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EXCLUSIVE: Spotlight On Gravis New Net Zero Fund

Amanda Cheesley

31 March 2025

Ed Simpson (pictured) at London-based recently highlighted how significant investment in infrastructure is critical to enable countries to meet their net zero targets by 2050.

Gravis’s Luxembourg-domiciled Net Zero Fund, will invest in a range of infrastructure assets, focusing on five key themes to help accelerate the transition to net zero.

The fund’s target size is €500 million ($541 million); it is aimed at a 10 to 12 per cent internal rate of return (IRR) net with an early yield. The fund will be classified under Article 8 of the EU’s Sustainable Financial Disclosure Regulation (SFDR), with the first close scheduled for the second quarter of this year.

Themes include the energy transition, targeting assets that support decarbonising electricity and/or heat generation and use. One project involves constructing an anaerobic digestion plant, Simpson told this news service in an interview.

Another theme is transport, looking at investments that accelerate the transition to electric or green gas-fuelled transportation. Projects include a pipeline of electric vehicle charging points.

Sustainable food and agriculture
With the need to produce more food using fewer resources to feed a growing population becoming critical, a third theme is sustainable food production. This focuses on reducing emissions from agriculture and land use through controlled environment food production or changing agricultural practices.

“One project involves the construction of advanced glass houses, producing leafy greens hydroponically for the Irish market,” Simpson continued. Hydroponic farming involves growing plants in a nutrient-rich water solution rather than soil, offering advantages such as reduced water consumption, land usage, and pesticides.

Natural capital is another key theme for Gravis. Simpson has looked at sustainable forestry management to produce biochars which can be used to improve soil health and boost farmers' yields and a project in Spain to repurpose land used for wheat to grow avocados, which use less water.  

London-headquartered , an international $760 million natural real assets manager with 100 per cent of land under or in transition to regenerative management, has also just launched the new SLM Silva Fund II, a €200 million ($210 million) fund to invest in sustainable forestry and carbon in Europe.

Another key theme for the Gravis fund is resource use, targeting projects that cut the use of carbon-intensive natural resources through increased efficiency, recycling and the promotion of the circular economy. “One project focuses on miscanthus-based sustainable packaging, worth about €35 to €60 million,” Simpson said.

In light of population pressures, wars, supply chain disruptions and the impact of new technologies shaking up the space, this news service is continuing to cover agriculture, forestry, food production and related businesses.