into microbe-enriched compost through controlled aerobic composting, restoring degraded soils and supporting climate-resilient farming for farmers, agribusinesses, and corporate institutions. Sahara Recycling develops Integrated Recycling Parks designed to intercept municipal solid waste before it is openly dumped, with each facility capable of processing approximately 500 tons of waste per day using a combination of processing technologies that handle plastics, organic waste, textiles, and hygiene waste to produce recycled feedstock and compost.
Together with the six cohort members announced previously, these five businesses complete the 2026 CFA Pakistan cohort, bringing together eleven ventures working across energy, waste, circular economy, agriculture, and buildings and construction to address the climate challenges that are most acutely affecting Pakistan’s environment, economy, and communities. All eleven are now receiving expert guidance from the CFA Pakistan programme team and will pitch to a panel of climate-focused investors later in the year, with the British High Commission in Pakistan and DAI providing the institutional framework within which this preparation and eventual investor engagement will take place.
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