EU Timber Funds Gain Traction As Capital Tilts Toward
Climate-Aligned Strategies: Report
Private equity is undergoing a strategic reset. Up against a
perfect storm of inflationary pressure, shifting investor
preferences and a tightening regulatory net, the industry has
had to become nimbler, leaning into sectors that offer both
solid financial footing and tangible environmental value. One of
the most notable shifts in today’s private capital markets is
the growing momentum behind timber and forestry funds — a
once-niche strategy that is now gaining notoriety as a key
component of climate-focused portfolios.
A new EY report, entitled “The Rise of Timber and Forestry Funds
in Recovering PE and VC markets,” dives into the rising
influence of timber and climate funds around the world —
particularly in the EU.
After several years of market upheaval, including trillions in
sidelined capital that is finally shrinking, the private equity
and venture capital space has begun to find its footing. Global
PE fundraising fell to $680 billion in 2024, marking the third
consecutive annual decline and the lowest tally since 2015,
according to Preqin and Pitchbook data. Venture capital also
cooled, with 1,783 funds raised — a 40 percent drop from the
year-ago period. Yet the performance isn’t totally bleak.
Investors directed $619 billion across 462 mega-deals, up 35
percent year-over-year, signaling a shift toward fewer but
larger bets.
Geographically, North America, Europe and Asia capture the
biggest wave of private capital deal flow, though each region is
charting its own course. Asia is seeing a surge in VC funding,
fueled by tech innovation. Globally, artificial intelligence is
crowding deal pipelines, with AI investment up 35 percent from
2023. In Europe, sustainability continues to influence asset
allocation, and nature-based solutions — especially timber and
forestry — are increasingly commanding investor attention.
Morningstar data from Q1 2025 showed that more than 50 percent
of all new fund launches and assets under management (AUM) in
Europe are now in Article 8 and 9 funds, as per the EU’s
Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation. ESG-aligned
strategies have been catapulted from the outskirts to the
mainstream, with fund managers now treating sustainability as
both an investment theme and a competitive advantage.
Nowhere is this momentum more apparent than the rise in the
number of timber and forestry funds. These investment vehicles,
which target sustainably managed forests, brought in $8.4
billion last year—down slightly from 2023, but well ahead of the
five-year average. Performance has been impressive, with IRRs
often rising into the double-digit percentages and “select
vintages” topping 16 percent on the high side of the spectrum,
per the EY report.
Several tailwinds are helping to buoy the timber and forestry
asset class, including rising demand for renewable construction
materials, forests’ carbon-capture potential and EU-backed
afforestation guardrails. As a result, the EU is taking its
place as a strategic hub for timberland investment. Unlike
traditional asset classes, timberland offers low correlation to
public markets, inherent inflation protection and strong climate
resilience. In a market increasingly focused on risk, return and
impact, timber and forestry funds are no longer an alternative;
instead, they’re becoming a lighthouse of where capital is
likely headed next.
Source:
globalaginvesting.com