Impact Investment Strategy

Together we develop and deploy innovative, scalable and sustainable “impact” solutions

We invest in companies that share our values ​​and that consider a positive social and environmental impact essential to their mission. We recognize and encourage portfolio companies to implement a variety of risk mitigation strategies in order to deliver attractive, profitable ventures and projects to our partner investors.

Purpose of In3’s Flagship “CAP” Funding:  From greenfield project finance to early-stage venture/growth capital, we partner with companies to create a continuum of funding that accelerates the development and deployment of clean/healthy/circular/sustainable solutions worldwide.  Such solutions are often ecologically attuned to the big challenges of our times — climate change, social justice, energy/food/housing/water security and healthy ecosystems. 

We’re on a mission to break down barriers to make affordable capital accessible to anyone from anywhere in the world that has the wherewithal to develop medium- and larger-scale projects aimed at solving these issues.  Related topics to read or bookmark:

We Invest in the Impact Economy with a preference for “Nature-based” Solutions that are more sustainable and reliable than engineered interventions. 

Seems that nature has already designed the better methods of reversing climate change, for example, as biology and scale of both problems and solutions provide a way of “cleaning up the mess” (drawing down enough carbon in soils and products that keep them out of the atmosphere) without creating a bigger mess (nuclear waste, water pollution or geotechnical disruption from fracking, deforestation or depletion of soils, carrying capacity of our biosphere, species extinction, persistent organic pollutants that we can’t safely eliminate …).  

Thus, we give preference to projects with social and/or environmental benefits — and we will not consider any venture or project that would cause social or environmental harm — in order to focus on those solutions with the greatest potential for making enough of a difference as soon as possible.  Arguably, we still have time, so let’s not stumble — we need to implement and scale truly sustainable solutions as rapidly as the teams and capital will allow.

Our capital and capabilities are designed to meet clients where they are and utilize our best strategic thinking on how we can together drive positive social and/or environmental change.  We customize or tailor solutions to meet the needs of our clients (“bespoke” solutions), now and into the future. We utilize the latest tools for measuring/tracking, transparent reporting, and include community members as part of the solution to improve lives and livelihoods, to bolster local self-reliance. 
(See examples of “Impact Measurement and Management Systems” such as IRIS or the Investor Impact Quotient tools, translating “from impact intentions into impact results”.)

We mainly focus on the more pressing problems of our times — from climate change to food security, from health to wealth, housing to reforestation, we keep an open mind and really listen, implementing solutions to diverse and innovative approaches with measurable impacts alongside profits.  

Our clients are usually mid-market project developers, increasingly involved in reducing carbon emissions (“de-carbonizing” all commercial activity), reducing and eliminating other pollutants and risk of harm (now or in the future), or socially responsible facets (worker health and safety, better-paying jobs, livable wages and healthier workplaces and communities) alongside decent if not enhanced fiscal returns. 

Our “next gen” approach to project finance delivers funding to developers seeking up to 100% of their project’s budget from a single Family Office under our Capital Assurance (Guarantee) Program (article on CAP funding’s purpose, goals and advantages).  Discover how CAP funding expedites and streamlines project funding for $25 million or more.  

Innovate, Accelerate and Scale.  How? 

Clean Energy | Efficiency | Healthy/Sustainable Food | Materials | Storage | Waste-to-Value | Water | Healthcare | Regenerative Real Estate | Infrastructure

Priorities include

  • protecting and rebuilding degraded soils
  • protecting clean water and recovering valuable/displaced resources like water and raw materials such as nutrients for living things
  • converting Persistent Organic (human-made) Pollutants like tires and plastics into recovered carbon black (rCB)
  • drawing down atmospheric carbon via trees and bamboo forests, while protecting the older trees and forests that science shows contain the most carbon. Use alternative building materials like bamboo, hemp and other fast-growing fibers to decrease demand for wood
  • sustainable food systems, agroforestry / silvopasture, no-till agriculture, rotational grazing and other nature-based carbon sequestration. 

Examples:

  1. Nature-based carbon removal projects and related climate stabilization solutions — Regenerative Food Systems, Afforestation, Reforestation and Revegetation (ARR), Eco-restoration.  Projects such as these often have an even greater need for significant greenfield/early-stage investment because they typically require a long time to produce verifiable and sustainable carbon draws.  Key to this in food systems is regenerating topsoil and groundwater resources.
  2. Clean Power Generation to radically reduce emissions, decarbonize and rebuild a sustainable economy:  Roughly 85% of greenhouse gas emissions in the United States come from current energy systems.  Achieving climate stability will require radical improvements in methods of energy production (generation), storage, distribution and patterns of consumption, including “net zero” buildings, energy-intensive industries, “smarter” cities, and the electric power grids.  This includes efficiency measures, waste recovery (often an overlooked source of energy) and controls. 
  3. Innovative solutions to social issues such as sanitation, affordable housing, health and safety through business activities that improve lives and livelihoods — such as improving smallholder farming with more valuable crops, less exposure to toxic inputs like pesticides, improper waste handling, excess tillage, or other non-value-added steps. 
  4. Responsible, Transparent and Renewable Supply Chains, heading toward zero waste, via better feedback loops and risk management.  Materials accumulating in our biosphere can and must become feedstocks to close the take-make-waste loop across industries such as packaging, transportation, waste management/resource recovery, healthcare, … the list goes on and on.  Specific areas of our focus and expertise:
    1. Shifting from petroleum-based plastics to biopolymers (biodegradable plastics) as well as durable polymers and composites — get the fossil carbon out of circulation that’s presently poisoning the planet.  Reuse and pollution reduction measures can only go so far.  Better to use the “zero waste” designs of natural systems, a “bio-inspired” approach.
    2. Shifting from synthetic fertilizers applied to dead soil with overwatering (causing runoff harmful to the downstream environment) to more sustainable practices, use of biologics and living microorganisms applied to healthy soil and building more organic material (regenerating topsoil) through no till, cover crops, crop rotation, and using biologically active soil to draw down carbon, also known as “carbon farming.” Healthier soil also makes for healthier plants that are naturally more resistant to pests and thus require fewer pesticides. 
    3. These same principles of soil and resource management apply to human health and wellness, spanning disease prevention and optimal health and wellness (healthy lifestyles, fitness, even mental health and happiness), meaningful work, social justice, realizing our potential as contributors to our families, communities, and the greater society. 
    4. Water and energy efficiency, conservation and clean water generation.

New venture investments are in some ways the opposite of project finance in the sense that a late-arriving, “me, too” technology will usually deliver marketplace advantages (necessary to attain market share), while established “cookie cutter” solutions, organized into pipelines or portfolios of projects, provide the keys to reaching the scale.  Scale of what?  The social and/or environmental impacts necessary for timely UN Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) achievement.  See below for more specifics.

The time for action is upon us.  This is our moment.  And In3’s point here is simply that project-based replicability of nature-based solutions (versus new tech venture originality) more rapidly moves the needle in the right direction, in our view.  This is a point of hot debate in our society, with data and science helping settle the age-old question of “what will make the most difference, sustainably, profitably, in the least amount of time?” 

Unmasking the Truth (and ourselves)

Making a “molehill into a mountain of change” requires replicability to reach scale. We have to be quite certain that we focus on change for good, change for keeps, changes that conform with systems science and ecological principles, not primarily being merely “less bad.”  Incremental, stepwise thinking has a place in all of this, but “tinkering” with nature such as with certain types of GMOs (open pollenating, that tend to take over other crops), geoengineering, or designs for defeating or “fixing” the harm already done, without regard for the precautionary principle, … how is that worth the risk and worthy of our support?  Such technology tends to multiply and spread like a pathogenic virus, on its own, so we must make certain that there are not going to be unintended consequences before unleashing.  Is that research routinely and consistently required by promoters, or are we the unwitting subjects of a vast experiment, like blind mice unaware of the longer-term effects, just looking for the next piece of cheese? 

Take geoengineering, for example, with plans to store wastes underground, by injecting CO2 emissions in between rock formations, hoping that it stays there.  One decent earthquake could erase all that good intention.  Haven’t we already learned that there is no “away” for things like nuclear waste?

Further, even if data science could prove greater benefit at a reasonable risk, we have get our turnaround goals right sooner, not later.  Estimates are that we have about a decade to make serious progress toward the big, hairy, audacious goals (BHAGs) in the post-pandemic era, starting, well, yesterday. Decade of Action

This “impact investing” strategy embraces and aims to help achieve the UN Sustainable Development Goals (UN SDG’s), with particular attention to SDG’s 6-13, where private capital, if wisely and properly deployed, has the potential to

1. Eradicate Poverty — promote self-reliance
2. Eliminate Hunger and Malnutrition — achieve Food Security and promote Sustainable Food Systems & Regenerative Agriculture (ties to 13, below)
3. Ensure Good Health & Well-Being 
6. Ensure access to Clean Water & Sanitation for all
7. Ensure access to affordable, reliable, sustainable & modern Clean Energy
8. Promote sustainable development, economic growth and Meaningful, Decent Work
9. Invest in Infrastructure and Innovationto promote inclusive, resilient and restorative or at least sustainable Industrialization 
10. Reduce [Income] Inequalities — especially within and between countries, which ties to SDG 1 and 8 as well as all impact projects that create better-paying jobs
11. Make Cities & Communities Sustainable (all human settlements) inclusive, safe, resilient communities and affordable housing
12. Ensure patterns of sustainable and responsible Consumption & Production — radically reduce our global ecological footprint
13. Take urgent action on Climate Change
14 & 15. Sustainably manage Life below Water and Life on Land — encompasses forest preservation and fisheries management, regeneration of degraded drylands (ties to agriculture), and protecting biodiversity
17. Partnerships for the Goals, which includes access to impact capital.

Result:  Accelerated solutions to today’s pressing sustainability problems such as decreasing the worst effects of climate change (SDG #13), greater food (2) and housing security (11), with breathable air, drinkable water, healthy and nutritious food (2, 3, 6, 7 for cooking, 8 and 10 to afford healthy food), local self-reliance such as enabling farmers to earn a decent wage (1) while regenerating topsoil or preserving the living soil and clean water (2, 6, 15) that we still have. Together, we build a sustainable future.  more

Related Article:  Impact Capital — Opportunities to solve problems we all face

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