Funding & Investment in Travel
Palmer’s ‘really special’ grandfather’s island visit sparks tourism buzz in St Kitts

Chelsea’s Cole Palmer gestures towards the crowd after Chelsea won against Paris St Germain in the FIFA Club World Cup final, at the MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, U.S., July 13, 2025. Photo: REUTERS
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Chelsea’s Cole Palmer gestures towards the crowd after Chelsea won against Paris St Germain in the FIFA Club World Cup final, at the MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, U.S., July 13, 2025. Photo: REUTERS
Cole Palmer could have gone anywhere around the world to celebrate his magnificent performance in leading Chelsea FC to FIFA Club World Cup glory against Paris Saint-Germain.
But rather than take a well-earned vacation to Las Vegas or an exotic Pacific destination, the Chelsea midfielder opted to visit the tiny Caribbean nation of St Kitts and Nevis, where his grandfather Sterry Palmer was born.
The England international, 23, was given a hero’s welcome when he arrived in St Kitts and was greeted by a series of local dignitaries, including deputy prime minister Dr. Hon. Geoffrey Hanley and the minister of tourism Hon. Marsha T. Henderson.
Palmer’s popularity in St Kitts and Nevis has spiked massively ever since he had the country’s flag stitched into his boots alongside the England badge. It was a small gesture that has gone a long way.
“Landing in St. Kitts off the back of winning the Club World Cup felt really special,” Palmer said. “It’s where my grandad’s love for football started. The island’s beautiful and really chilled. I can’t wait to explore the mountains, rainforest and sea — and to try out the food.”
Following the huge publicity that Palmer’s visit has attracted, local officials are looking to capitalize on the moment from a tourism perspective.
Meanwhile, Atiba Harris, the president of the St Kitts and Nevis FA, told FIFA that he hopes that the Chelsea star’s exploits can help improve the Sugar Boyz’ footballing future from providing inspiration to aspiring pros to increasing the global player pool.
FIFA: Just how big has Cole Palmer’s visit to St Kitts been this week?
Atiba Harris (AH): One of the things we appreciate here in St. Kitts and Nevis is our people in the diaspora community, and to have someone like Cole Palmer come back to his roots… his grandfather was born here so to see that the lineage did not stop and now his grandson is coming back is a testament to strong family ties and values that we offer here. Having Cole Palmer here is a really big deal and is going to inspire the next generation as well.
Was his visit planned or was it something of a surprise?
The officials from St Kitts tourism would have reached out to the Football Association regarding the trip. I was supposed to be at the Club World Cup final, but had to stay behind so I couldn’t get to see him play. But having him here is a pleasure.
What does it say about his ties to the country that he chose to come to St Kitts?
It shows the strong family values, and I must give credit to his grandfather as well to instill this. Usually when people migrate they tend to forget where they come from, but it is not the case here. Cole is here visiting the soil where it all started for his family.
To what extent did Palmer lead to a surge of Chelsea fans on the island?
There is a huge Chelsea following over here and there have been even more ever since he started wearing the flag on his boots. That drew a lot more younger fans closer to him. And you see his trademark (shivering cold) celebration a lot in local competitions.
What inspiration does Palmer provide to current professionals or aspiring stars that someone from their heritage has made it to the very top of the game?
It’s going be an overall inspirational move. He is going to inspire not just the younger generation but the current crop of players who are playing both locally and overseas as well. We have guys like Marcus Rashford as well who I believe could inspire players from the diaspora to come to our national team.
Have there been any conversations with Palmer about doing something concrete with the country going forwards?
I think this is the initial step having tourism involved where he can probably promote the country as a whole. And I’m sure there have been talks with the government about finalizing something with him, along with others like Marcus Rashford.
Were there any conversations about trying to recruit Palmer to play for the national team before he decided to play for England?
He was on the radar. We have a long list of players who are eligible to represent the country. The reality is that England is the ‘home’ of football and if the English national team come calling for you at a young age then you are naturally going to gravitate to the land of your birth. I won’t say it passed us by; I would say he took his opportunity just like others in the past, like Micah Richards to represent the land of their birth, but they never forgot where it started with their family heritage.
Funding & Investment in Travel
Startups Supplying Scarce Materials And Rare Earth Elements See Abundant VC Funding

It’s well known that scaling cutting-edge technologies and battery production requires supply-constrained materials such as lithium, cobalt and nickel, as well as rare earth elements sourced from just a few locations on the planet.
Tech giants, automakers and other industrial players have long been cognizant of the supply chain risks. And recent headlines show concerns increasingly spilling over into geopolitics.
Startups haven’t been sitting this one out either. In the past few quarters, a growing roster of venture-backed companies has secured funding for areas including battery and magnet recycling, rare earth-focused mining technology, and even extracting materials from space.
Collectively, they’ve raised billions to date, including some large recent rounds. To illustrate, we used Crunchbase data to put together a list of a dozen companies, most funded in the past year, with a mission of supplying scarce materials through recycling or at their original source.
Most venture money going to recycling
The largest investment recipients are focused on recycling, looking to extract scarce materials from devices, scrap, batteries and industrial machines no longer in use.
In this arena, the two most heavily funded startups — Massachusetts-based Ascend Elements and Nevada-based Redwood Materials — are both focused on batteries and have been around a while. Together, they’ve pulled in nearly $3 billion in equity funding and over $1 billion in debt financing to date.
Notably, however, both companies secured most of their funding between 2021 and 2023. That coincided with a more bullish period overall for cleantech equity funding. Since then, sustainability-focused investment has trended lower, with U.S. investors in particular seeing impacts from the Trump administration dialing back support for clean energy initiatives.
Outside the U.S., meanwhile, we’ve seen some more recent, sizable rounds around critical materials recycling.
Out of Canada, Cyclic Materials announced in June that it raised $25 million to build a rare earth recycling facility in Kingston, Ontario. It will take magnet-rich scrap and retired industrial products to recycle rare earth elements used in EV motors, wind turbines and consumer devices. Per Cyclic, it’s an undertapped market, as today, less than 1% of rare earth elements are recycled.
On the earlier-stage side, two German companies also raised good-sized financings. Cylib, which develops technology to draw critical raw materials from end-of-life batteries, picked up a $64 million Series A last spring. And at seed-stage, Munich-based Tozero secured $12 million for a plant to recover raw materials from recycled lithium-ion batteries.
Mining attracts capital too, following MP Material’s footsteps
Startup capital is also flowing to ventures focused on mining critical materials.
Before looking at the latest funding picks, however, it seems worth pointing out that MP Materials — the company generating headlines of late around rare earth mining — is itself a stock market success story with some Silicon Valley roots.
Shares of Las Vegas-based MP shot higher this month following news that the U.S. Defense Department agreed to buy an equity stake in the company, which operates the country’s only rare earth mine in Mountain Pass, California. A few days later, Apple announced a $500 million commitment to buy rare earth magnets developed at an MP Materials’ facility in Fort Worth, Texas.
Notably, MP was one of the earlier companies to ride the SPAC boom, making its public market debut in 2020 through a merger with a blank-check company. The deal included an equity investment from backers including venture capitalist and onetime “SPAC king” Chamath Palihapitiya.
More recently, we’ve seen a few startups nab venture and debt financing around mining efforts and technologies targeting scarce metals.
Montreal-based Torngat Metals secured $120 million in debt financing last month from government sources for a rare earth mining project in Strange Lake, located in Quebec’s northernmost region. It touts the project, which includes “detailed caribou avoidance procedures,” as a strategically important national initiative in a time when Chinese domination of heavy rare earth metals threatens others’ ability to build and source high-performance magnets.
Phoenix Tailings, based in Woburn, Massachusetts, also attracted investors’ interest, pulling in $76.4 million in fresh financing this year, per a May securities filing. The company has developed a process to extract valuable metals and rare earth elements from mining waste.
Exits next?
Major U.S. market indices are trading near all-time highs these days, so it’s looking like a good time for public companies in a lot of industries. But those tied to sourcing of rare metals and battery materials are riding particularly high.
MP Materials, for instance, had a recent market cap around $10 billion — its highest to date. Rare earth stocks more broadly are also sharing in the enthusiasm.
Could IPOs and acquisitions for the most heavily funded companies tied to sourcing scarce materials be next? These aren’t likely to be the fastest-moving spaces for dealmaking, but at least for now some momentum is on their side.
Related Crunchbase query:
Related reading:
Illustration: Dom Guzman
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Crunchbase Daily.
Funding & Investment in Travel
New travel fees for Brits heading to Mallorca

British travellers will soon need to fork out 7€ for an ETIAS permit to visit popular holiday destinations like Spain though the system’s implementation has been pushed back to 2027. The fee will only apply to tourists aged between 18 and 70, whilst younger and older visitors won’t face any charges.
Funding & Investment in Travel
Jelly Ko expands refill options on the back of strong sales and demand

The in-house brand of Style Story, an Australia-based online retailer of South Korean beauty products, has added a fourth refill product to its portfolio.
Its global bestseller, Bubble Tea Steam Cream, recently joined Dewy Glaze Toner, Be Jelly Overnight Dream Serum, and White Truffle Souffle Serum in having a 50ml version.
“Bubble Tea Steam Cream is the product that put Jelly Ko on the map, and it is now available in a convenient refill pouch that’s perfect for topping up your empty jar or packing in your carry-on luggage.
“Refills are performing really well for us. Last month, across our sales channels, refill packs made up almost 40% of total sales for Bubble Tea Steam Cream, which is our hero SKU and most repurchased product. That is a huge adoption rate and shows that customers are not only repurchasing, but actively opting for the more sustainable option,” Lauren Lee, founder of Jelly Ko and Style Story, told CosmeticsDesign-Asia.
In fact, the travel-friendliness of the refill packs was pointed out to Lee by customers.
“Many started using the refill packs as travel companions because they are resealable, lightweight, and easy to pack due to its flat packaging. It wasn’t actually something that we realised when we originally designed them, but now that we’ve seen how people are using them, we have adopted that into our messaging as well.
“It makes sense because traditional cosmetics can be bulky, breakable, heavy, and just a bit annoying to cart around, even if they are travel-sized. These refill packs take all the fuss out of travelling with your go-to skin care products.”
Going forward, Jelly Ko plans to continue growing its refillable offerings.
“We will be adding a refill version for our Cherry Blossom Sleeping Mask, which will also double as a travel pack, in the next production run. As for dedicated travel-sized products, we are not planning any at this stage. We currently offer sachet samples and these refill packs, which fill the gap for now.”
Smooth like bubble
Jelly Ko’s Bubble Tea Steam Creamis claimed to be the world’s first bubble tea skin care, which has sold out six times since its launch in 2020.
Infused with collagen, panthenol, probiotics, squalane, and four types of hyaluronic acid, it is a nourishing yet lightweight moisturiser that “replaces oil, serum and cream in one step”.
Inspired by the popular beverage, this cream is fast-absorbing, and delivers deep hydration and buttery-soft smoothness targeted at improving dark spots, blemishes, and visible signs of ageing.
According to the brand, it helps to refine texture and tone for all skin types and ages; smooths and firms skin for a more even, radiant complexion; and does not contain additives, such as artificial fragrances, dyes, sulphates and parabens, that may trigger reactions.
In addition, the newly launched refillable pouch is said to use 90% less plastic, glass and paper, contributing to reduction of carbon emissions and packaging waste.
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