The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Top-performing firm accused of greenwashi­ng

India coal sale to avoid interest payments questioned

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SINGAPORE: One of Singapore’s best-performing stocks this year – an energy company backed by state investor Temasek Holdings Pte – is under fire for trying to avoid higher interest payments to bondholder­s that kick in if the company fails to meet emissions targets.

In order to reduce its official carbon footprint, Sembcorp Industries Ltd sold two coalfired power plants to an Omani group for Us$1.5bil (Rm7.1bil).

The company told shareholde­rs that the sale would lower its greenhouse gas emissions intensity by 38%, more than enough to dodge the penalties attached to the company’s sustainabi­lity-linked bonds.

But the firm financed the sale of the assets with a 15-year loan and retains “substantia­l” liabilitie­s and “operationa­l influence,” over the business, according to a report by Anthropoce­ne Fixed Income Institute, a London-based think tank.

That effectivel­y makes Sembcorp a shadow bank for the coal industry, Anthropoce­ne argues, and the carbon footprint of the coal plants shouldn’t be removed until the loan is fully repaid.

Sembcorp, in which Temasek holds a 49% stake, has two outstandin­g sustainabi­lity-linked bonds totalling S$975mil (Us$697mil or Rm3.3bil).

Under the performanc­e targets, the company has to pay an extra 25 basis points in inter

est if it failed to meet the emissions intensity targets.

The sale of the coal plants is “purely a greenwashi­ng exercise,” said Kelvin Law, an associate professor of accounting at Singapore’s Nanyang Technologi­cal University.

“It’s the same facilities, same group of employees, same polluting activities, just under a different name.”

Payments are due in up to 24 years, and Sembcorp has the option of waiving the entire payment. Such conditions are unusual, but shareholde­rs approved the transactio­n on Tuesday.

“They didn’t have much choice,” Law said.

“If shareholde­rs don’t let the company do it, the interest rate could go up.”

“It’s window-dressing so they can meet the sustainabi­lity targets and not pay a higher interest rate,” he added. “I have to admit, it’s a pretty innovative form of greenwashi­ng.”

For Sembcorp, the deal underpins its “brown to green transforma­tion” and helps reduce its emissions intensity, the company said in a statement.

“Our commitment­s to our stakeholde­rs, including our bondholder­s, are very clear and are not subject to interpreta­tion.”

Sustainabi­lity-linked bonds (SLBS) are a new and rapidly growing type of environmen­tal, social and governance debt.

Because the interest payments rise and fall based on the issuer meeting emissions targets over time, proponents say they encourage better environmen­tal practices, compared with debt pegged to a specific project that may or may not reduce future pollution.

But detractors say SLBS have become yet another way for companies to secure cheaper financing – and an enhanced reputation – with minimal effort to deliver on climate goals.

“That Sembcorp is offloading its carbon emissions through an accounting transactio­n to meet SLB targets is unlikely to be what investors intended,” Cedric Rimaud, co-author of the Anthropoce­ne report, said in an interview. “It’s not a real reduction in emissions, and it damages the credibilit­y of SLBS.”

The firm aims to eventually generate 70% of its profit from sustainabl­e solutions, up from 40% in 2020, and reach net-zero by 2050. The company has also pledged to not finance new coal-fired energy assets.

The deal also underscore­s the struggle of divesting from coal assets amid a globally shrinking pool of capital for carbon-heavy projects.

Sembcorp said in an Oct 22 circular to shareholde­rs that it had offered buyers the option of an all-cash transactio­n, deferred payment notes, or a combinatio­n of the two “given the limited availabili­ty of funding.”

All bidders opted for some form of loan from Sembcorp, the company said.

 ?? — Bloomberg ?? Under fire: The Sembcorp Tuas solar farm in Singapore. Sembcorp has sold two coal-fired power plants to an Omani group for Us$1.5bil (Rm7.1bil).
— Bloomberg Under fire: The Sembcorp Tuas solar farm in Singapore. Sembcorp has sold two coal-fired power plants to an Omani group for Us$1.5bil (Rm7.1bil).

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