Skip to content
Bits&Chips
×

Your cart is currently empty!

×
Memberships
Advertising
Magazines
Videos
Contact

Log in

Headline

TNO Ventures aims to boost Dutch startup activity

15 May 2025
Paul van Gerven
Reading time: 1 minute

TNO has set up its own investment arm: TNO Ventures. The new organization will support both TNO spinoffs and startups that have emerged independently of the applied research institute. Through licenses and tech participations, companies can access TNO’s technologies, expertise and facilities, for example in the fields of AI, medical technology and integrated photonics. Startups in which TNO participates in this way pay in shares, reducing the cash-out for the startup.

“Only when we can apply innovations to societal challenges and implement technology on a large scale do we make an impact. With TNO Ventures, we support spinoffs and startups through the ‘valley of death’ so that promising innovations scale up from research to broad practical application more often and faster. In addition to our technological expertise, including due diligence, we ensure the availability of facilities such as labs and cleanrooms and IP guidance from TNO,” says Hans Boumans, director of TNO Ventures.

Credit: TNO

Dutch tech startups and scale-ups are currently growing more slowly than European and American companies. In the Netherlands, an average of 21.5 percent of startups grow into scale-ups. In Europe, this percentage is on average 23 percent, and in the US, it’s 54 percent. With TNO Ventures, the organization aims to stimulate the further development and scaling of innovative technologies.

TNO Ventures isn’t limiting its activities to direct participations. It’s also a participant in twelve early-stage investment funds, including DeeptechXL, Innovation Industries and Photonventures.

Related content

Polaris brings together top Dutch experts for RF breakthroughs

The AI-driven company: use case challenge

Top jobs
Your vacancy here?
View the possibilities
in the media kit
Events
Courses
Headlines
  • TNO Ventures aims to boost Dutch startup activity

    15 May 2025
  • Intel admits to lack of external customers

    14 May 2025
  • EU and Japan intensify tech research collaboration

    13 May 2025
  • Dutch LED tech finds its way to US early adopter

    12 May 2025
  • Solar tester Eternal Sun changes hands

    8 May 2025
  • Holst Centre hosts photonics lab bridging R&D and commercialization

    8 May 2025
  • Semi: Brussels should have a bigger semiconductor budget of its own

    7 May 2025
  • Micronit founder Ronny van ’t Oever passes away

    6 May 2025
  • Nobel Prize winner: ASML is trump card in EU’s negotiations with US

    6 May 2025
  • Astrape lands €7.9M to improve data center efficiency

    1 May 2025
  • ASM weighs shifting production in response to tariffs

    1 May 2025
  • EU launches platform to boost Europe’s chip design ecosystem

    30 April 2025
  • ASM projects 10-20 percent growth this year

    30 April 2025
  • Intel confirms high-NA EUV deployment for 14A node

    30 April 2025
  • EU Chips Act “needs a reality check,” say auditors

    29 April 2025
  • NXP warns of “very uncertain environment” as CEO steps down

    29 April 2025
  • Besi leans on AI to keep bookings coming in

    23 April 2025
  • Oneplanet develops photonic sensor to keep tabs on farm emissions

    22 April 2025
  • Funding round takes chip designer Magics to inflection point

    22 April 2025
  • Distilling perfect photons for a better quantum computer

    22 April 2025
Bits&Chips logo

Bits&Chips strengthens the high tech ecosystem in the Netherlands and Belgium and makes it healthier by supplying independent knowledge and information.

Bits&Chips focuses on news and trends in embedded systems, electronics, mechatronics and semiconductors. Our coverage revolves around the influence of technology.

Advertising
Subscribe
Events
Contact
High-Tech Systems Magazine (Dutch)
(c) Techwatch bv. All rights reserved. Techwatch reserves the rights to all information on this website (texts, images, videos, sounds), unless otherwise stated.
  • Memberships
  • Advertising
  • Videos
  • Contact
  • Search
Privacy settings

Bits&Chips uses technologies such as functional and analytical cookies to improve the user experience of the website. By consenting to the use of these technologies, we may capture (personal) data, unique identifiers, device and browser data, IP addresses, location data and browsing behavior. Want to know more about how we use your data? Please read our privacy statement.

 

Give permission or set your own preferences

Functional Always active
Functional cookies are necessary for the website to function properly. It is therefore not possible to reject or disable them.
Voorkeuren
De technische opslag of toegang is noodzakelijk voor het legitieme doel voorkeuren op te slaan die niet door de abonnee of gebruiker zijn aangevraagd.
Statistics
Analytical cookies are used to store statistical data. This data is stored and analyzed anonymously to map the use of the website. De technische opslag of toegang die uitsluitend wordt gebruikt voor anonieme statistische doeleinden. Zonder dagvaarding, vrijwillige naleving door je Internet Service Provider, of aanvullende gegevens van een derde partij, kan informatie die alleen voor dit doel wordt opgeslagen of opgehaald gewoonlijk niet worden gebruikt om je te identificeren.
Marketing
Technical storage or access is necessary to create user profiles for sending advertising or to track the user on a site or across sites for similar marketing purposes.
Manage options Manage services Manage {vendor_count} vendors Read more about these purposes
View preferences
{title} {title} {title}