Kansas City corporate leader works to take ClimateTech from research to the real world 

July 13, 2022  |  Claire Burke

Operation Breakthrough campus with Ignition Lab solar canopy

The solar canopy at Operation Breakthrough’s high-profile STEM lab and youth coworking space was an opportunity for Black & Veatch to put one of the firm’s core capabilities to use for the community and the climate, said Ilya Tabakh.

“[Our goal was] to support an initiative that supports STEM education, combines sustainability and technology, and put in infrastructure for Operation Breakthrough that frees a lot of resources for them to retarget towards the important work they do,” said Tabakh, entrepreneur in residence at Black & Veatch, a Kansas City-based global infrastructure firm.

Solar canopy outside the Ignition Lab at Operation Breakthrough

Backed by fellow KC climate-focused corporations — Sun Partners International, JE Dunn, MRIGlobal, and RisingSun Solar — the solar installation allows Operation Breakthrough’s Ignition Lab to generate zero-carbon energy while providing a space for students to learn and gain work experience within STEM fields.

Black & Veatch was integral in the funding and design of the solar project.

Click here to read more about how Kansas City companies gave the Travis Kelce-backed Ignition Lab project a boost.

The solar work at the Troost STEM lab represents just one of Black & Veatch’s recent ventures into sustainable infrastructure. The firm has found that critical infrastructure needs to become “more robust, resilient, and sustainable to continue to operate,” Tabakh said.

Its IgniteX growth accelerator program was introduced to move industries closer to that vision, he added.

First launched as a CleanTech accelerator in 2019, it continued in 2020 as a COVID-19 Response accelerator, and in 2022 the growth program became focused on startups “accelerating a net-zero carbon future” as a ClimateTech accelerator.

Steve Edwards, outgoing chairman and CEO of Black & Veatch, speaking at the 2022 IgniteX Climate Tech Showcase

Of 90 applicants to the 2022 program, eight were chosen for the 2022 IgniteX Climate Tech Showcase — based on criteria of innovation, sustainable solutions, decarbonization, resiliency, and reinventing industry. From a startup recycling clothing into raw materials known as Circ to a company called Twelve eliminating emissions by transforming CO2 into critical chemicals, materials, and fuels, the cohort showcased ideas for reducing carbon emissions through tech. 

“There was a pretty strong focus on ‘How do we partner with other folks in the innovation ecosystem and work with other emerging companies and technology players to continue to drive innovation?’ As some of these cool things are being invented out of research, out of the science lab, our thinking is on ‘What do we actually have to do to bring them into the grid, bring them into the world?’” said Tabakh.

“We find the best and smartest folks working on these issues and we combine them with the deep expertise we have internally until both sides end up running faster and you come up with more dynamic and creative solutions,” he continued.

While the 2022 IgniteX program recently wrapped, Black & Veatch continues to work in line with the goals of the program, Tabakh said.

The firm began releasing sustainability reports in 2020, formalizing Black & Veatch’s approach to leadership and responsibility related to deploying infrastructure that mitigates and adapts to climate change.

In its 2022 report, Black & Veatch commits to “reduce Scope 1 and 2 emissions by 40 percent and overall GHG emissions (Scope 1, Scope 2, and Scope 3 business travel and teleworking) by 20 percent from a 2019 baseline by 2023 and be net zero for overall emissions by 2025.”

As Kansas City officials work on an updated Climate Protection & Resiliency Plan for the city, Black & Veatch provides an example for how corporations and startups can begin to navigate sustainable development and ClimateTeach in a world increasingly focused on sustainability.

“What’s exciting is that regions and cities are really thinking about ‘What does the next generation of their infrastructure look like?’ and thinking about many of the stakeholders involved in those conversations,” said Tabakh. “On the regional plan [for Kansas City], there are quite a lot of conversations taking place.”

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

2022 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    MidxMidwest returns: Seizing opportunities from one-on-one founder-VC meetups more important than ever, organizers say

    By Tommy Felts | September 28, 2024

    It’s a critical time within the startup funding ecosystem, Dan Kerr and Maggie Kenefake agreed, noting the slow tick of investments across the region present a core challenge — and opportunities — to be addressed by this fall’s MidxMidwest event. “If you look at capital, 80 percent went to the biggest three states again, and…

    Brookside couple envisions upscale neighborhood escape in former Michael Forbes spot

    By Tommy Felts | September 27, 2024

    A couple who first met as servers at a restaurant on the Country Club Plaza are setting the table for a new venture in Brookside: an “elevated” neighborhood bistro and bottle shop that’s expected to open in early 2025. After a light remodeling, Hannah Koenig and Avery Bailey plan to open CRU in late January…

    KC Pioneers scored Kansas City a spot on the ‘gaming wave’; why this pro esports teams views its hometown as a championship asset

    By Tommy Felts | September 27, 2024

    In the globe-spanning esports market, most of the top competitive gaming teams keep their hometown — if they have one — ambiguous to the public. With the industry expected to touch 1 billion people worldwide by 2029 and players untethered to physical locations, it’s simply an unimportant biographical detail to many. And potentially limiting for others.…

    How a $527M development is poised to transform KC’s last ‘Wild West’ neighborhood

    By Tommy Felts | September 26, 2024

    Editor’s note: The following story was published by KCUR, Kansas City’s NPR member station, and a fellow member of the KC Media Collective. Click here to read the original story or here to sign up for KCUR’s email newsletter. A New York developer plans to renovate several historic West Bottoms buildings into apartments and office space, in addition to new…