Securing growth-stage capital remains a primary bottleneck for African tech and mid-sized enterprises looking to scale operational footprints. While seed-stage angel investing has become more common across major regional tech hubs, finding follow-on capital to support real-sector production, expand physical supply chains, and build clean energy infrastructure is challenging in the current macroeconomic environment.
To bridge this mid-stage funding gap, entrepreneurship accelerator Cascador has successfully deployed over US$5 million in aggregate growth capital to seven innovative African startups during its second annual Pitch Day.
The funding was distributed via the Cascador Catalytic Fund, a US$2 million annual investment platform reserved for the accelerator’s alumni network. Since its launch in 2019, the program has supported over 60 founders who have collectively brought in more than US$55 million in external investment.
The Capital Ledger: Debt vs. Equity Instruments
The funding round shows a notable shift toward structured debt financing over traditional equity-heavy models. This trend indicates that mature African tech startups are increasingly looking to avoid equity dilution while securing the working capital needed to fund asset-heavy operations.
Real-Sector Breakdown: Financing Agribusiness and Green Tech
The largest individual allocations went to companies working in agribusiness, clean energy logistics, and data infrastructure:
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Agriarche (US$1.7 Million Debt / ₦2.5 Billion Credit Line): Emerging as the largest single recipient of the 2026 cycle, the agricultural technology firm secured a massive credit facility to scale its crop-sourcing pipelines and digitize trade networks for local farmers.
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Koolboks (US$1.4 Million Debt): The eco-friendly refrigeration startup will use the capital to manufacture and distribute its solar-powered cooling systems, targeting off-grid small businesses and cold-chain food distributors.
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Powerstove (US$1.2 Million Debt): The clean-tech manufacturer will deploy the debt capital to scale production of its automated, biomass-powered clean cookstoves, which generate off-grid electricity while reducing household carbon emissions.
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Stears (US$450,000 Equity): The financial data and intelligence platform secured equity backing to expand its proprietary macroeconomic data tools and country-risk analysis models for corporate subscribers across the globe.
The remaining disbursements include renewable infrastructure player First Electric, which raised US$357,000 in debt; tech venture Fortics, which brought in US$142,000 in debt; and Indigenius AI, which secured a US$250,000 equity injection to advance its machine-learning products.
Due Diligence and the Road to Scale
Unlocking capital from the Catalytic Fund requires passing a thorough due diligence process that goes beyond a basic pitch presentation. The fund’s analysts evaluate companies based on clear financial metrics, operational resourcefulness, historical unit economics, and a proven track record of managing debt obligations.
Deina Mayaki, CEO of Agriarche, explained that the program helps teams build long-term operational resilience:
“The scale-up framework sharpens a leadership team’s ability to turn strategic insights into immediate operational reality. By helping us refine our core market positioning and funding strategy, the program gave us the tools to handle rigorous due diligence audits without defensiveness. This NGN2.5 billion credit line will serve as primary capital to expand our market footprint.”
The Long-Term Macro Runway
The successful conclusion of the 2026 Pitch Day—which has pushed Cascador’s total two-year disbursement track past the US$9 million mark—reflects a maturing ecosystem for African business accelerators.
Rather than simply offering short-term corporate mentorship, platforms like Cascador are evolving into permanent investment partners. By combining strategic operational training with direct access to non-dilutive debt and growth equity, these funds are helping a new generation of African entrepreneurs scale sustainable, high-impact businesses across the continent.
