
Good Return secures backing to lend to women-owned businesses in Asia
Good Return, an Australian “public benevolent institution,” secured $2.2 million for its second fund, an evergreen lending vehicle supporting micro and small women-owned
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Investors are waking up to the outsized impact potential of investing at the intersection of climate change and women’s and girls’ empowerment.
Investing with a gender lens can particularly address challenges in climate adaptation and resilience issues. And solving climate-related problems disproportionately benefits women and girls.
A growing crop of fund managers are designing strategies to seize the overlapping opportunities.
Get in front of investors, family offices, financial advisors and wealth managers looking to deploy capital at the intersection of climate + gender.
Cut your research time and discover impact fund managers investing at the intersection of climate + gender.*
*Disclaimer: This list of climate + gender funds is based on available information, sourced by ImpactAlpha. Information has not been further reviewed by the managers nor verified by third parties, is not guaranteed for accuracy or completeness, and should not be relied upon as investment advice or recommendations. Nothing in this list or on ImpactAlpha.com shall constitute an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy securities.

Good Return, an Australian “public benevolent institution,” secured $2.2 million for its second fund, an evergreen lending vehicle supporting micro and small women-owned

Bangalore-based Theia Ventures was launched by Priya Shah to invest in early-stage climate technologies that aren’t yet on many investors’ radar. Shah has

A loan to a Kenyan farmer exemplifies the income and impact African lenders leave on the table with exclusionary and outdated underwriting practices.

Five years ago, the practice of applying a gender lens to climate investing was still nascent. The argument was clear: if you wanted

France-based Koolboks launched in 2018 with a line of coolers for European beach-goers and campers. When the Covid pandemic hit, its co-founders spotted

As singer-entrepreneur-cultural icon Rihanna turns her attention to Africa, her Nairobi-based investment fund is deploying a new set of tools to invest in





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