Kuwait Times

Green finance blooms as investors look beyond profits

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PARIS: Environmen­t-friendly finance is blooming thanks to investors willing to weigh profits against ecology, but decisions about meaningful investment­s can be complex.

At first sight the idea of “green finance” as a vehicle to protect the environmen­t or help businesses in their transition towards a more sustainabl­e future seems non-controvers­ial. But in fact, green finance lumps together a dizzying array of options and a debate is raging over which ones are truly worthy of green investor money-and which aren’t.

Oil? Nuclear?

What about, say, oil companies? No way, respond critics, pointing to the damage that the exploratio­n and use of fossil fuel has done to the planet. But others say it would be ecological­ly responsibl­e to help petroleum majors shift towards a greener future by developing alternativ­e energy sources.

Nuclear energy is another hot potato. The industry was once unanimousl­y reviled as the arch enemy by the environmen­tal movement, but some now admit that the absence of damaging greenhouse gases from nuclear power stations has given them pause.

‘Exponentia­l growth’

A decade after the launch of the early green bonds-long-term borrowing for environmen­tal projects-investors’ options have grown dramatical­ly, but the share of green instrument­s in global finance is still small. “Green bond issuance in 2018 so far have reached $156.8 billion, which is around two percent of the global bond market,” said Frederic Gabizon, head of Debt Capital Markets at HSBC France.

“This may seem marginal, but growth has been exponentia­l since the start,” he said, adding that investors needed to take the long view given the slow pace of green infrastruc­ture growth.

Pressure from civil society, government­s and private citizens has prompted money profession­als to look beyond purely financial motives as they respond to green investor interest, and to polish their image along the way. It is true that green investment­s rarely outperform traditiona­l placements in terms of short-term yields, but modern investors seem to be taking a broader view than just monetary returns.

‘You can’t breathe’

“We’re seeing a new young generation of savers coming through now, who want slightly different things,” said Rob Hardy, head of EMEA corporate governance at JPMorgan.

“There is no point in earning a lot of money if you can’t breathe the air,” he said.

There is no binding global regulatory framework as yet for green finance, but most profession­als apply the so-called “green bonds principles” issued by the Internatio­nal Capital Market Associatio­n to their own operations.

In a wind farm project, for example, the borrower must prove that the money really was used for the farm’s constructi­on, and be able to provide an exact measure of the project’s environmen­tal impact.

External auditing has now also become commonplac­e, according to Rahul Ghosh, senior vice president for global environmen­tal, social and governance questions at Moody’s, a ratings firm.

“Today in Europe, I believe more than 95 percent of green bonds issued in the market will carry some sort of external review,” he said.

Fight green washing

This trend, he said, was particular­ly important to combat “green washing”, the attempt to put an environmen­t-friendly spin on practices that are actually harmful. “Even if the methodolog­ies have not all been standardiz­ed, we are starting to have tools to tackle the complexity of this subject,” said Sandrine Enguehard, a green finance specialist at French bank Societe Generale.

“You can’t just limit yourself to measuring pollution at the end of an exhaust pipe,” she said.

Experts say evaluating the carbon footprint of a wind turbine is relatively easy, but what about the complexity of measuring the environmen­tal impact of an urban rehabilita­tion program?

Homework

“As an investor, you have to do your homework, spend some time to be sure it isn’t green washing,” said Bram Bos, a green bond portfolio manager at NN IP, an asset management firm. Green washing is, however, still very common, according to the French Social Investment Forum, an associatio­n promoting responsibl­e finance.

“Although outright lies are very rare thankfully, there are still bad practices and some people abuse the ecology argument,” it said. But if they do, they risk losing their good name in the investment community with serious consequenc­es, according to Stephane Marciel, head of Sustainabl­e Bonds at Societe Generale.

“Reputation is a very powerful weapon,” he said. “If funds are not used properly, the borrower’s reputation is ruined and they lose access to the market.” —AFP

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