China Daily (Hong Kong)

ICBC lists largest green bond on London bourse

- By ANGUS MCNEICE in London angus@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

The Industrial and Commercial Bank of China Ltd, also called ICBC, has listed a $1.58 billion green bond on the London Stock Exchange. The funds will be used to finance environmen­tally sustainabl­e assets.

The listing is the largest-ever for a green bond on the LSE and represents the first Chinese issuance on the exchange’s Internatio­nal Securities Market.

Green bonds are a type of funding that companies, government­s and banks use to finance climate-related and environmen­tal projects.

“These bonds are priced extremely tightly, financing assets around the world, from China to Pakistan, to windfarms in Scotland, so it shows the reach of ICBC operations,” said Nikhil Rathi, chief executive of the LSE.

The new ICBC London green bonds are backed by a range of low-carbon transport assets, as well as ones related to wind, solar, and marine renewables. These include three railway lines in China, multiple onshore wind and solar farms in China and Pakistan, and the 588-megawatt Beatrice offshore wind farm under constructi­on in Scotland.

Sean Kidney, chief executive of the Climate Bonds Initiative, said the move signaled ICBC’s intent to become the leading green credit bank in the world. He said it also indicates China’s commitment to reducing the environmen­tal impact of the Belt and Road Initiative, a major infrastruc­ture and economic developmen­t plan involving numerous countries and regions.

“We have an incredible challenge, globally, in addressing climate change and the environmen­tal impact of pollution,” Kidney said. “President Xi Jinping said the Belt and Road project must go green and it’s critical for the world and it’s critical for China and it’s critical for those countries that learn from the Chinese example, to leapfrog to green.”

The dual-currency green bond includes a three-year floating rate dollar tranche that raised $500 million, a five-year floating rate dollar tranche that raised $500 million, and a three-year floating rate euro tranche that raised 500 million euros ($586 million).

Han Ruixiang, general manager of ICBC London Branch, said the bank will use the proceeds to finance green assets under the bank’s Green Bond Framework, including those in renewable energy, energy efficiency, low-carbon transporta­tion, sustainabl­e water and wastewater management.

“These assets are located within the economies covered by the Belt and Road Initiative and include a UK offshore wind farm,” Han said.

John Glen, the UK’s economic secretary to the treasury and city minister, said the strengthen­ing of ties between the UK’s financial services industry and Chinese banks and investors is crucial in light of Britain’s pending exit from the European Union.

“As the UK leaves the European Union, it is really very important that we look to deepen these global financial partnershi­ps,” Glen said. “The treasury is committed to strengthen­ing the financial services industry relations with China.”

Global green bond issuance reached $155.5 billion in 2017, an increase of more than 78 percent from 2016, according to a report from London-based law firm Linklaters. China is a leading player in the green bond arena, issuing $36.4 billion last year.

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