Unlocking capital for climate resilience
The Panra Fund aims to support more than 1.8 million farmers, 60% of them women, across 5 million hectares in adopting climate-resilient practices over the next decade.
By financing smallholder-focused agribusinesses, the fund seeks to reduce climate vulnerability, strengthen adaptive capacity, and improve ecosystem health. ERA-linked revenues provide direct financial incentives for farmers, advancing food security, gender equity, and measurable adaptation outcomes in some of Southeast Asia’s most climate-exposed communities.
Our expertise in rural communities enables us to deliver flexible investment in financial assets that are nature-based, scientifically sound, and driven by local communities.
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In SE Asia, 75% of vulnerable populations reside in rural areas, where agriculture is their primary source of income. By 2050, 20% of the region’s population will face food insecurity due to a projected 10% decline in agricultural productivity.
The world’s 600 million smallholder farmers (100 million of which reside in SE Asia), working on less than two hectares of land, produce roughly 30–34% of the global food supply yet, most financing available to smallholder farmers is poorly suited to their reality. Without measures to help smallholder farmers adapt to climate change, it is estimated that global agricultural productivity will decrease by 17% by 2050.
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80% of Southeast Asia’s population lives in coastal or low-lying areas, which are increasingly threatened by sea-level rise, cyclones, flooding, and heatwaves. The region also contains 40% of the world’s coral reefs and 35% of the world’s mangroves - critical ecosystems that are under urgent threat.
Coastal communities in low lying regions and in small island states are some of the most vulnerable to climate change worldwide. Yet adaptation finance dedicated to help coastal communities conserve, restore and protect coastal and marine habitats is falling critically short of what is needed.