Here’s what to know about profit for purpose

Here’s what to know about profit for purpose

Here’s what to know about profit for purpose

Turning surplus bread into pasta, or using tech to deliver healthcare in rural areas. These are just two of thousands of European business ideas making a real impact on people and the planet. While traditional venture capital may hesitate, dedicated impact investors are stepping in, valuing social and environmental outcomes alongside financial returns.

Billions are being mobilised globally for impact investments, including public funds and private capital. According to Impact Europe, a network for do-good investors, private direct and indirect investments reached €190bn by the end of 2024, more than double that of 2022. Worldwide, impact investments may be worth up to $1.57 trillion, according to the Global Impact Investing Network.

Those who invest for purpose over profit come in all shapes and sizes. Do-good investors have different risk appetites and focuses, backing everything from clean-energy schemes and affordable housing to firms improving access to healthcare or education. But they share one requirement: the impact of their money must be measurable.

Younger investors are increasingly forward-looking and determined to build a resilient, sustainable economy for the future.

AI was one of the most debated topics at this week’s Malmö Impact Summit, where hundreds of impact investors — from foundations and pension funds to development banks, charities and wealthy individuals — gathered in Sweden.

In recent years, artificial intelligence has emerged as a powerful tool for scaling social initiatives — enhancing impact measurement, boosting efficiency, and targeting funding more effectively.

Panel at Impact Week in Malmö, 19 November 2025.
Panel at Impact Week in Malmö, 19 November 2025. – Impact Europe

However, AI also requires a huge amount of energy, which comes as a climate trade-off for some impact investors focused on sustainability.

Data centres, the backbone of AI, already consumed around 415 terawatt‑hours (TWh) of electricity in 2024, or roughly 1.5% of global demand, according to the International Energy Agency. By 2030, global electricity use by data centres could more than double.

Conversations around how to mobilise AI and tech developments to serve people and the planet dominated many panels at the summit.

“There is a really emerging field that is also called ‘AI for good’, where you see AI-based or AI-related business models that can quickly analyse massive data volumes, and then also develop models that can create a direct and measurable social impact,” said Dr. Markus Freiburg, incoming chair in 2026 of Impact Europe.

AI technology is increasingly part of new initiatives. According to the latest figures from Dealroom’s latest State of Impact report, start-ups using AI technology to deliver affordable and clean energy are attracting the most investment, particularly those applying AI to energy trading and energy monitoring.

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