
AWE Funds (Achieving Women Equity)
AWE Funds (Achieving Women Equity) is a gender-lens impact venture firm that backs women owned, led, or influenced startups in India across climate tech, health, and fintech. Water shows up through its climate bets, from wastewater intelligence to water-from-air. As of June 2026, (don't) Waste Water tracks 2 water companies across 3 deals and rates its water commitment Committed.
Compiled by Antoine Walter, (don't) Waste Water, from official filings and direct intelligence in Leviathan.
The take
AWE Funds, short for Achieving Women Equity, is a gender-lens venture firm that backs startups owned, led, or influenced by women, pointing most of that capital at India's climate and sustainability economy. As of April 2026 it appointed Steve Taub, formerly of GE Ventures and In-Q-Tel, as Venture Partner for deep tech, a sign its hard-science ambitions are widening.
AWE Funds is the work of founder and managing partner Seema Chaturvedi, who spent twenty-five years in capital markets before deciding the sharpest impact she could fund was women-led enterprise. Its maiden vehicle is an India-registered early-growth fund, and that is where water quietly enters the story: its climate bets are how it ends up owning water, not a standalone water thesis.
AWE Funds is therefore a name to watch for anyone who thinks water and gender equity meet on the ground in emerging markets. (don't) Waste Water counts two water companies across three deals so far, DigitalPaani, an IoT platform that helps industrial sites run their own water and wastewater treatment, and Uravu Labs, which pulls drinking water from air, both a deliberate slice of a much larger gender-lens book.
Water Commitment Score
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
Portfolio · 2 water companies
Invests alongside
Highlighted = profiled on (don't) Waste Water.
Frequently asked
- What does AWE Funds invest in?
- AWE Funds invests in women owned, led, or influenced companies in India, using a gender-lens approach across climate tech, health, fintech, and the future of work. It writes early-growth equity cheques through a fund registered in India, and its water exposure arrives through climate and sustainability bets rather than a dedicated water mandate.
- What does AWE stand for?
- AWE stands for Achieving Women Equity, the gender-lens thesis at the heart of the firm. Its branding also reads Accelerating World-Class Enterprises, but the fund's mission is gender balance: backing enterprises owned, led, or influenced by women so that capital reaches founders the market overlooks.
- Who runs AWE Funds?
- AWE Funds is led by founder and managing partner Seema Chaturvedi, a capital-markets veteran who built the firm to fund women-led enterprise. The investment team includes Divya Sampath as portfolio partner and Steve Taub, a former GE Ventures and In-Q-Tel investor, who joined as deep-tech venture partner in 2026.
- Is AWE Funds a water fund?
- AWE Funds is not a dedicated water fund. It is a gender-lens impact investor whose water exposure comes through its climate portfolio, including DigitalPaani in water and wastewater treatment and Uravu Labs in atmospheric water generation. (don't) Waste Water tracks two water companies across three deals and rates it Committed.
- Where is AWE Funds based?
- AWE Funds is a US-registered impact firm that runs its investing from an India office in Gurgaon, where its maiden fund is registered with the Indian securities regulator SEBI. The structure lets it raise from global institutions while backing women-led, early-growth companies on the ground in India.