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The Climate Solutions Fund will be one of the biggest in the growing market for investment funds with an environmental slant.
The fund will be focused on equity investments in small companies in
four sectors: renewable energy; energy efficiency technologies; energy
from biofuels and biomass; and the carbon trading markets.
This
is the second fund from Generation Investment Management, chaired by
the former vice-president of the US and managed by David Blood, former
head of Goldman Sachs Asset Management.
The first, the Global
Equity Strategy Fund, has $2.2bn invested in large companies the
company judges have “sustainable“ businesses, from an environmental,
social and economic viewpoint. Mr Blood said he expected that fund to
be worth $5bn within two years, based on commitments from interested
investors.
Mr Blood said raising $683m for the new fund in the
midst of “market disruption” showed the resilience of green investing.
“The fact we were able to raise $683m was extraordinary, so our
experience is that it has not really been a problem [raising funds
despite what is] generally a difficult environment,” he told the
Financial Times.
“A fear expressed by some is that the first
thing to go in a downturn is the nice-to-have sort of investment. Some
people put green investments in that category, but we think that is
nonsense. This is not nice-to-have – it is fundamental
finance...because the transition from a high-carbon to a low-carbon
economy is a ginormous step that is going to happen quickly,” he said.
Both Mr Gore and Mr Blood had invested in the new fund to a “pretty sizeable” extent, Mr Blood said.
The
average size of investment made by the new fund is likely to be about
$30m, in small private or public companies. All of the investors in the
new fund were drawn from the company’s existing pool of investors.
None
were willing to be named but existing investors in the Global Equity
Strategy Fund include the Swiss private bank Lombard Odier Darier
Hentsch; the California State Teachers Retirement System; Sweden’s
Mistra Foundation; and Australia’s Victoria Super Fund.
Last
year, Generation formed a partnership with the Silicon Valley venture
capitalists Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers to collaborate on
possible investments. Source
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