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Forest Invest

Forest Invest

By: Shauna Matkovich
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Meet experts in forest investment from different corners of the forestry asset class. From investors to entrepreneurs, market players to service providers. Tune in to hear stories from the trenches, insights and best practice guidance to build your toolbox for creating profitable and impactful forest investments.

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Shauna Matkovich
Economics Personal Finance
Episodes
  • Returns from Restoring the Forest Soil Microbiome – with Josh Parrish of Funga
    Dec 8 2025


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    Funga

    Josh Parrish (LinkedIn)


    Today, I’m joined by Josh Parrish, Chief Growth Officer at Funga.

    Josh explains how restoring the forest soil microbiome with native mycorrhizal fungi can meaningfully improve tree survival and boost growth rates in intensively managed Southern pine plantations, without relying on synthetic inputs.


    We explore the science and technology behind Funga’s approach, including DNA sequencing, machine learning analysis of fungal communities, nursery inoculation methods, and large-scale field trials across 12 US states. Josh also explains why degraded below-ground biodiversity is one of the most overlooked risks in modern forestry and long-term forest investment.


    Josh shares early evidence showing up to 30 percent gains in productivity, outlines Funga’s carbon removal business model, and describes how their 30-year lease structure works for landowners. We end with a discussion about what high-profile carbon removal buyers such as Netflix may signal for the future of regenerative forestry and nature-based climate solutions.


    After a harvest, we see about a 75% reduction in below-ground biodiversity in these pine systems" ... “What we’re targeting—and seeing—is approximately a 30% lift in productivity over time from restoring the microbiome.


    Chapters

    00:00] Intro and welcome

    [00:19] Meet Josh Parrish, Chief Growth Officer at Funga

    [00:32] Favourite tree: the white oak

    [02:01] Josh’s background and journey to Funga

    [04:16] What is the forest soil microbiome?

    [04:42] Mycorrhizal fungi explained

    [07:11] Why below-ground biodiversity matters

    [08:22] Why nobody talks about soil health

    [09:48] Technology behind Funga’s approach

    [11:00] What happens to forest soils after harvest

    [14:14] Risks of a degraded microbiome

    [16:19] How landowners can assess soil health

    [17:25] How Funga inoculates seedlings

    [18:25] The nursery partnership and process

    [21:10] How prescriptions for inoculation are created

    [23:11] How to identify inoculated roots

    [24:02] Control vs. inoculated seedlings

    [27:00] Early results and productivity gains

    [29:45] Restoration vs synthetic inputs

    [30:19] Funga’s business model

    [31:56] The 30-year carbon lease

    [33:02] Carbon methodology and enhanced sequestration

    [37:02] Partnership with Netflix

    [40:02] Scaling awareness with landowners

    [41:32] What’s next for Funga

    [43:31] Advice for new forest investors

    [44:36] Closing


    Production team

    Founding Director and Host: Shauna Matkovich - The ForestLink

    Producer and Editor: Magdalena Laas - Unscripted Creatives


    Sound library

    Nature by MaxKoMusic/Soundcloud

    Sopwell Woodlands and Scohaboy Bog SAC, Cloughjordan, Co Tipperary, IRELAND by wild_rumpus/Soundcloud


    Sign up now for the ForestLink’s newsletter, where you’ll receive technical advice, reflections, and best-practice guidance to support you with your forest-linked investment strategy or business straight to your inbox.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    45 mins
  • Development Finance for Emerging Market Forestry – with Anton Timpers of FMO
    Dec 1 2025


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    Anton Timpers (LinkedIn)

    FMO


    Today on Forest Invest, I am joined by Anton Timpers, Manager of Agriculture, Food and Forestry at FMO, the Dutch entrepreneurial development bank.

    Anton explains how FMO approaches forestry as part of its wider agribusiness and sustainable land-use strategy. We discuss how the bank invests across the full forestry life cycle, from early-stage plantation projects to mature industrial forestry in emerging markets. Anton also outlines why FMO continues to support sustainable plantation forestry as a cornerstone of the future bio-based economy.


    We explore the role of blended finance and concessional capital in crowding in private investment, and how development finance institutions can help reduce risk in frontier and emerging markets. Anton highlights the environmental and social safeguards FMO applies to avoid deforestation, ensure certification, and prevent greenwashing in forestry projects.


    Anton also shares FMO’s ambition to invest up to 1 billion euros in forestry and sustainable land use by 2030. We talk about the challenge of finding truly bankable forestry projects in fragmented markets across Latin America, Africa and Asia, and what potential investees need to have in place before approaching a development finance institution like FMO.


    We are convinced about the opportunities in emerging markets, and we hope that with global supply shifting, people will consider these locations more seriously.

    Chapters

    [00:23] Meet today’s guest: Anton Timpers (FMO)

    [00:34] Favourite tree

    [01:02] Anton’s background and intro to FMO

    [02:05] Building FMO’s forestry focus

    [02:33] What makes FMO’s approach unique

    [03:58] Investing across the asset maturity spectrum

    [04:45] Co-investors and partners

    [06:03] Appetite from commercial investors

    [06:32] Plantation forestry vs natural forests

    [08:20] Conservation, restoration and carbon risks

    [10:13] Safeguards, certification and due diligence

    [11:29] Why forestry moved into the agri team

    [13:04] Standards, safeguards and risk frameworks

    [14:26] FMO’s €1 billion forestry goal

    [15:53] Main obstacles and fragmented markets

    [17:49] Industrial demand and medium-sized enterprises

    [20:01] Illegal logging and market realities

    [21:47] Small global community of forestry investors

    [23:21] What potential investees should know

    [25:14] What to prepare before approaching FMO

    [27:07] Direct equity vs fund-led co-investments

    [27:50] COP discussions, pledges and Brazil focus

    [29:39] Carbon credits, accounting and market gaps

    [31:03] Positive momentum from COP

    [32:06] Geographic focus: LatAm, Africa, Asia

    [33:29] Concessional capital and early-stage funding

    [35:36] How to approach FMO with an opportunity

    [36:00] Final reflections

    [36:11] Actionable advice for first-time forest investors


    Production team

    Founding Director and Host: Shauna Matkovich - The ForestLink

    Producer and Editor: Magdalena Laas - Unscripted Creatives

    Nature by MaxKoMusic/Soundcloud

    Sopwell Woodlands and Scohaboy Bog SAC, Cloughjordan, Co Tipperary, IRELAND by wild_rumpus/Soundcloud

    Sign up now for the ForestLink’s newsletter, where you’ll receive technical advice, reflections, and best-practice guidance to support you with your forest-linked investment strategy or business straight to your inbox.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    39 mins
  • A Social Impact NZ Forest Carbon Investment Model – with Blair Jamieson
    Nov 26 2025


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    Tāmata Hauhā

    Blair Jamieson on LinkedIn


    We’ve proven that it works — that you can invest in Māori land, generate real returns, and create meaningful change.


    In today’s episode, I’m joined by Blair Jamieson, CEO and Co-Founder of Tāmata Hauhā, a New Zealand–based company leading the way in Māori land investment, carbon forestry, and sustainable land-use transformation. Blair shares how his background in government shaped the creation of this mission-driven organisation, which helps Indigenous Māori landowners unlock economic opportunities by developing under-utilised land into long-term, intergenerational assets that generate both social impact and financial returns.

    We explore the realities and complexities of Māori land ownership and why building trust requires what Blair calls a “thousand cups of tea” approach — patient, relationship-centred engagement grounded in cultural respect. Blair explains how Tāmata Hauhā blends cultural integrity with commercial pragmatism, collaborating with more than 70 Indigenous groups to establish forests that deliver economic, community, climate, and biodiversity benefits.

    Blair also breaks down New Zealand’s Emissions Trading Scheme (NZ ETS), offering rare insights into how this compliance-based carbon market provides credibility, transparency, and liquidity unmatched by most voluntary carbon systems. We discuss the company’s investment model, expected returns, and its expansion into the Chatham Islands, where carbon forestry is reshaping remote communities and supporting nature-based climate solutions.


    Chapters

    00:00 – Welcome & Introduction

    00:23 – Meet Blair Jamieson & Tāmata Hauhā

    01:21 – What the Company Does

    02:25 – Blair’s Background in Government

    03:17 – Forestry as an Economic Enabler for Māori Land

    04:12 – Working with 70+ Indigenous Groups

    05:05 – Community Impact & Commercial Returns

    06:11 – Māori Land Ownership Explained

    09:39 – The “Thousand Cups of Tea” Approach

    12:39 – Māori Leadership Within the Company

    14:29 – History of Radiata & NZ Forestry

    17:35 – Moving Beyond Pine Monoculture

    20:06 – Nurse Crops & Native Regeneration

    22:27 – NZ Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS) Overview

    24:30 – How NZU Compliance Markets Work

    31:51 – Carbon Prices & Market Dynamics

    33:38 – Investment Model Explained

    35:26 – Chatham Islands Projects

    39:35 – Māori vs Moriori: Cultural Context

    41:48 – Main Risks: Politics, Not Integrity

    45:12 – What’s Next for Tāmata Hauhā

    47:17 – Scaling & International Interest

    47:51 – Final Advice for New Forestry Investors


    Production team

    Founding Director and Host: Shauna Matkovich - The ForestLink

    Producer and Editor: Magdalena Laas - Unscripted Creatives

    Sound library

    Nature by MaxKoMusic/Soundcloud

    Sopwell Woodlands and Scohaboy Bog SAC, Cloughjordan, Co Tipperary, IRELAND by wild_rumpus/Soundcloud

    Sign up now for the ForestLink’s newsletter, where you’ll receive technical advice, reflections, and best-practice guidance to support you with your forest-linked investment strategy or business straight to your inbox.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    51 mins
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