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Gov. Fund · WATER INVESTOR

Netherlands Enabling Water Technology

Netherlands Enabling Water Technology (NEW-TT) is a Dutch government-backed fund and accelerator that finances early-stage water-technology startups, run by a consortium of Wetsus, Deltares, the University of Groningen and development agency NOM at WaterCampus in Leeuwarden. As of June 2026, (don't) Waste Water tracks 2 water companies across 3 deals and rates its water commitment Committed.

Committed
Water Commitment

Compiled by Antoine Walter, (don't) Waste Water, from official filings and direct intelligence in Leviathan.

Type
Gov. Fund
Founded
2021
HQ
Leeuwarden, Netherlands
Stage
Pre-Seed - Seed
Median round
$1.1M
Portfolio
2 cos

The take

Netherlands Enabling Water Technology, NEW-TT for short, is not a venture firm chasing returns; it is a public instrument built to drag Dutch water research out of the lab and into a company. NEW-TT runs out of WaterCampus in Leeuwarden, the Frisian water-tech cluster, and is steered by a consortium of four heavyweights: the research institute Wetsus, applied-water body Deltares, the University of Groningen, and NOM, the northern Netherlands' regional development agency. Public money, patient and early, is the whole point.

NEW-TT works in two halves. The first scouts university spin-offs and hands them eleven validation labs and an incubation programme to turn a paper into a prototype. The second is the part a newcomer investor will recognise: the NEW-fund, which writes convertible loans averaging around 350,000 euros into early-stage water startups based in the Netherlands. A convertible loan is debt that later turns into equity, the gentlest way for public money to take an early bet, and here it is meant to make a company investor-ready rather than to flip it.

What NEW-TT backs is narrow and deliberate: water treatment, water and raw-material reuse, energy from water, and smarter water-system management. In my Leviathan database the two companies it shows up in, HULO.ai (AI-driven leak detection) and Hypersoniq (inline water-quality sensors), are both pure water-technology bets at the seed stage, across 3 tracked deals, exactly the early, technical, unglamorous corner of water where private capital rarely goes first.

NEW-TT is a fixed-term programme, funded into 2027 by subsidies from the Dutch ministries of Economic Affairs and of Education, and that clock is the interesting tension: it has a finite window to prove that a government-run fund can seed a water-tech pipeline the market then carries forward. As of June 2026 it has already pushed startups like HULO into real seed rounds alongside private co-investors such as LUMO Labs and VP Capital, which is exactly the hand-off it was built to make.

Team · 1 profiled

Ronald Wielinga
Manager Entrepreneurship, WaterCampus

Water Commitment Score

Tier
Committed
2 water companies · last deal 2025 · leads ~0% of rounds · High confidence
How this is scored ↗
as of Jun 2026 · no pay-to-rank

Compiled from official filings, third-party records, and direct intelligence from investors and founders, in Leviathan · recomputed monthly · as of Jun 2026.

How they invest

Pre-Seed1
Seed2
Median round$1.1Mrange $880K - $2.7M · 3 disclosed

Portfolio · 2 water companies

HULO.ai offers a cloud-based leak-detection platform that applies patented AI algorithms to pre
Seed · 2025
Hypersoniq provides inline sensors based on patented multi-frequency electrochemical impedance
Seed · 2025

See the full portfolio and deal analysis in Leviathan →

Invests alongside

LUMO Labs2x VP Capital2x Gimv1xRabobank1xFrisian Development Fund (FOM)1xVanagon1x

Highlighted = profiled on (don't) Waste Water.

Frequently asked

What does Netherlands Enabling Water Technology invest in?
Netherlands Enabling Water Technology backs early-stage water-technology startups across four areas: water treatment, water and raw-material reuse, energy from water, and smarter water-system management. It favours technical, research-driven companies at the seed stage. (don't) Waste Water tracks 2 such water companies, including AI leak-detection firm HULO.ai.
Who runs Netherlands Enabling Water Technology?
Netherlands Enabling Water Technology is run by a four-party consortium: the water research institute Wetsus, applied-research body Deltares, the University of Groningen, and northern development agency NOM. It operates from WaterCampus in Leeuwarden, where Ronald Wielinga, Manager Entrepreneurship, leads its startup and financing work.
How does the NEW-fund invest in startups?
Netherlands Enabling Water Technology invests through the NEW-fund, which provides convertible loans, debt that later converts into equity, averaging around 350,000 euros per startup. The money is designed to make young Dutch water companies investor-ready, bridging the gap before private venture investors step in. It typically backs Pre-Seed and Seed rounds.
Where is Netherlands Enabling Water Technology based?
Netherlands Enabling Water Technology is based at WaterCampus in Leeuwarden, the water-technology cluster in Friesland, in the northern Netherlands. From there it supports water startups across the country, backed by Dutch government subsidies and run by a consortium of Wetsus, Deltares, the University of Groningen and NOM.
What is the difference between NEW-TT, WaterCampus and Water Alliance?
Netherlands Enabling Water Technology (NEW-TT) is a specific funding and incubation programme, not the whole ecosystem. WaterCampus is the Leeuwarden site and network that hosts it, Water Alliance is the membership organisation of water-tech companies there, and Wetsus is the research institute. NEW-TT is the instrument that finances startups.