• Specialist impact investor raises more than $100 million from European and U.S. institutions
• Strategy introduces liquidity and exit pathways for impact investors across developed and emerging markets
• Emerging markets allocation includes catalytic first-loss tranche supported by EU-backed Proparco to mobilize private capital
Blue Earth Capital has closed more than $100 million for a newly launched impact secondaries strategy aimed at improving liquidity, widening access to seasoned impact assets, and drawing more institutional participation into emerging markets. The launch introduces a structured vehicle for impact secondaries at a time when allocators are shaping new portfolio strategies around climate action, inclusion, and circular economy themes.
Impact secondaries have long featured in conventional private equity. However, the absence of dedicated offerings has limited the ability of impact investors to manage vintages, mitigate blind-pool and concentration risks, and recycle capital at scale. Market participants have argued that liquidity constraints remain one of the most persistent friction points in the impact sector, especially in emerging economies where exit pathways are less mature and deal pipelines are largely opportunistic.
Nicolas Muller, Head of Private Equity Partnerships at Blue Earth Capital, said the firm has been focused on building the market’s foundations. “Blue Earth Capital has played a crucial role in shaping the impact secondaries asset class for several years. The first close of our dedicated impact secondaries offering marks an important milestone, underscoring our role as a catalytic player in addressing a key challenge in impact investing: liquidity.”

Closing the Liquidity Gap
The strategy will invest globally across developed and emerging markets, with sector exposure spanning climate action, circular economy, financial inclusion, healthcare, and education. Blue Earth Capital said that secondaries can appeal to risk-sensitive investors by providing exposure to seasoned assets while improving diversification and shortening time to distributions. They may also attract new institutional entrants by reducing duration risk and introducing clearer exit pathways into what is often viewed as an illiquid corner of private markets.
CEO Philipp Mueller said the offering responds to a structural need in the impact ecosystem. “Thanks to the strong support of some of the most sophisticated impact allocators, we are proud to launch our dedicated impact secondaries strategy. This innovative offering leverages our strong secondaries and impact capabilities, as well as our extensive network. It fills a crucial gap in the impact sector and presents an attractive opportunity to generate both impact and returns.”

Emerging Markets Allocation and EU Backing
The strategy includes an emerging markets allocation supported by Proparco, the French development finance institution, through a first-loss tranche backed by the European Union’s EFSD+. The structure aims to enhance risk-adjusted returns for private investors and channel capital to regions where demand for sustainable financing is high but access remains constrained.
Françoise Lombard, CEO of Proparco, said the objective is to build liquidity and confidence in frontier markets. “We are proud to support Blue Earth Capital’s innovative mission to build a more efficient market for impact secondaries in emerging economies. As an anchor investor in this inaugural initiative, our objective is to enhance market liquidity, strengthen exit pathways, and ultimately reinforce long-term investor confidence in these regions. Over time, we are convinced that this strategy will help channel sustainable private capital more effectively to where it can generate the greatest impact.”

Initial capital commitments also include the Ursimone Wietlisbach Foundation and Stella, the investment arm of a German family foundation.
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Early Transactions and Market Infrastructure
Blue Earth Capital has already begun deploying capital across developed and emerging markets. The portfolio includes a continuation transaction with Suma Capital for Gestcompost, Spain’s largest organic waste treatment manager, which processes 1.2 million tons of organic waste annually and is expanding into biogas and biomethane. The firm has also acquired stakes in four impact funds across India and Africa through an LP-led transaction. These deals illustrate both growing deal flow and a wider taxonomy of secondary transaction types.
Urs Wietlisbach, Chairman of the Board and Co-Founder of Blue Earth Capital, said the strategy is designed to help mainstream the asset class. “We see this strategy as deeply catalytic: it demonstrates how targeted secondary investments can mobilize new pools of capital, expand access to mature impact opportunities, and strengthen the overall market infrastructure for impact investing. By proving that financial discipline and measurable impact can go hand in hand, initiatives like this help shift impact investing from the margins to the mainstream.”

Blue Earth Capital asked BlueMark to independently assess the strategy’s alignment with impact and ESG best practices. BlueMark awarded a Platinum rating, its highest, under its Fund ID verification framework, evaluating strategy, governance, and impact management.
Why It Matters for Allocators
Institutional allocators have been expanding exposure to private impact strategies, but deployment has outpaced the development of liquidity channels. Market participants argue that the ability to manage duration, reduce pipeline uncertainty, and recycle capital could enable faster scaling of impact mandates. A functioning impact secondaries market could also reinforce the credibility of emerging markets for mainstream private investors by improving exit visibility.
The launch enters a broader macro context in which asset owners are reassessing private markets through the lens of climate transition, demographic change, and sustainable infrastructure needs. If successful, the strategy could serve as a template for future impact liquidity solutions across regions.
Global Implications
The initiative matters beyond a single manager. It introduces new market plumbing for impact investing and engages European DFIs and philanthropic investors as catalytic capital providers. For emerging markets, the question is not only capital inflow but whether secondary markets can help accelerate scale, transparency, and competitive pricing for climate and social assets. For developed markets, secondaries represent a pathway to institutionalize impact investing as a mainstream private markets allocation.
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