Finance
UK’s first public-private nature fund raises $86m to restore landscapes at scale
Public funding alone can’t fill the financing gap for long-term nature restoration projects that mitigate the impacts of climate change, says environmental fund manager Finance Earth.
The London, UK-based firm drove that point home earlier this month when it announced a £64.6 million ($86.4 million) first close of its Big Nature Impact Fund LP, which blends anchor capital from the UK government’s Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) with backing from institutional investors.
Part of the UK Nature Impact Fund platform, the Big Nature Impact Fund is the UK’s largest-ever nature-as-infrastructure fund, and the first to combine public and institutional investment for nature restoration projects.
Defra provided a £30 million ($40 million) cornerstone investment, while the remaining capital came from Zurich Insurance Group, Admiral Group, Esmée Fairbairn Foundation, and the Church of England’s Social Impact Investment Programme.
The fund is targeting a final raise of £90–120 million ($120–$160 million).
Defra unlocking private finance ‘at scale’
The fund’s structure could provide a blueprint in future for others, suggests Finance Earth investment director Rich Fitton.
The Defra contribution, in particular, could help de-risk investment into nature projects for more commercial backers.
Defra’s capital sits at the bottom of the fund’s cashflow waterfall, absorbing first losses and only seeing returns once the private investors have recovered their capital in addition to a 7% preferred return.
For every £1 of public money, the structure is designed to unlock at least £2 of private investment.
“Structuring Defra’s capital as downside protection was fundamental to unlocking private finance at scale into what remains a relatively new asset class,” Fitton told AgFunderNews.
Taking a cue from renewables
Rather than acquiring land outright, the 12-year fund will partner with landowners and project developers, funding woodland creation, peatland restoration, and habitat projects across England. Revenues will come primarily from verified carbon credits and biodiversity units sold under offtake agreements, rather than from timber, farming, or land price appreciation.
Describing the model as “nature as infrastructure” helps lower the psychological barrier for institutional investors unfamiliar with natural capital, explains Fitton.
“We design the funds to make it look and feel and smell as much like a traditional infrastructure fund as possible, because the underlying investments do look a lot and live like infrastructure investment.”
Both share high upfront capital expenditure, multi-decade revenue streams, and a clear path from development through to the operational phase.
“We see the natural capital sector as following in the footsteps of those more established sectors,” explains Fitton. “This is a familiar structure of investment but in a new asset class: nature.”
The exit strategy borrows directly from renewable energy and what happened as solar and wind energy matured as asset classes. Finance Earth is targeting a five-year mark as a key inflection point when woodland and peatland projects typically hit their first carbon credit verification event.
At that point, the assets should become attractive to the so-called “YieldCo” funds that buy stabilized, operational assets and take on only market risk, not construction or development risk.
The fund will invest only in fully verified credits, sidestepping the more common practice of selling pre-verification carbon credits in UK voluntary markets. It is also one of the first funds to receive the Financial Conduct Authority’s new “Sustainability Impact” label.
Beyond England
Fitton acknowledges the challenges ahead. Natural capital remains a “loose term” covering everything from commercial timber to biodiversity credits, and the markets underpinning the fund’s revenues are still nascent. The fund is betting that high-integrity projects, particularly mixed native woodland rather than monoculture commercial forestry, will command a price premium as buyers become more discerning.
With its first close complete, Finance Earth is now deploying capital against an identified pipeline of over £100 million in projects.
Its ambitions also stretch beyond England, with future funds planned for Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland. These and other projects could lay groundwork for replicating the blended finance model in other jurisdictions where a public or philanthropic anchor investor is willing to absorb first-loss risk.
This week also saw the UK arm of investment firm Capital Continuum Advisers merge into Finance Earth to create what the company says is “one of the world’s leading specialized platforms for climate and nature investment.”
CCA UK brings its carbon and nature project structuring expertise into Finance Earth’s fund management capabilities, and the latter will take on CCA UK’s pipeline of carbon projects in Africa and Southeast Asia.
“This is a useful model that can be replicated elsewhere,” Fitton says. “Watch this space.”
Finance
UK financial regulator publishes landmark AI review
The UK’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) published a landmark review on Monday that proposes recommendations to regulate the impact of artificial intelligence (AI) on the financial decisions made by consumers.
The review, titled the Mills Review, anticipates that both consumers and firms will start delegating “more financial decision-making to AI systems,” including for agreements, initiating transactions, and executing decisions “within agreed parameters.” One of the key findings of the review outlined that while AI can help bridge advice gaps and “support growth,” there remain risks “associated with fraud, cyber security, and consumer harm.” Conducting the review, Sheldon Mills highlighted that “AI can also amplify risks: bias, discrimination, exclusion, opaque decision-making (particularly when multiple AI models interact), misleading or hallucinatory advice and erosion of consumer trust.”
The review stated that presently, one in five adults in the UK are “already open to AI making decisions for them,” particularly when decisions feel “complex or high stakes.” It found that roughly 26 percent of the population “trust general-purpose tools such as ChatGPT, Claude or Gemini for financial advice” with little awareness that such platforms provide no “formal routes to recourse” or protections.
Overall, the Mills Review identified four areas that it anticipates will be impacted by AI in the financial sector: “the transformation of firms,” “new consumer journeys,” “a reshaped competition landscape,” and “amplified financial crime and cyber risk.” The FCA projected the shift in how consumers and firms consult AI to take place by 2030.
The Mills Review put forth seven “priority” recommendations to be considered by the FCA Board. It recommended that any transitions to autonomous AI models be monitored and that regulatory frameworks and perimeters be adapted and secured. The review called for the strengthening of “system-wide coordination and oversight,” the scaling up of the FCA’s AI Lab to enable it to support AI models and innovation for agentic finance, and an “AI-enabled agentic supervisory model” to be built and adopted. Finally, it recommended that a trusted “public-interest AI-enabled financial capability service” be developed.
The FCA announced, in the press release, that it will launch an AI “good and poor practice publication” in late 2026.
Finance
Fayette County Public Schools Board of Education approves audit contract, new finance director position
LEXINGTON, Ky. (WKYT) – The Fayette County Public Schools Board of Education approved a one-year audit contract capped at $131,750 plus $225 per hour during a virtual meeting Monday, along with a new finance director job description.
The contract is with Mauldin & Jenkins Certified Public Accountants, an Atlanta-based firm, and covers the 2025-26 fiscal year and the restatement of the 2024-25 fiscal year and ancillary services through FY 2029-2030. The work is set to be completed by Nov. 15.
The board approved the contract in a 5-0 vote.
Audit contract details
Interim Chief Financial Officer Kyna Koch said the cost is already accounted for in the district’s budget.
“And is actually less than we expected given our current situation — we were thrilled with the bid,” Koch said.
Koch said she believes this is Mauldin & Jenkins’ first school district audit in Kentucky, but that the firm works with school districts of more than 100,000 students throughout the Southeast.
“Quite frankly when I spoke to the folks at KDE they were thrilled because we’re running kind of short of auditors who want to do school district audits — so all around I think this was a win-win for everyone,” Koch said.
New finance director position
The board also approved a new job description for the position of Director of Finance. Acting Superintendent Dr. Bill Bradford said the title will replace two associate director positions.
“Which will not only save the school district money but it’s also going to streamline our work and align internal controls to make room for a more efficient unit,” Bradford said.
Koch said the position will be posted as soon as possible following the board’s approval.
Closed session
The board went into closed session for more than an hour to discuss pending investigations that could lead to employee discipline. When the board returned, it took no action and adjourned the meeting.
Copyright 2026 WKYT. All rights reserved.
Finance
UK Watchdog Urged to Consider Broader Oversight of AI Financial Firms | PYMNTS.com
The UK’s financial regulator should consider expanding its oversight to cover advanced artificial intelligence models used in financial services, according to a review commissioned by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), as policymakers assess whether existing rules can keep pace with rapidly evolving AI technology.
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