Our new partnership with Palatine further positions us as a prime player in the technology sector and we are delighted to be working with their team, FourNet CEO Richard Pennington said. The pandemic has been a catalyst for significant change in working practices and our industry over the past 12 months and fresh investment will enable FourNet to rapidly meet the changing needs of our customers, many of whom are critical to the UK s success following the pandemic, and to build and acquire the additional capabilities that our customers require. Palatine s investment will keep FourNet at the forefront of the industry and will also provide the fuel for us to lead further change across the sector, while allowing us to capitalise on the rapid growth in demand for cloud, collaboration and managed service solutions.
Henderson Park And South Street Partners Acquire Palmetto Bluff
themiddlemarket.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from themiddlemarket.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
LLR-Backed TrueLearn Acquires Picmonic
themiddlemarket.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from themiddlemarket.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
2 people found this useful
TTC Group has been sold by Palatine Private Equity to the company’s management team with investment from Pricoa Private Capital.
Almost two thirds (65%) of the risk management, compliance, and road safety training provider will become management and employee owned under the new funding arrangement with the remaining 35% held by Pricoa.
Jim Kirkwood, CEO of TTC Group, told Fleet News that part of the reason for parting ways with Palatine Private Equity and linking up with Pricoa Private Capital, the private capital business of Prudential Financial, was access to capital.
“Palatine has been a great supporter of the business over the past three-and-a-half years, but as the business was getting bigger, we wanted to do more, we wanted to put our foot on the accelerator,” he explained.
Anthesis believes Remediiate’s solution will be a game-changing disruptor and will become very significant to countries, governments and businesses in sequestering CO2 and noxious gases from major facilities such as power stations, cement and steel works, and converting these to high value algae for many uses such as animal feed, soil rejuvenation, and methane reduction in cows. © GettyImages/leungchopan A UK headquartered CO2 conversion technology provider is actively engaging with international feed manufacturers as regards take up its algae output for use in animal feed.
“Remediiate is having a number of advanced stage conversations with some of the leading global feed businesses, this is going to be large-scale in terms of technology adoption,” said Simon Davis, sustainable agriculture lead, Anthesis, a company that works with cities, companies, and other organizations to drive sustainable performance; its ventures arm has been partnering