Singapore has named eight undergraduate winners of the 2026 Singapore Valley Awards, as policymakers and industry leaders step up efforts to build a pipeline of entrepreneurs capable of commercialising deep-technology innovations rather than leaving them at the research stage.

The annual programme recognises students who demonstrated strong entrepreneurial thinking and the ability to translate emerging technologies into scalable business models across sectors such as biotechnology, clean energy, advanced manufacturing and artificial intelligence.

Winners will receive cash prizes and a fully sponsored internship in China, with placement matching currently under way with partner companies.

The awards ceremony, held on Feb. 16 and attended by Acting Transport Minister and Senior Minister of State for Finance Jeffrey Siow, reflects Singapore’s broader push to strengthen its entrepreneurial culture as the city-state positions itself as a regional hub for deep-tech innovation.

Siow said platforms such as the Singapore Valley Awards give students early exposure to entrepreneurship under industry mentorship, adding that stronger collaboration between companies and academia will be critical to developing founders capable of bringing innovations into commercial use.

Organisers said the 2026 edition placed less emphasis on pitch presentation and more on execution fundamentals, including market entry strategy, regulatory pathways, financing structure and cross-border scalability.

The shift reflects a growing view within Singapore’s innovation ecosystem that the key challenge in deep tech is no longer generating ideas, but turning them into viable businesses that can navigate long development cycles, capital intensity and complex regulatory environments.

Participants selected one of three commercialisation challenges: developing a go-to-market strategy for a new antimicrobial compound, designing a Renewable Energy-as-a-Service platform combining solar generation, AI-based energy management and blockchain-enabled trading, or proposing AI-enabled smart manufacturing hubs capable of scaling across Asia-Pacific markets.

The ceremony also featured a dialogue between founders, investors and researchers on the realities of building deep-tech companies, including product-market fit, execution timelines and commercial risk.

Speakers included technology entrepreneurs, venture investors and scientists involved in Singapore’s research ecosystem.

Partner companies for the internship programme span sectors such as robotics, education technology and digital services, underscoring the cross-industry demand for deep-tech talent.

Founded in 2017 by technology entrepreneur Pang Shengdong and supported by investment firm Tembusu Partners, the Singapore Valley Awards aim to develop what organisers describe as execution-ready founders who can test technologies against real-world constraints such as adoption, regulation, financing and scale.

The initiative comes as Singapore intensifies efforts to translate its strong research capabilities into commercially successful ventures, particularly in strategic sectors such as energy transition, healthcare resilience and advanced manufacturing.

Business News Asia

Share.