green finance Archives - Focus - China Britain Business Council https://focus.cbbc.org/tag/green-finance/ FOCUS is the content arm of The China-Britain Business Council Wed, 23 Apr 2025 09:49:21 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 https://focus.cbbc.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/focus-favicon.jpeg green finance Archives - Focus - China Britain Business Council https://focus.cbbc.org/tag/green-finance/ 32 32 China releases its first green sovereign bonds in London https://focus.cbbc.org/china-releases-its-first-green-sovereign-bonds-in-london/ Mon, 14 Apr 2025 12:30:00 +0000 https://focus.cbbc.org/?p=15721 Experts say the green sovereign bonds will attract international investment in China’s green transition, bringing private funding and boosting international climate cooperation, writes Jiang Mengnan for Dialogue Earth On 2 April, China’s Ministry of Finance debuted its first ever green sovereign bonds on the London Stock Exchange. The money raised will go towards projects in China in sectors such as clean transportation, marine conservation and recycling. The event makes China…

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Experts say the green sovereign bonds will attract international investment in China’s green transition, bringing private funding and boosting international climate cooperation, writes Jiang Mengnan for Dialogue Earth

On 2 April, China’s Ministry of Finance debuted its first ever green sovereign bonds on the London Stock Exchange. The money raised will go towards projects in China in sectors such as clean transportation, marine conservation and recycling.

The event makes China the latest of more than 50 jurisdictions to issue green sovereign bonds, Xie Wenhong, head of the China Programme at the Climate Bonds Initiative (CBI), told Dialogue Earth. The industry had long been looking forward to China following suit, he said.

Dialogue Earth consulted several experts regarding the launch. Broadly, they welcomed it as a move that would help spur international investment in green projects in China, and offer the country an opportunity to deepen climate cooperation with the UK and EU. China could also include green investment plans in its new climate action plan under the Paris Agreement, they said.

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How significant was the bond issuance?

Governments issue green sovereign bonds to raise funds for environmental protection and green development. The money is often invested in areas such as renewable energy, low-carbon transport, green buildings and conservation. It supports national green-development strategies and attracts international investment to projects related to sustainability.

What are the different types of bonds?

China’s green sovereign bonds issue in London was worth RMB 6 billion (GBP 624.38 million). Of this, half have a 3-year maturity at 1.88% interest, and the other half a 5-year maturity at 1.93%.

For comparison, in 2016 China issued RMB 3 billion of ordinary sovereign bonds in London. Xie explained that it is normal for green sovereign bonds issues to be comparatively large. Germany, for example, issued USD 7.7 billion of green bonds in 2020, alongside ordinary sovereign bonds to the same value.

However, Xie notes that consideration needs to be given to the demand for green funds, and whether it will be possible to use all the money raised. The first ever green sovereign bond was a USD 800 million 5-year bond issued by Poland in 2016, according to a report by the CBI. EU nations, including France, Germany and Hungary, followed suit, along with emerging economies such as Chile, Indonesia and Thailand. In 2017, France issued USD 7.5 billion worth of 22-year green sovereign bonds and has since “tapped”, or increased, the size of the issue to USD 29.5 billion. In 2020, Egypt issued USD 750 million of 5-year green sovereign bonds, the report notes.

China’s debut of RMB 6 billion (USD 824 million) is not particularly large. Mao Xuxin, head of the Bank of China’s London Research Centre, told Dialogue Earth it was understandable for China to keep its first green sovereign bond issue relatively small as it would lead to a higher ratio of bids to sales. According to Xinhua News Agency, the London bonds “spurred strong demand” from international investors. This was despite the interest rates being lower than those of regular government bonds issued in Hong Kong at a similar time, with a similar maturity length. In the end, the bids were 6.9 times greater than the bonds available, Xinhua reported.

Issuing an RMB-denominated bond in London has another advantage for China: it helps internationalise the currency, says Zhang Chuanjie, an environmental, social and governance (ESG) senior researcher at the Bank of China’s London branch. Growth in green finance, Zhang explained, is seen as a way to drive that process, within which the UK is a key location.

“Globally, the UK has always been an important site for the RMB foreign exchange spot market. After Hong Kong, London and Singapore are the two most important international centres of RMB business,” he said.

A focus on climate adaptation in the use of funds

In February, the Ministry of Finance published a framework for issuing green sovereign bonds. It specified possible uses of the funds, including direct investments in projects, contributions to project running costs, support for local governments, and tax rebates. The catalogue of eligible projects refers to an existing list for green bonds, with six major categories:

  • Clean transportation
  • Sustainable water resources and wastewater management
  • Sustainable management and restoration of biological and land resources
  • Restoration of marine environments
  • Prevention of pollution
  • Resource recycling and reuse

“At present, renewable-energy projects – wind and solar power – are not on the list,” Xie observed. “In contrast, a large number of sectors related to ecological conservation and restoration have been incorporated into the framework.” He believes this may signal the emergence of a new trend: using fiscal tools and the bond market to finance projects focused on climate adaptation and resilience.

Sean Kidney, CEO of the CBI, told Dialogue Earth: “The framework is meeting the requirements of China’s national ‘taxonomy’, the Green [Bond Endorsed] Projects Catalogue. That is perfect for sending the right signals to the market.”

Making national climate plans investable

The green transition is a vast project, and the most important aspects of it – climate actions and the energy transition – are facing huge funding gaps. A recent report from the World Economic Forum puts demand for climate finance up to 2030 at USD 9 trillion a year, increasing to USD 10 trillion a year from 2031 to 2050.

A report from the consultancy Oliver Wyman found that China will need RMB 3.5 trillion a year in green finance from 2020 to 2060. Current policy would see an estimated RMB 2.4 trillion of that come from government, leaving a RMB 1.1 trillion gap to fill, the reports states. Market reports have shown that the lack of private investment has consistently been a problem.

Sovereign debt is backed by the state. This means lower risk, making it more attractive for some investors. Green sovereign bonds are, therefore, a good way to leverage private investment in national or regional green transitions. In 2019, the CBI’s Green Bond European Investor Survey found an appetite for more green bonds from sovereign issuers.

Sovereign bonds can also catalyse the corporate bond market. A working paper from the International Monetary Fund found that “the number and the size of corporate green bond issuance increase more in a jurisdiction after the sovereign debut”.

The same research found the effect was strongest in countries with stronger climate policies. That is, alignment between green sovereign bonds and national policies is more likely to drive green investment by the private sector.

Sovereign bonds aligned with national strategies are generally more attractive, said Thomas Dillon, head of sovereign ESG at Aviva Investors, the UK’s biggest investment firm, in a seminar.

Antonina Scheer agrees. She is a policy fellow at the London School of Economics (LSE)’s Transition Pathway Initiative Centre (TPI Centre). The LSE is the academic partner of the investor-led TPI, which aims to support companies and investors in aligning with the low-carbon transition. Scheer told Dialogue Earth that, to encourage private investors to participate in climate finance and investment actions, it is worth considering how investment frameworks and standards can align with national strategies.

Scheer noted that incorporating investment plans into the updated Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) “could also boost investor confidence and drive more private climate investment”. Under the Paris Agreement, signatories should have submitted updated NDCs in February – but most countries, including China, have not. Countries that haven’t yet finalised their NDCs could still include investment needs and plans in those documents.

International cooperation

In theory, it doesn’t matter where you issue sovereign debt – international investors will always be able to buy it. But, says Mao, launching in London draws more attention. “Issuing bonds in London helps China attract international investors, and offers the City a chance to diversify its offering of green financial products and distinguish itself from Wall Street,” Mao added. The Bank of China’s London branch also plans to issue new sustainability bonds this year, in both RMB and GBP, Zhang noted.

Kidney told Dialogue Earth that usually, countries tend to issue their green sovereign bonds at home, and this is the first time another country has done so in London. “China is doing it specifically to underline the green underpinnings of the UK-China climate dialogue, i.e. for political purposes,” he said, welcoming the move. The UK government recently announced that China and the UK are set to restart formal climate talks, with China’s environment minister to visit London and the talks to become institutionalised for the first time.

According to a Bloomberg report, China’s choice of London to issue green sovereign bonds “will test appetite among international investors to shift climate bets to the world’s top polluter” and is aimed at “showcasing the nation’s green leadership credentials as the US retreats under President Donald Trump”.

Experts who spoke with Dialogue Earth all mentioned the effect of the change in administration at the White House and agreed this could be an opportunity for better climate cooperation between China and the UK, and China and the EU. Speaking to the Financial Times, Adair Turner, chair of the Energy Transitions Commission, said that China, the EU and the UK should form a climate coalition of “the world apart from the US” in response to the US retreat under President Trump. If China’s first green sovereign bonds are successful, there are hopes they will result in more climate investment both in the country and internationally.

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This article was originally published by Dialogue Earth

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Explained: China & the UK’s green finance initiatives https://focus.cbbc.org/how-are-the-uk-and-china-collaborating-in-green-finance/ Tue, 10 Jan 2023 07:30:01 +0000 https://focus.cbbc.org/?p=11546 The UK finance sector is well positioned to take advantage of the surge in activity around models of green finance in China, and its use as an enabler of green growth The news that the UK saw its warmest year on record in 2022 – and the prediction that this year could be even hotter – is yet another reminder of the urgent need to enable a low-carbon future. One…

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The UK finance sector is well positioned to take advantage of the surge in activity around models of green finance in China, and its use as an enabler of green growth

The news that the UK saw its warmest year on record in 2022 – and the prediction that this year could be even hotter – is yet another reminder of the urgent need to enable a low-carbon future. One of the many ways that this can be achieved is by pushing green finance into the mainstream.

2021 saw China become the world’s second-largest green bond market according to HSBC (issuing over RMB 600 billion of green bonds, a 180% increase on 2020), as the country rolled out funding to support the vast array of clean and renewable infrastructural projects that will be required to meet its ambitious net zero targets. The UK financial sector, for its part, has played a world-leading role in developing such instruments from their inception, and is well-placed to work together with Chinese partners in pursuing common goals.

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Green finance can be defined as financial regulations, standards, products or investments that pursue environmental goals, including climate change adaptation and mitigation, and biodiversity. Over the past decade, the UK and China have established strong partnerships in the field of green finance, becoming world leaders in responding to the transition to a green economy. In a speech in London at City Week 2022 last April, Chinese Ambassador Zheng Zeguang spoke of the “broad space for China-UK cooperation on green development” and noted that a March 2022 conversation between President Xi Jinping and then Prime Minister Boris Johnson had highlighted cooperation in green financial services and the digital economy.

The UK-China Green Finance Centre, co-established by the City of London and the Green Finance Committee of the China Society for Finance and Banking, has spearheaded UK-China collaboration in green finance, and continues to serve as a key platform for leading industry and policy experts to develop market-led solutions to help scale up green finance in both countries – as well as globally.

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At the Second Belt and Road Forum for International Cooperation held in Beijing in 2019, the UK-China Green Finance Taskforce (UKCGFC) announced the formation of the Secretariat for the Green Investment Principles for the Belt and Road (GIP), and the first list of signatories, including HSBC. The goal of the GIP is to encourage and assist signatories to better integrate environmental considerations into the decision-making and implementation processes of their investments in the region. Today, the number of GIP signatories stands at 40, with overall assets amounting to over $48 trillion worldwide.

The UKCGFC is supported by the UK Government through the China-UK PACT (Partnering for Accelerated Climate Transitions) programme. Since it launched in 2018, UK PACT has funded eight projects in China with the aim of helping the country reach its goal of reaching carbon neutrality by 2060. The newest round of projects, which started in 2021, includes a project to help financial institutions make greener decisions through climate-related disclosure and transparency, and “a project to improve the uptake of Environmental, Social and Corporate Governance (ESG) measures by the Chinese investment community, as well as to accelerate finance transition through the creation of a China-UK leadership forum, jointly led by the City of London Corporation and the Beijing Institute of Green Finance and Sustainability (BIFS).”

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In terms of specific financial support, the London Stock Exchange’s Green Economy Mark identifies listed companies and funds contributing to the global green economy by addressing key environmental objectives such as climate mitigation and adaptation, waste and pollution reduction and transitioning to a circular economy. More than 100 companies and funds with a combined market cap of $140 billion have received the Mark since its launch in 2019. In 2020, Yangtze Power became the first Chinese issuer to receive the London Stock Exchange’s Green Economy Mark, certifying that the company generates more than 50% of its revenues from green products or services, according to FTSE Russell’s Green Revenues Data Model.

In November 2021, the Bank of China listed $2.2 billion in sustainable bonds on the London Stock Exchange. The bonds include the Sustainability Re-Linked Bond (SRLB), which will fund loan projects linked to sustainable development in industries such as tourism, trade, manufacturing and warehousing.

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COP26: Cross-border collaboration in green finance https://focus.cbbc.org/cop26-cross-border-collaboration-in-green-finance/ Fri, 05 Nov 2021 07:30:52 +0000 https://focus.cbbc.org/?p=8876 In this latest article in our series on COP26, we examine the impact of climate change and net zero policies on the finance and banking industries, and how companies like HSBC and the London Stock Exchange are funding and enabling green financial solutions China’s energy consumption mix currently relies heavily on coal, but China has demonstrated its determination to shift to more renewable sources of energy – investing  $83.4 billion…

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In this latest article in our series on COP26, we examine the impact of climate change and net zero policies on the finance and banking industries, and how companies like HSBC and the London Stock Exchange are funding and enabling green financial solutions

China’s energy consumption mix currently relies heavily on coal, but China has demonstrated its determination to shift to more renewable sources of energy – investing  $83.4 billion in renewables in 2019, almost as much as the US, Japan, Germany, France and the UK combined.

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At the same time, China’s Central Bank (PBoC) is driving more climate-friendly regulations. The Green Bond Endorsed Project Catalogue was updated in April 2021 to better align with global standards, and now the so-called clean coal and secondary oil and gas extraction projects will no longer qualify for fundraising via green bonds. We are also seeing efforts co-chaired by China and the EU under the auspices of the EU International Platform on Sustainable Finance to work towards a “Common Ground” Taxonomy to help investors to be able to determine which projects and activities are sustainable.

The PBoC is also considering how to provide low-cost funds for carbon emission reduction, as well as promoting and building green finance pilot zones. Lastly, a national unified carbon emissions trading market was established in July 2021 to contribute to the effective control and gradual reduction of carbon emissions in China and to the achievement of green and low-carbon development. All these steps provide opportunities for international cooperation which China is actively promoting, including co-chairing a G20 Sustainable Finance Research Group alongside the US.

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Opportunities and challenges in the China market

China’s carbon neutralisation pledge and the delivery of its net zero commitments have pushed green finance much higher up the agenda. The development of China’s green finance capacity still needs to progress alongside the setting of its green finance standards, bringing them more in line with international standards where appropriate, and many have encouraged more disclosure of carbon footprints for invested projects as well as possible incentives to spur innovation in green finance products. In addition to the above efforts to develop climate-related opportunities, China’s prudential regulators, along with other members of the Network for Greening the Financial System (NGFS) will continue to work on the effective management of climate-related risks. This will include the development of stress tests for the stability of the financial sector against environmental and climate-related credit risk.

Given the huge scale of investment required, public funding alone will never be able to achieve carbon neutrality, and China’s policy-makers will need therefore to encourage the rapid mobilisation of private sources of capital. As action on climate change becomes an increasing priority for China’s policy-makers over the next decade and the Chinese market continues to open, so the opportunities for overseas investment and financial institutions in China’s green finance markets will grow.

Those banks and institutions that fail to transition to net zero will increasingly risk finding stranded assets on their balance sheets and in their investment portfolios. They may also face legal “liability” risks for undermining efforts to transition, or for failing to declare accurately their ‘green’ exposures.

The UK-China Green Finance Taskforce is a long-standing partnership between the City of London Corporation and China’s Green Finance Committee of the China Society for Finance and Banking. It will continue to serve as an important platform to drive green finance growth in the UK and China, as well as globally. — Alderman Willian Russell, 692nd Lord Mayor of the City of London

Creating opportunities for cross-border collaboration

Improving the visibility of and access to capital for green and sustainable commercial activities will be key to achieving the lofty goals set by the UK and China in the future.

The UK-China Green Finance Taskforce, co-established by the City of London Corporation and China Green Finance Committee, as part of the outcome from the 2017 UK-China Economic and Financial Dialogue, spearheaded UK-China collaboration in green finance over the past 5 years and continues to serve as a key platform for leading industry and policy experts to develop market-led solutions to help scale up green finance in both countries as well as globally.

At the Second Belt and Road Forum for International Cooperation held in Beijing in 2019, the Taskforce announced the formation of the Secretariat for the Green Investment Principles for the Belt and Road (GIP), and the first list of signatories, including HSBC. The goal of the GIP is to encourage and assist signatories to better integrate environmental considerations into the decision-making and implementation processes of their investments in the region. Today, the number of GIP signatories stands at 40, with overall assets amounting to over $48 trillion worldwide.

In terms of specific financial support, the London Stock Exchange’s Green Economy Mark identifies listed companies and funds contributing to the global green economy by addressing key environmental objectives such as climate mitigation and adaptation, waste and pollution reduction and transitioning to a circular economy. More than 100 companies and funds with a combined market cap of $140 billion have received the Mark since its launch in 2019. In 2020, Yangtze Power became the first Chinese issuer to receive the London Stock Exchange’s Green Economy Mark, certifying that the company generates more than 50% of its revenues from green products or services, according to FTSE Russell’s Green Revenues Data Model.

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Enabling the next generation of green leaders

Achieving net zero goals will require new skills and ideas. Sharing international examples of best practice will help both leaders and employees understand their carbon emissions and environmental impact, identify climate-related risks, and successfully disclose environmental information.

Companies with strong environmental, social and governance (ESG) standards are well positioned to prepare their corporate culture for net zero. A common perception about China is that its companies retain a rudimentary understanding of ESG, with low levels of transparency and disclosure. While this may have been true in the past, today we’re seeing a growing appreciation of the value that attention to ESG factors can bring in China. Investment company ABRDN is working with Chinese companies that are aligning themselves with the UN’s sustainable development goals, such as Contemporary Amperex Technology Co., a global frontrunner in the manufacture of rechargeable lithium-ion batteries powering the shift to the electrification of road transport.

Lujiazui Financial City Green Financial Development Center (GFDC), one of the five projects in China supported by UK Partnering for Accelerated Climate Transitions, held an ESG Information Disclosure Policy and Practice Seminar in September 2021. The seminar invited relevant regulators, financial institutions, industry representatives and third-party professional service parties to discuss ESG information disclosure policy and practice, especially in environment information disclosure and carbon emissions target management. More than 50 representatives responsible for ESG matters from domestic and foreign financial institutions and enterprises actively participated. GFDC and the Carbon Trust shared their carbon reduction targets and implementation paths, which received a warm response, promoting several potential UK-China business collaborations.

Click here to read CBBC’s Targeting Net Zero: The Role of UK-China Business Report

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