Some of the rising stars of Greater Manchester鈥檚 life sciences and GreenTech sectors came together for 老九品茶Cloud鈥檚 latest roundtable.

The discussion was the latest in a series of roundtables run in conjunction with GM 老九品茶 Growth Hub following publication of听 the GM 125 Rising Stars of 老九品茶 list earlier this year.

The list focused on four key sectors: GreenTech; digital, creative and tech; advanced manufacturing and materials; and life sciences.

The discussion was hosted by Manchester鈥檚 Graphene Engineering Innovation Centre.

Go green or go bust

PharmAppy was set up in 2020 in a bedroom in Prestatyn, North Wales, by school friends turned entrepreneurs Rhys Lloyd and Josh Ablett, and听aims to improve communications between pharmacies and patients.

Lloyd said: 鈥淲hat I鈥檝e taken from today relates back to what my old accountant鈥檚 slogan used to be. That was 鈥榗ompanies are either born green, going green or going bust鈥. It doesn鈥檛 matter whether you start out as a GreenTech business, at some point in that business lifecycle you鈥檝e got to think about society and the affect that you鈥檙e business has on it.鈥

We need more solar panels

Seb Leaper is the co-founder of Watercycle Technologies, which is a spin-out from The University of Manchester.

He said: 鈥淚f Manchester wants to hit net zero by 2038 we should be looking out and basically seeing solar panels on pretty much every roof top. We鈥檙e not anywhere close to that. We need batteries to store power when it鈥檚 too sunny. There鈥檚 a huge amount that needs to be done and we need more joined up efforts. We need to work with finance providers to take a slightly longer term view so that payback period is accounted for.鈥

Joined up thinking

James Baker is the CEO of Graphene@Manchester at the Graphene Engineering Innovation Centre (GEIC), which helps companies develop and launch new technologies, products and processes that exploit graphene.

He said: 鈥淭here are great businesses and great technologies. What鈥檚 nice to hear is how many of them come out of the university sector. How do we scale? If we always do what we always did, we鈥檒l always get what we always got. For me the challenge is how do we things more joined up and more connected?鈥

Be part of the solution

Martin Fergie is the CEO of Spotlight Pathology, which develops decision support tools powered by artificial intelligence (AI) to help in the diagnosis of blood cancers.

He said: 鈥淎s a business in the healthcare space, although you might not think you鈥檙e directly in a GreenTech company or working towards net zero, I think it鈥檚 really important to think about how your products do contribute towards that when you think about patient outcomes and improved health. Ultimately that鈥檚 going to become important to your customers in the future.鈥

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Be careful of labels

Founded in 2018, FOTENIX has been described as the 鈥楩itBit for farming鈥 and uses technology to boost food production.

CEO Charles Veys said: 鈥淭here鈥檚 some exciting stuff happening in Manchester. I don鈥檛 think GreenTech being labelled as an industry adds much value. All companies that want to exist in the next few years are going to have a green focus and green drivers. Worrying about what our label is probably not important, it鈥檚 what our common aim is and what our common location is and how be can benefit together.鈥

Greenwashing has changed mindsets

Dan Cathie听is the听co-founder and CEO听at Silveray, which is on a mission to develop affordable large-area direct conversion detectors for the X-ray imaging market.

He said: 鈥淚t鈥檚 pretty clear from this room that every founder or CEO here, and most likely in Greater Manchester running companies, has the best interests of society at heart, including sustainable improvements and GreenTech. 听It doesn鈥檛 mean they see that as the core selling point of their business but everyone is trying to build that in. Fundamentally making money is why the businesses are created. What greenwashing, let鈥檚 call it, has done is it鈥檚 forced it into people鈥檚 mindsets.鈥

Media needs to be fairer

Vicky Wilding manages a team of advisors, delivering award-winning sector support for the Green Economy team.

She said: 鈥淚 would echo everything that Seb talked about. We need to address the market failure in the uptake of green technologies, products and services. There鈥檚 definitely some confusion in businesses acting sustainably and businesses operating in the GreenTech and services space.”

鈥淭here are lots of negative press around things like heat pumps and how they work but we don鈥檛 see the flipside of that and the positive stories.鈥

Manchester is changing

Yousef Taktak is a health and life sciences specialist at the Growth Company and said: 鈥淕reater Manchester is very rich in life science and GreenTech businesses. I鈥檝e seen the change over the years where we鈥檙e now into digital health and more focused on diagnostic.鈥

We need a new label

Sid Sethi is the founder and MD of Bury-based Specscart – one of the UK鈥檚 fastest growing eyewear businesses. Sethi launched the business in 2018 with a focus on fashionable and low-priced eyewear.

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Sethi said: 鈥淚 completely agree with Dan鈥檚 point. All the founders and CEOs have the best intentions at heart to create sustainability. What I鈥檇 love to see is a new title that we could potentially label good businesses with, just like the Good Employment Charter. It could be the Good Green 老九品茶 Charter so we could have a new label for Manchester鈥檚 businesses.鈥

Don鈥檛 think of waste as waste

Ethar Alali is the CEO and founder of ReallyRecycle.com and Automedi, which is a听groundbreaking recycling business that transforms plastic waste into products using 3D print vending machines.

He said: 鈥淓very company has to think of themselves as a GreenTech company. It鈥檚 not just about changing the amount of recycling we do, it鈥檚 also how we can stop thinking of waste as waste.鈥