Since its discovery, graphene has endured an extensive period of hype. There was not a problem on earth (or beyond!) for which graphene was not proposed as a solution. That narrative has, thankfully, shifted to targeting more appropriate value-add applications that are beginning to gain commercial success. However, practically no graphene manufacturer is making significant revenue, let alone a profit, so continued funding will still be essential - but is there still enough cash being injected?
IDTechEx forecast the market for graphene material to be at a tipping point with notable orders beginning to arrive. However, those orders are not arriving for everyone, and a period of consolidation is expected over the next 5-10 years as clear market leaders emerge; looking at equivalent mature industries there will not be space for more than a handful. In fact, it is more sensible to see graphene powders and nanoplatelets as options within a broad family of advanced carbons that include MWCNTs, SWCNTs, thin graphite, and carbon black.
In their leading, unbiased market report "Graphene Market & 2D Materials Assessment 2021-2031", IDTechEx provide global analysis of the manufacturers, applications, and materials. This gives the reader key insights into the graphene industry and a realistic outlook for the market potential.
As mentioned, revenues are still low to modest for graphene manufacturers, and profitability is almost non-existent outside of a few; for a full breakdown see the market report. This is unsurprising given the time it takes for an advanced material to gain adoption in anything more meaningful than a branding exercise. However, this does bring the challenge of funding, which will remain essential for companies to carry on until the profitable booming market arrives.
Funding was not an issue 10-years ago, there were numerous new graphene companies with many raising some significant money and/or going public to further support this. Despite the pandemic, for many emerging technologies the previous 12-months has seen a flurry in early-stage funding and significant money raised with companies going public (mostly via SPAC), but the same cannot be said for the graphene industry.
Of course, funding is not everything; strategic partnerships can be as significant to the future success of a company. The first half of 2021 has seen more of these, with the likes of Sojitz Corporation investing in the promising Singapore start-up 2DM, Huvis and NeoEnpla for graphene fibers, and even Nationwide Engineering with University of Manchester and Versarien for their concrete work.
In 2020, the key graphene funding was mainly related to energy storage with Skeleton Technologies and Nanotech Energy grabbing the headlines. This has not reached the same heights in the first half of 2021, but with NanoXplore and Martinrea forming a joint venture called VoltaXplore and each contributing $4m, Graphene Manufacturing Group going public and being prominent about their aluminium-ion work, and several smaller companies, such as Volexion and Anaphite, making some initial investment announcements, it shows there remains an appetite here. In terms of private funding raised by a graphene manufacturer, Graphmatech's oversubscribed funding round of 84.5million SEK (ca. $10m) is one of the more notable so far this year.
Funding does not just have to be external private or public investments; large companies will often start new ventures or business units that can reshape the market. The biggest news stories from the first half of 2021 all surround Gerdau. Gerdau is a Brazilian company and one of the leading steel producers in the world. They have been active in the graphene field for multiple years, and in 2021 the company took their activities a step further and launched a new subsidiary called Gerdau Graphene. It was stated that the focus will be on construction, industrial and automotive lubricants, rubber thermoplastics, paints, batteries, and sensors market in the Americas. This was quickly followed up with supply & distribution agreements with NanoXplore and a MoU concerning a distributor agreement with First Graphene.
There are 4 final areas to consider when looking at the funding developments in the graphene landscape.
In summary, funding and commercial activity are still very much alive in the graphene industry. There is a range of joint ventures, acquisitions, IPOs, funding rounds, and strategic partnerships & investments still taking place. The challenge is the amount; to be a large-scale player (either as a manufacturer or further up the value chain) and compete against incumbent materials or other emerging solutions, particularly for energy storage, will take a large amount of capital. Obviously, there are internal company investment/spending and public companies raising money not discussed; much of the funding quoted in this article is interesting but, in many cases, will be just to keep the company afloat or get started rather than enable significant growth.
For more information on the graphene market see the leading IDTechEx report on the topic, "Graphene Market & 2D Materials Assessment 2021-2031". This included detailed analysis based on an extensive number of primary interviews for over 10 years. The report details the players, use-cases, and provides granular forecasts segmented by 18 application areas. To learn more about this report, please visit www.IDTechEx.com/Graphene, or for the full portfolio of research available from IDTechEx please visit www.IDTechEx.com/Research.