Holland Metropole partner Achmea Real Estate has launched a new impact fund aimed at acquiring older rental homes and making them more energy-efficient and sustainable.

The Achmea Dutch Residential Impact Fund (ADRIF) is the first of its kind in the Netherlands and aims to reduce the number of rental homes with an energy label of D or worse. Approximately one million rental properties in the Netherlands fall into this category.

The funds will be used to purchase older, poorly insulated rental homes and make them more sustainable. These will primarily be housing complexes owned by large investors and housing corporations looking to sell part of their portfolio, or private investors with reasonably large portfolios. The fund will not purchase homes from individual owners.

Pension funds

Achmea has invested €50 million into the fund and invited other institutional investors, such as pension funds, to participate, with the goal of reaching €1 billion by 2030.

“Together, we face an enormous challenge in making existing homes in the Netherlands more sustainable,” said Achmea executive board member Daphne de Kluis. “We need to act quickly, and this requires considerable investment. Our investment is just the first step.”

Achmea plans to make the homes Paris Proof. The roofs, façades, and floors will be insulated, and HR++ glass will be installed throughout the properties. Additionally, gas-fired central heating systems will be replaced by electric heat pumps or connections to district heating schemes.

Cost to tenants

These measures, Achmea states, will lead to significantly lower CO2 emissions per home. Tenants will also benefit from more comfortable homes and significantly lower energy bills.

Tenants will experience a slight increase in rent to cover the costs, but when energy bills are taken into account, their total housing costs will remain the same or decrease slightly, provided energy consumption and household size remain unchanged.

“This means that the project will not only benefit the climate but also contribute to keeping housing affordable,” Daphne de Kluis said.

Annual return

The fund aims for an average annual return of 6% for participating investors, comprising direct rental income and the expected increase in property value. This, according to Boris van der Gijp, co-chairman of Achmea Real Estate, will enable institutional investors to contribute to meeting the Paris climate targets “while achieving an appropriate financial return.”

Holland Metropole partner Bouwinvest and two of the Netherlands’ largest pension funds launched their own social impact fund in December 2023 to boost the stock of affordable and care-related homes in the Netherlands.

The civil service pension fund ABP, one of the largest funds in the world, has committed €250 million, while the building sector fund bpfBOUW has contributed €150 million to the partnership. The focus of the Social Impact Real Estate Partnership is on housing for groups in the Netherlands who are currently struggling to find a home.