The National - News

Etihad raises $1.2bn in aviation industry’s first ESG loan linked to sustainabi­lity

- DEENA KAMEL

Etihad Airways said it raised $1.2 billion in global aviation’s first sustainabi­lity loan linked to environmen­tal, social and governance goals.

The deal is the airline’s third sustainabl­e financing transactio­n as it pledged in 2020 to reach net-zero carbon emissions by 2050.

The structure of the loan, which was closed on October 1, includes a $500 million four-year tranche and a $700m five-year tranche, Adam Boukadida, chief financial officer of Etihad Aviation Group, told The National.

“This will be by far the biggest of three green transactio­ns that we’ve done over the last three years and is the first ESG-linked loan for Etihad and for aviation globally,” he said.

“It’s a sizeable transactio­n and sustainabl­e financing is very much part of our finance

DNA and a key part of our strategy now and in the future.”

The transactio­n is the largest sustainabl­e financing in the airline’s history and follows two aviation financing deals – a $600m sustainabi­lity-linked transition sukuk in 2020 and a €100m ($115.6m) loan tied to the UN Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals in 2019. Etihad also runs the Greenliner programme, which uses its fleet of Boeing 787 Dreamliner­s as a test-bed for sustainabl­e flight initiative­s.

The Covid-19 pandemic has increased global concerns about climate change threats, with government­s promising to build back greener and borrowers establishi­ng ESG frameworks as part of that transition.

Global airlines are keen to improve their green credential­s to address passenger concerns about climate-related issues and to counter the “flight-shaming” movement that began in Europe. Last week, airlines around the world accelerate­d their climate goals and committed to net-zero carbon emissions by 2050 as they face increasing pressure from environmen­tal activists and politician­s.

Proceeds of the loan will be used for general corporate purposes, Mr Boukadida said.

The airline has committed to penalties and incentives of up to $ 5.5m linked to its progress against key performanc­e indicators on the ESG loan. The loan is linked to several ESG goals.

The environmen­tal goal involves reducing carbon emissions from passenger aircraft (measured in terms of CO2 emissions per revenue tonne kilometres). The airline has set key milestone goals for 2035 and 2025 as part of its net-zero target for 2050.

The social goal will focus on gender diversity. At its Global Business Service Solution centre in Al Ain, which handles functions from HR support to global revenue audits and has a majority female workforce of 300, Etihad will focus on increasing female participat­ion and continuing training and developmen­t.

The final governance measure will be linked to the Integrity Score, which is used to assess the overall internal culture of integrity at the airline.

Work on these goals will start with “immediate effect” and the airline will have an annual reporting cycle along with the solicitors and lenders, Mr Boukadida said.

Etihad picked HSBC and First Abu Dhabi Bank as the strategic partners and financiers for this transactio­n. HSBC and FAB were the joint ESG structurin­g banks, joint ESG coordinato­rs, joint bookrunner and mandated lead arranger.

Airlines are keen to improve their green credential­s to address climate-related issues

 ?? Etihad ?? Etihad Airways’ Greenliner programme involves the use of its Boeing 787 Dreamliner fleet
Etihad Etihad Airways’ Greenliner programme involves the use of its Boeing 787 Dreamliner fleet

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