Tuesday, December 17, 2024

Mad Capital Closes $4M Seed Round to Finance the Regenerative Agriculture Revolution

Mad Capital, an impact-focused lender that offers equitable, flexible funding for organic and transitioning farmers, announced today that they’ve raised a $4M Seed round, led by Trailhead Capital.

“Regenerative agriculture aspires to work with nature, rather than against it,” said Phil Taylor, co-founder of Mad Capital. “Mad Capital is a bold reimagination of financing in nature’s image, empowering farmers to create farm ecosystems that are good for the Earth and good for humanity.”

“Our goal is to finance 10 million acres of farmland by 2032. We are thrilled to have expanded our investor community and now have the resources to continue backing farmers who are transitioning more land to regenerative organic production”, added co-founder Brandon Welch.

Also Read: Prima Acquires Prospect Farms to Create the Next Generation Wellness Platform

Conventional and industrial agriculture are responsible for the ongoing degradation of our soil, massive greenhouse gas emissions, biodiversity loss, and chemical laden foods. Regenerative organic farming is a rising movement that addresses these challenges by working with nature to maximize the health of soil, people, and animals. However, many farmers struggle to convert to regenerative organic because traditional banks are largely unwilling to supply transition financing.

“In the coming year, we’ll turn our focus to building out our network of mission-aligned capital partners and launching our second Perennial Fund, with a goal of financing an additional 100,000 acres of farmland in 2023,” commented Brandon Welch.

Mad Capital manages innovative pools of capital that offer farmers flexible and customized financing to help them thrive during the organic transition period. Their inaugural fund, the Perennial Fund, blends debt funds with traditional financing to create one-of-a-kind capital stacks for their farmers to accelerate their transition. Without this custom working capital, farmers often take a financial hit during the standard three year period it takes for farms to regenerate their ability to produce a consistent crop yield.

Mad Capital’s funds are supported by a global cadre of investors that believe this model can scale worldwide, such as Patagonia’s venture capital fund Tin Shed Ventures, Silverstrand Capital, Homecoming Capital, and 38 others.

SOURCE: PR Newswire

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