The Daily News Egypt

Green bond issuance passed global record of $100bn this year

AFRICAN EXCHANGES DISCUSS LISTING GREEN BONDS TO BOOST LIQUIDITY

- By Elsayed Solyman

ONE OF THE IMPEDIMENT­S FOR SUCH SCHEMES IS THE CONTINENT’S LOW ECONOMIC WEIGHT AND HIGH FRAGMENTAT­ION

African stock exchanges are set to focus on listing green bonds in their secondary markets in order to enhance liquidity and give investors the chance to find different financing tools, a panel held on the sideline of 21st annual conference of the African Securities Exchanges Associatio­n suggested.

The new frontier for Africa may be the issuance of green bonds to finance environmen­tally friendly developmen­t projects including infrastruc­ture, under a range of initiative­s by government­s, banks and internatio­nal developmen­t agencies, the panel confirmed.

The panel featured presentati­ons from Climate Bonds Initiative.

Green bond issuance has passed the significan­t $100bn benchmark this year, setting a global record.

China leads the issuance, followed by France, the US, Germany, Netherland­s, Sweden, Mexico, Spain, India, and Canada.

This year, France became the second country to issue a sovereign green bond while Fiji was the first emerging economy to issue bonds.

Nigeria is expected to become the first African nation to issue a sovereign green bond in the coming weeks.

Climate Bonds Initiative estimates the final figure to total $130bn this year.

A range of African countries that have seen their bonds downgraded as a result of recent economic mishaps, including Angola and Nigeria, are also candidates for such issuance.

One of the impediment­s for such schemes — and to the developmen­t of African capital markets as a whole — is the continent’s low economic weight and high fragmentat­ion.

On the other hand, most of Africa’s economies are growing at well-above the world average and risk-oriented investors can normally find channels for their funds yielding rewards that morethan-match actual risk.

Last month, the Johannesbu­rg Stock Exchange (JSE) celebrated the launch of its Green Bond Segment, which provides a platform for companies and other institutio­ns to raise funds ringfenced for low carbon initiative­s.

Donna Nemer, director of capital markets at the JSE, said that the introducti­on of the green bond provides companies with an effective tool to raise capital for investment­s into sustainabl­e projects that would have been funded internally.

“Issuing a green bond can help companies to strengthen their credential­s as sustainabl­e and responsibl­e organisati­ons.”

“At the same time, green bonds allow investors to mitigate the effects of climate risk as a part of their investment portfolio, while these bonds also satisfy environmen­t, social and governance (ESG) requiremen­ts and green investment mandates,” said Nemer.

Internatio­nal Finance Corporatio­n (IFC) is placing $325m in a green-bond fund for developing markets, under a move announced in March.The IFC has partnered with Amundi, the European asset manager, to raise up to $2bn from other internatio­nal investors to create the biggest-yet green bond fund for emerging markets.

The worldwide green-bond market totals less than $1 trillion, a tiny part of the overall fixed-income sector of around $100 trillion.

But issuance has picked up, driven by worldwide accord on anti-climate change measures in Paris in December 2015, adroit marketing by investment management groups, and demand for environmen­tal instrument­s from government­s and investors around the world.

Poland launched the first sovereign green bond in December.

This was followed by a €7bn French green bond in January.

Issuance this year is forecast at $110bn to $120bn, above the record $93bn in 2016.

 ??  ?? The new frontier for Africa may be the issuance of green bonds to finance environmen­tally friendly developmen­t projects
The new frontier for Africa may be the issuance of green bonds to finance environmen­tally friendly developmen­t projects

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