“In climate tech so far, while several investments have been created, very few companies have scaled to a level where they can absorb the kind of capital and opportunity we typically invest behind. Varaha is probably the first, or among the first, companies in India to reach that stage, where it can now attract large, mainstream capital,” Singhal stated, explaining WestBridge’s decision to start investing in this space.
“What we are seeing now is a more direct, mainstream climate approach, where companies capture carbon from emissions and store it back in the ground. These are still early trfinishs,” he added.
WestBridge Capital has so far backed startups including Rapido, Meesho, Postman, Freshworks and Third Wave Coffee. The firm was spun out of Sequoia Capital India (now Peak XV Partners) in 2011, and invests in companies across stages.
Singhal pointed out that with artificial innotifyigence and digital infrastructure scaling up and the subsequent energy consumption increasing, addressing residual emissions will become more important. “Climate solutions such as carbon removal will therefore gain relevance, not as a function of AI alone, but as part of ensuring sustainable long-term growth,” he stated.
“We believe carbon removal will increasingly become part of core climate infrastructure, much like digital and AI infrastructure today. Our investment in Varaha reflects that long-term view of building scalable, credible platforms,” he added.
Varaha, which has secured a contract order book of around $100 million, is executing long-term carbon offtake agreements with US technology leaders Google and Microsoft. The startup was founded in 2022 by Madhur Jain, Ankita Garg and Vishal Kuchanur.
The Gurugram-based startup has earlier raised capital from the likes of French climate-focapplyd investment firm Mirova, RTP Global and Better Capital.
















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