Allied Climate Partners (philanthropic investment organization) announced the first close of Southeast Asia Clean Energy Fund II (SEACEF II), managed by Clime Capital.
ACP is focused on increasing the number of bankable, climate-related projects in developing economies such as Southeast Asia, the Caribbean and Central America, Africa, and India.
Allied Climate Partners CEO Ahmed Saeed said in a release. “SEACEF II will provide the catalytic capital required for early-stage developers and businesses to deliver renewable energy, energy efficiency, and grid solutions across the region. ACP intends to catalyze additional funds like SEACEF II, that are targeting the project development financing gap at scale in emerging markets and developing economies around the world.”
This first close of SEACEF II included senior equity participation from:
- International Finance Corporation, a member of the World Bank Group
- FMO, the Dutch Entrepreneurial Development Bank
- British International Investment
- Norfund
- Swedfund
- Arnold Ventures
Junior equity investors included:
- Global Energy Alliance for People and Planet
- Australian Development Investments
- ImpactAssets
- ACP
Mason Wallick, Chief Executive Officer and co-founder of Clime Capital added, “SEACEF II is the first blended investment fund in Southeast Asia to provide early-stage high-risk capital to support promising businesses accelerating the region’s low-carbon transition. Allied Climate Partners’ commitment to this fund contributes an essential element to the fund’s unique blended model, enabling us to address the specific needs of our target projects.”
SEACEF II was anchored by Sea Change Foundation International (Sea Change), a philanthropic organization focused on climate change mitigation and a core partner in ACP.
Across the globe, ACP and its partners aim to create an investment platform totaling $825 million, kickstarted with around $235 million in philanthropic junior capital.
ACP expects these managers to eventually attract about $11 billion for building viable climate projects. A release from ACP notes that this will result in a 47x increase in ACP’s risk-focused philanthropic capital and a 14x multiplier on the overall investment platform.