Climate focused PE funds are performing better than expected, and why in-house general counsels should care

Author Jon Coles
February 12, 2026

Climate focused private equity funds in North America are quietly defying long held assumptions about underperformance. Once perceived as niche strategies tethered to uncertain regulatory environments, these funds are now demonstrating competitive return profiles, and in some cases beating comparable non-climate vehicles. The shift is being driven by better technology, more sophisticated operating models, and a growing consumer and corporate preference for low carbon solutions. And for in-house general counsels, the implications stretch far beyond investment performance. 

According to PitchBook’s Climate PE Funds: Heating up or Cooling Down?, funds launched between 2016 and 2021 delivered slightly better overall returns than non-climate funds, particularly in lower performing segments, suggesting a degree of resilience in downturns. While differences dissipate when adjusting for vintage year and geography, the core takeaway remains- climate focused private equity no longer lags. It now performs on par with traditional strategies, disrupting long held assumptions that sustainability aligned investing requires sacrificing returns. 

At the same time, assets under management in the sector are expected to reach $563 billion by 2029. Despite a slowdown in fundraising over the past couple of years, largely due to broader macro uncertainty, capital is expected to accelerate again as performance stabilizes, regulatory drivers solidify, and institutional investors sharpen their climate commitments.

Why climate PE is outperforming expectations

1. Technology has hit an inflection point

Advances across renewables, low carbon energy, storage, industrial decarbonization, and electric vehicles have fundamentally changed the economics of climate focused sectors. Once expensive or unproven technologies now enjoy commercial maturity, scalable manufacturing, and improved efficiencies. For PE managers, this means better margins, lower deployment risk and more predictable exit paths. 

In particular:

  • Solar and wind costs have continued their long-term decline 
  • Battery storage has become critical infrastructure rather than an experimental addon 
  • Electric vehicle supply chains are more robust and diversified 

These shifts have opened pathways for value creation that didn’t exist a decade ago.

2. Renewables are beating fossil fuels on cost

Renewable energy is no longer simply “competitive”, it is increasingly the lowest cost option. Meanwhile, fossil fuel extraction costs have risen due to supply chain constraints, regulatory burdens and labor shortages. This creates a favorable backdrop for PE funds backing solar, wind, grid optimization, and distributed energy. 

The result: stronger earnings and better operating performance than anticipated during underwriting.

3. Consumers are voting with their wallets

Sustainability linked consumer behavior is now mainstream. Demand for environmentally responsible products has risen sharply, especially among younger demographics and corporate procurement teams seeking to meet internal climate targets. 

For climate PE, this means:

  • Faster adoption cycles 
  • More predictable revenue streams 
  • Higher valuations for companies that can demonstrate measurable emissions reductions

4. Policy, even when mixed, still pushes capital toward climate solutions

While the United States has seen political shifts and partial rollbacks of earlier climate policies, the long-term trend remains supportive. Geopolitical tensions and concerns about energy security have pushed governments to prioritize domestic clean energy capacity. Even policy volatility can create opportunities, as companies seek regulatory clarity and transition financing.

Why inhouse general counsels should care

General counsels increasingly operate at the intersection of risk, strategy, and governance. Climate PE’s rise has direct consequences for legal teams—whether advising a corporation partnering with a climate tech provider, participating in M&A, or navigating regulatory compliance.

As climate PE funds expand, their portfolio companies are scaling into mainstream markets—energy infrastructure, transportation, manufacturing, consumer goods and industrial services. For in-house GCs, this means a growing volume of commercial agreements, joint ventures, supply chain contracts, and IP licensing tied to climate aligned technologies. 

Legal teams need to understand the deal dynamics and risk profiles of these sectors, because climate tech is rapidly becoming part of core business strategy rather than a side initiative.

2. Regulatory complexity is rising

Even as US federal policy fluctuates, states, provinces and other global jurisdictions are tightening climate disclosure rules and incentivizing low carbon investments.

GCs must navigate:

  • Evolving emissions reporting requirements 
  • Environmental claims and greenwashing scrutiny 
  • Cross border regulatory fragmentation 
  • ESG related litigation risk

PE-backed climate companies often grow quickly and expand internationally, heightening exposure to regulatory regimes with steep penalties for noncompliance.

Climate related contracts increasingly involve specialized terms such as emissions reduction guarantees, carbon credit verification, technology performance thresholds, and multistakeholder financing structures. 

In-house GCs must ensure commercial teams fully understand the legal implications of these provisions, particularly around:

  • Warranties tied to emissions performance 
  • IP ownership of decarbonization technologies 
  • Longterm supply agreements involving new materials or energy sources 
  • Risk transfer and indemnities for technology underperformance 

As climate PE accelerates adoption of new technologies, contract sophistication rises accordingly. 

4. M&A activity is heating up

The combination of strong fund performance and market consolidation is increasing M&A activity across climate focused sectors. Many corporates are buying climate tech startups to meet sustainability goals, secure supply chains and modernize operations.

For GCs, this means:

  • More due diligence on novel technologies 
  • Greater scrutiny of regulatory exposure 
  • Integration challenges involving ESG data and reporting 
  • Heightened importance of cultural and reputational risk management

Understanding how climate assets are valued and governed will be essential for advising executive teams.

The growth of climate focused PE is reshaping legal hiring in three important ways.focused PE is reshaping legal hiring in three important ways.

1. Increased demand for regulatory and environmental expertise

Companies are hiring lawyers with backgrounds in:

  • Environmental law 
  • Energy regulation 
  • Clean energy project finance energy project finance 
  • Climate policy and compliance

GCs without this expertise internally are increasingly turning to specialized outside counsel.

2. Rising need for commercial lawyers fluent in technology and infrastructure

Climate PE portfolio companies often straddle software, engineering, and heavy industry. As a result, inhouse teams are seeking lawyers who understand:

  • Complex commercial contracting 
  • Data governance frameworks for energy systems governance frameworks for energy systems 
  • IP protection in climate tech innovation tech innovation 
  • Equipment, construction and engineering agreements

Hybrid legal technical skill sets are becoming highly valuable.

3. More inhouse roles embedded in sustainability functions

As climate initiatives become enterprise priorities, companies are placing legal counsel directly into ESG, sustainability or energy transition teams. These roles focus on:transition teams.

These roles focus on:

  • Compliance with emerging disclosure rules 
  • Claims substantiation and marketing review 
  • Negotiating carbon credit or renewable energy certificate agreements credit or renewable energy certificate agreements 
  • Evaluating strategic climate tech partnerships tech partnerships

Legal is becoming a strategic partner rather than simply a risk gatekeeper.

Across the United States and Canada, the shift toward clean energy and growth in AI‑driven power demand will significantly expand legal teams, especially in:

  • Regulatory and compliance law
  • Project finance and infrastructure transactions
  • Labor and employment law
  • Real estate and construction law
  • Environmental and safety compliance
  • Government contracting
  • Intellectual property law

Organizations that strategically expand their legal capabilities now, especially those supporting both technology and energy operations, will be best positioned to manage the risks and opportunities emerging from North America’s evolving energy landscape.

How Taylor Root can help you hire a General Counsel for your energy company

Taylor Root is a leading legal recruitment consultancy with a strong presence in the US and Canadian markets, offering tailored solutions for hiring exceptional General Counsel’s. If you are looking to add an in-house attorney to your team, please submit a brief and a member of our team will be in touch.

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