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Case Study
Product Disruption

Sunfire’s Journey: What It Takes to Scale a Disruptive Climate Technology

April 2, 2025
Product Disruption
Christian von Olshausen, Sunfire's Co-Founder & CTO (left), plant in Dresden (right). All photos © Sunfire.

Disruption in climate tech isn’t always about speed. It’s often about sustained determination over a long period. Few companies characterize this better than Sunfire, the German electrolysis pioneer that has spent over a decade building, proving, and scaling high-efficiency solid oxide and pressurized alkaline electrolyzers to unlock green hydrogen at industrial scale.

Today, Sunfire is scaling to become one of the world’s leading electrolyzer manufacturers. With over 650 employees, a major order backlog of over 800 MW, and €1 billion of private and public financing secured, the company is on a solid path to profitability. But its accomplishments required resilience.

Climate Brick sat down with Christian von Olshausen, Sunfire’s CTO and co-founder, to explore the journey behind the company and consider how it responded to the critical unlocks identified by Climate Brick as key for product disruptor startups:

  1. Show market existence early on and prove technological readiness (e.g., through prototyping)
  2. Establish IP moats through, e.g., patents and process design
  3. Establish partnerships, secure high-quality and reliable supply chain

What emerges is perspective into some hard truths and strategic unlocks that founders navigating a disruptive climate product should consider.

Sunfire's alkaline electrolyzer. Photo © Sunfire.

“When we started, there was no market.”


Sunfire’s story began with a vision, not a business model, and certainly not a market to play into. Back in 2010, when the company was founded, there was neither customer demand nor policy support for green hydrogen. But Christian and his co-founders Carl Berninghausen and Nils Aldag believed in a future where renewable molecules would replace fossil ones and acted accordingly.

“When Sunfire started, there was no market, there was just the idea that renewable molecules would be better than fossil-fuel derived ones. Still, there were enough customers who would say, okay, I'm going to invest into this topic because I want to prepare for a future where there will be a business model.”

Alongside investing time into painting a picture of future markets for stakeholders and potential partners, the company soon set to work in establishing proof of its technical potential: “We knew the one thing we needed for customers to believe in such a future was a lighthouse project — a demonstration of the technology. And this was to be established with partners.”

Sunfire’s investment into technical validation proved critical. Notable was its plant at Salzgitter, Germany — one of the world’s first industrial-scale solid oxide electrolyzer pilot projects, demonstrating high-efficiency green hydrogen production integrated directly into steel manufacturing processes.

“Our industrial partners’ commitment to saying we believe in this kind of future was something that raised so much attention. Gradually, politicians see this investment into the pilot projects and it brings them confidence.” 

It was that growing confidence of politicians that prompted market and policy shift. “The politicians then became the second group of partners — politicians saying ‘yes, this is the right thing to do and industry supports it, let’s generate those rules to make sure that those molecules have a chance to enter the market’.”

Sunfire’s investment heavily in technology validation, long before the market was mature enough to generate real revenue, speaks to a critical issue — what mattered most to early partners: “Salzgitter didn’t bring huge revenues but it answered a key question: whether the product works and how it performs — building a minimum viable product is key.”

Sunfire management team. Photo © Sunfire.

Don’t Confuse Innovation with Market Fit


While revenue generation began early, true business viability took nearly nine years to materialize due to policy lags and immature markets. While Sunfire’s technology is cutting-edge, Christian is refreshingly blunt about the challenges of disrupting a fossil-dominated energy market.

“We’re not like Spotify. Spotify made it cheaper and more convenient to listen to music. Hydrogen is not cheaper. It’s not more convenient. It’s an expensive insurance for the future.”


While revenue generation began early, true business viability took nearly nine years to materialize due to policy lags and immature markets. While Sunfire’s technology is cutting-edge, Christian is refreshingly blunt about the challenges of disrupting a fossil-dominated energy market.

In this case, the true disruptor isn’t just technology — it’s policy. Without carbon pricing, regulation, or quotas, green hydrogen struggles to compete with fossil alternatives. Sunfire’s commercial success was only unlocked once politicians saw industrial players backing the tech and responded with supportive policy frameworks.

The crucial lesson for founders — policy and market viability matters, so consider launch timing carefully.  “Don’t start too early,” said Christian. “A company eats money. Make sure a business model exists first.” 

Sunfire's high temperature SOEC electrolyzer. Photo © Sunfire.

On IP, Capital, and Control


While founders generally assume that patents are key to defending a disruptive product, Christian offers a more nuanced perspective: “IP has been important, but not really decisive… Many things we just keep secret.”

Patents were certainly useful in early conversations with VCs, Christian acknowledged, commenting that it’s generally expected by them to see some kind of minimum IP protection in a startup’s first business plan. But he explained that Sunfire’s strategic moat today lies in execution, systems integration, and scale.


Three Jobs, All Hard


When asked about the biggest challenge of building Sunfire looking back over its journey to date, Christian breaks it into three equally demanding tasks: developing the technology, building a market, building the company. “It’s really three jobs. And all are hard!”

Each requires different skill sets and strategies, from lobbying policymakers, to recruiting industrial leadership, to reorganizing internal processes at every stage of scale. “A startup journey is really one of evolution… you need to staff your team accordingly for that and you need patience.”

Christian’s reflections on advice for startups are grounded and deeply pragmatic:

  1. Starting without a clear business model is risky: “If you start early, be ready to invest in market development and technology validation long before generating real revenue.”
  2. Stay humble and lean: “build a minimum viable product (MVP). Showcase your expertise to earn trust and credibility. Get early revenue...”
  3. Know the market mechanisms: “Technology follows business models, not the other way around.”

Above all, he emphasizes resilience: “It’s about having patience and being able to bear uncertainty. Would I do it all again? Definitely yes, I would do it again. With all the learnings. I would love to start again and I think I would do better.”

For climate tech founders navigating the long road to product-market fit, Sunfire offers a compelling example — not just of how to build a company, but how to endure long enough to make the disruption real.

Article
Asset As A Service

Einride’s drive to commercialize autonomous electric transport

March 31, 2025
Asset As A Service
Portrait of Linnéa Kornehed Falck, Einride's Co-Founder and Deputy CEO – © Ellen Simone Photography.

Einride is a category-defining company providing three new key technologies; digital, electric, and autonomous to the road freight transport market. By using new technologies, the Einride platform makes it possible to ship goods sustainably and cost-competitively today.

Founded in 2016, Einride became the world’s first company to operate an autonomous, electric freight vehicle on a public road by 2019 and the first company to receive approval to operate the vehicle on a US public road in 2022. Today, it partners with several Global Fortune 500 brands, deploying its platform with customers such as Heineken, Mars Inc, and DP World. Its vision is to make Earth a better place through intelligent movement. We sat down with Linnéa Kornehed Falck, Co-founder and Deputy CEO of Einride, to discuss Einride’s journey to date with transforming road freight. An edited version of the conversation follows.

Q1: What was your approach to scale, and were there any particular technical roadblocks?

Einride was founded on the idea that there needed to be a better way to move goods, one that was more sustainable and efficient. Today, road freight is accountable for up to 8% of global CO2 emissions, while an average truck is hitting around a 20% utilization rate, meaning there is tremendous room for improvement. Einride believes that the way to create change is through deploying digital, electric, and autonomous technologies. Digital technology makes things easier by reducing manual input and administration, helping create new efficiencies, and allowing full fleets to have better uptimes and higher utilization rates, translating into lower costs per pallet shipped. Electric enables a sustainable option for road freight that can drastically lower emissions and as the price per vehicle goes down as it has for electric cars, it will be cheaper to use electric than fossil-based options. On top of that, autonomous will unlock unseen efficiency gains and make the operations even cheaper.

When Einride started, there was significant criticism around whether electric trucks would be able to be a viable option for road freight; and if it would, it was the common belief anything heavier than chips wouldn’t be possible. Einride has worked to show that not only is electric operations possible, but it is capable of a variety of flows, including heavy haul, and is increasingly competitive.

Autonomous technology has faced questions over the years, specifically on when it would transition from hype phase to commercially viable. While the competition bet that autonomous would happen overnight as soon as the AI was mature enough, Einride took a more modest approach by introducing autonomous operations where the environment complexity was lower and increasing the complexity of the environment as the technology matures. The approach has resulted in daily operations being live now in both the US and Europe where Einride is shipping for customers, proving the commercial business case.

Photo © Einride.

"It is a challenging environment right now for all players in this space, but the time is now to create impact so it is important that founders in this space get support and resources to get the job done."

Q2: How important were partnerships for Einride's success?

Both public and private partnerships have been essential in bringing new technology and new ways of working to market. Not only do they help to create trust with customers, but it also is how true scaled impact can be possible. 

On the commercial front, building trust with customers has helped us to scale our overall operations. Many of our customers are working with end consumers, a group with a strong passion for sustainability. With that in mind, it’s been vital for our team to share what impact our operations can make to build more market trust and understanding. Sharing successes with one customer has allowed us to open doors with similar shippers looking for new technology and solutions, a trend that continues to snowball as we grow.  

Q3: How has Einride's financing journey taken shape to date?

Einride has been fortunate to have the backing of strong investors since our Series A in 2019, which was led by EQT. This marked a significant milestone for the company in starting to scale operations. 

In 2021, with the Series B round, Einride found it essential to broaden our investor base to include more global financing. $100M USD was raised in this round, from new investors such as Temasek and Northzone. At the end of 2022, we announced a funding close of $500M USD, which included an equity round and debt financing.

Photo © Einride.

Q4: How do you think a Climate Tech playbook like The Climate Brick's will help?

Having the ambition to go out and create change, specifically in the climate tech space, requires a large amount of passion, hard work, and innovation from the people who are spearheading this change. However, society is at a point where we need to look at challenging structures to ensure we can be more resilient in the future, not just from a sustainability aspect but also from an overall aspect of society operating in the best way possible. 

It is a challenging environment right now for all players in this space, but the time is now to create impact so it is important that founders in this space get support and resources to get the job done. Ideas like the Climate Tech playbooks will help to enable the next generation of impact companies to be successfully created. 

Q5: What is your key advice for new founders?

As a founder, you’ll receive plenty of advice, and it’s crucial that you build a filter to know what to act on and when you may know best. A few pieces of advice that have helped in my own journey include: 

  • Have a clear point of view. Define what your business is about, and trust yourself. You’ll often question if you are on the right path. Always go with your instinct.
  • Focus on the output. Make sure to create a process, but the delivery is key. Without it, a business won’t stand on its own. Never set a process that stands in the way of the output.
  • Stick to your values. Know what you and your company are about, and don’t shy away from your core.

Webinar
New Technology

The New Technology Brick: A Deep Dive on ZeroAvia

July 10, 2024
New Technology

In this webinar, Katya Constant (Ex-CFO, ZeroAvia) and Robina Von Stein (Investor, Contrarian Ventures) deep-dived into the New Technology brick.

Webinar
Product Disruption

The Product Disruption & Gigascaling Bricks: A Deep Dive with…

July 3, 2024
Product Disruption
Gigascaling

In this webinar, Sofia Graflund (Ex-COO, Heart Aerospace) and Ted Persson (Partner, EQT Ventures) deep-dived into two bricks – Product Disruption and Gigascaling.

Case Study
New Technology

Climeworks is leading the race towards net zero through carbon capture

June 3, 2024
New Technology

Climeworks has developed the world’s first commercial Direct Air Capture & Storage (DAC-S) facility, which will help companies reduce their CO2 emissions.

Founded in 2009 in Switzerland, Climeworks’ technology captures CO₂ directly from the air, reducing the atmospheric concentration of CO₂ by only using renewable energy, energy-from-waste, or other waste heat as energy sources. The CO₂ can then be safely and permanently stored underground.

Case Study
Companion Software

Heating and cooling buildings is one of the largest CO2 emitters...

May 6, 2024
Companion Software

With its smart thermostats for heaters and air conditioners, tado° is the European market leader for intelligent indoor climate management.

tado°, founded in 2011, is manufacturer-independent and compatible with all common heating systems from a wide range of manufacturers. It has installed over a million devices so far.

Article
Green Deployment

Zolar is making the use of renewable energies as easy as possible for everyone

April 8, 2024
Green Deployment

Zolar aims to ensure that everyone can benefit from the advantages of decentralised power supply in the future by building a solar system on every roof in the world.

Zolar, founded in 2016, combines the best of the world of the internet with the world of crafts. Its customers receive everything from a single source, from the initial planning to the installation and maintenance of their solar system.

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