Urban-X Program Keeps Giving Mini Crucial Insights Into City Innovation

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Mini’s Urban-X program just announced its 12th cohort, in seven years, of technology startups that in some way deal with the challenges and opportunities inherent in the city environment — where Mini cars are most apt to be purchased around the world.

The BMW-owned brand has suffered its share of whipsawing over the decade as gasoline prices have gyrated and small urban get-abouts have fallen into and out of favor. But Mini management has continued Urban-X out of respect for the big and long-term picture.

“We are interested to see into the future a bit to see what might be around the corner, especially in the city,” Mike Peyton, president of Mini Business Innovations and vice president of Mini of the Americas, told me. “It allows us to associate ourselves with [innovative] thinking and adapt it and align ourselves that way. It’s also a bit of a proof point that we’re willing to do other things beyond what would be overtly automotive to show we’re trying to make a difference.”

Mini works with a venture-capital firm to identify and vet small companies whose ideas and technologies lean into the urban landscape in a specific way for each cohort. This year, it’s climate-tech companies.

In the process, Mini and its VC partner, which now is Israel’s JVP, get small investments in and looks at a variety of promising innovators in spaces that are in Mini’s broader sphere. Employing only minimal financial resources and a small dedicated team of staffers, Mini is able to open a window on important parts of the world that doesn’t require huge investment stakes nor the devotion of a big staff.

“Urban-X isn’t to sell a car, or to sell more cars,” Peyton said. “But when you start to think about what Mini is all about, it’s very much about trying to advance our thinking on how we make an impact or where we want to make an impact.”

Peyton said that, “when you take a step back, we’ve been pretty consistent on our overarching umbrella: a platform for pioneers that are reimagining city life. Previous cohorts have had a lot of variability — city-focused, but thigns taht were biulding-oriented and community oriented. We saw a lot of different aspects.”

Indeed, Urban-X cohorts have been built around varying concepts that range from “built environment and real estate” to “food, waste and water,” from “govtech and civic solutions” to “energy and grid.” Among the more than 80 startups spanning 14 countries that Mini has supported are Phuc Labs, an AI-powered, fluid-based sorting platform for battery recycling; Food for All, which transforms restaurant surpluses into inexpensive delivered meals; Gingko, which creates data-driven maps for urban development; Xtelligent, which is using sensor technology to make urban road intersections safer; and Metalmark Innovations, which develops “nanoarchitectured materials” to destroy air pollutants.

The new, climate-oriented cohort includes Carbon Blue, which is developing “marine calcium looping technology” that removes carbon-dioxide from oceans and returns calcium; Gentian, which leverages remote sensing data and proprietary machine-learning models to accelerate the speed and cut the cost of “ecological surveying”; and Dryad, which provides early forest-fire detection and health monitoring.

The initiative has helped enable startups collectively to raise more than $440 million, from seed to Series B funding, alongside four company exits.

But none of these companies has come up with a more efficient battery architecture for future Mini EVs, for example, or a new paint formula that gives Mini models a unique or more durable sheen — or anything else that immediately benefits the cars the brand sells.

At the same time, Peyton said, it’s not like Mini isn’t attempting direct relevance. “With us targeting to become an all-electric brand by 2030, it’s important for us to have a perspective on things like climate change,” he said. “Or how to make [the materials in] our vehicles vegan, and how to have no use of chrome going forward” because of environmental concerns.”

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