Meet the Swedish firm trying to shake up heat pumps
It sees a big opportunity in an old technology
Heat pumps, a type of reverse-refrigerator used for warming homes, are not the type of tech that gets most investors hot and bothered. They were, after all, invented in 1856. Harald Mix and Carl-Erik Lagercrantz, two Swedish financiers, see things differently.
The pair, whose investment group Vargas is behind Northvolt, a battery maker, and H2 Green Steel, which uses green hydrogen to produce steel, sense there are big bucks in replacing Europe’s many oil and gas boilers with heat pumps. Earlier this year Aira, a company founded by Vargas, launched a new product that it hopes will entice more people to make the switch. It is not only profits that are at stake.
Explore more
This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “Hot property”
Business May 18th 2024
More from Business
What are the threats to the $1trn artificial-intelligence boom?
A fast-growing supply chain is at risk of over-extending
LVMH is splurging on the Olympics
Will it pay off?
Can China smash the Airbus-Boeing duopoly?
It hopes to succeed where others have failed
Machines might not take your job. But they could make it worse
How robots and AI change the meaningfulness of work
Why is Mark Zuckerberg giving away Meta’s crown jewels?
Augustus Caesar goes on the open-source warpath
Donald Trump’s promise of a golden age for oil is fanciful
There is not much he could do to boost fossil fuels—or rein in clean energy