Minderoo Foundation’s FY25 Impact Report reveals a philanthropy model built not on generosity alone, but on strategy, evidence and long-term commitment.
By any measure, the figures in Minderoo Foundation’s FY25 Impact Report are substantial, yet the real story lies not in the scale of investment but in the intention behind it. This is philanthropy designed with the discipline of enterprise and the patience of long-term capital, a model that treats social and environmental challenges not as temporary projects but as systems requiring sustained structural change.
“Behind every figure in this report is a real outcome,” says Chief Executive Officer John Hartman. “A child accessing healthcare safely, a community rebuilding after crisis, a partner with the backing to drive lasting change.” It is a statement that captures Minderoo’s philosophy clearly, that impact is measured not by generosity alone but by endurance and accountability.
For business leaders accustomed to balancing risk, return and responsibility, Minderoo’s approach feels increasingly familiar. Resources are directed where evidence points to scalable results, partners closest to the challenge are provided with long-term certainty rather than short-term relief, and from July 2025 new grant agreements began adopting Pay What It Takes principles, recognising that meaningful impact cannot be delivered on underfunded operational models. It marks a shift away from transactional philanthropy toward partnership built on shared responsibility for outcomes.
In Australia, this strategy is evident in work that addresses root causes rather than symptoms. Partnerships with the Ngangk Yira Institute for Change are strengthening culturally safe healthcare pathways for Aboriginal children and families, while the Thrive by Five campaign is driving national reform in early childhood education, improving access, affordability and quality at a time when workforce participation and national productivity depend on it. Minderoo’s Cost of Late Intervention research revealed that failing to identify health and developmental issues early now costs Australia $22.3 billion annually, reframing early childhood investment not as social spending but as an economic imperative.
Across the Indo-Pacific, urgency is paired with endurance. Minderoo has stood alongside partners responding to conflict and disaster in Papua New Guinea while continuing long-term efforts to eliminate cervical cancer across the region, combining rapid response with sustained prevention. This balance of immediacy and persistence has become a defining feature of the Foundation’s operating model.
Global engagement has followed naturally, shaped by the belief that international decisions inevitably influence outcomes at home. At the United Nations General Assembly, COP30 and the UN Oceans Conference, Minderoo has brought evidence, lived experience and research to the centre of discussions on climate action, emerging technologies, humanitarian reform and ocean protection. The objective is not presence for visibility but participation for influence, ensuring that data and human experience guide policy direction.
Evidence remains the cornerstone of how Minderoo drives change. Research on Australian attitudes toward artificial intelligence is informing national policy discussions at a critical moment, while the Plastic Health Aware Dashboard has translated complex science into practical tools for government and industry decision-makers. Walk Free’s Global Estimates of Modern Slavery, now recognised with an international research award, continue to shape supply-chain legislation and corporate responsibility frameworks across the world. In each case, data is used not merely to describe problems but to unlock decisive action.
Perhaps the most distinctive element of Minderoo’s model lies in how it deploys capital. Through its $250 million Strategic Impact Fund, the Foundation invests in scalable solutions that deliver both impact and risk-adjusted returns, with more than $130 million committed across gender equality, natural ecosystems, thriving communities and plastics and human health. Investments in women-led venture capital, ocean restoration funds, sustainable materials innovation and blue-economy enterprises sit alongside catalytic capital designed to de-risk opportunities for institutional investors and unlock private finance at scale. To date, Minderoo has committed around $150 million to impact investments, positioning it among Australia’s largest impact investors and demonstrating how philanthropic capital can crowd in commercial capital for public good.
Financial discipline underpins this ambition , corporate services spending has been reduced to less than seven per cent of total expenditure, the corpus has grown to $7 billion with $3.3 billion invested in diversified portfolios, and the Board has approved the Foundation’s largest-ever budget of more than $400 million for FY26 alongside a three-year $1.1 billion commitment aligned to long-term systems outcomes under its 2030 Strategy. For C-suite leaders, the parallels to long-horizon corporate investment planning are clear.
Recent initiatives reinforce the breadth of Minderoo’s agenda, from early-years development programs across Western Australia to landmark investment in the Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts, humanitarian aid in Gaza and Ukraine, global gender equality partnerships, high-seas conservation initiatives and citizen-science ocean data programs reshaping how marine ecosystems are monitored. Each partnership reflects a consistent logic: back what works, stay the course when change is difficult, and take responsibility for whether impact endures.
As the Foundation moves into 2026, Hartman describes a clarity of purpose and an impatience for progress. The challenges ahead remain significant, spanning climate instability, inequality, humanitarian crises and technological disruption, yet the thesis remains steady that with strong partners, disciplined focus and a long-term view, meaningful change is not only possible but essential to forging a fair future.
For business leaders navigating complex global risk and rising expectations of corporate responsibility, Minderoo’s FY25 Impact Report offers more than a record of philanthropy. It presents a case study in how capital, evidence and partnership can be intentionally structured to drive systemic change at scale, proving that the architecture of modern philanthropy is no longer built on goodwill alone but on strategy, accountability and enduring commitment.


