![]() |
Charlotte Stonestreet
Managing Editor |
Fund to help bridge gap between research & bringing products to market
07 September 2015
The Institution of Mechanical Engineers is launching a new fund, Stephenson LP, aimed at helping companies overcome the investment hurdle between Research and Development and bringing a product to market.
The fund, initially worth a total of £2 million, is in line with the Institution of Mechanical Engineers’ original statement of purpose set out by founder George Stephenson in 1847 to "give an impulse to invention likely to be useful to the world”. It is the first investment fund of this kind by the Institution, and indeed any UK Professional Engineering Institution.
The Stephenson LP Fund is independently managed by specialist venture capital company Midven Ltd. and aims to invest in innovative companies engaged in mechanical engineering over the next few years.
The Fund’s first five investments are into blade compressor company Lontra, fuel cell catalyst developer Amalyst, sensor company Oxsensis, fusion energy company Tokamak Energy and space technology business Oxford Space Systems.
Stephen Tetlow MBE, Chief Executive of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, said: "These investments by the Institution of Mechanical Engineers are not just about providing monetary investment, but about connecting these and other companies to the vast resources and network of the Institution and its membership.
"The Fund fulfills the Institution’s original purpose to give an impulse to invention and also help companies overcome the investment hurdle between Research and Development and bringing a product to market.
"I am really excited that through the Fund the Institution is able to support Lontra, Amalyst, Oxsensis, Tokamak Energy and Oxford Space Systems in developing exciting and innovative technologies which really are inventions likely to be useful to the world. This is the Institution getting back to its roots.”
- ‘Game of Drones’ returns to Wales in June
- Brexit threatens billion pound UK medical technology sector
- IMechE buys training company Amber Train
- Professor Joe McGeough appointed President of IMechE
- IMechE invests in ultrasonic sensor company
- Mechanical engineers back UK staying in the EU
- Geoff Baker becomes IMeche's 133rd President
- Net Zero – the most ambitious engineering project ever
- Report predicts waves of AI impact on jobs
- IMechE launches Developing Engineers Programme
- No related articles listed

















