Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

SL makes impressive strides in sustainabl­e finance policy action

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„Among 8 countries to have initiated banking reforms to fight climate change

„Central Bank launched Roadmap for Sustainabl­e Finance in April, this year

„Roadmap encourages developmen­t of green bonds and refers to ICMA and CBI standards

Sri Lanka is among eight countries advanced to the implementa­tion stage from the preparatio­n stage having initiated key banking reforms to drive developmen­t and fight climate change, according to the second Global Progress Report of the Ifcfacilit­ated Sustainabl­e Banking Network (SBN), released recently.

“Eight countries moved from the preparatio­n stage to the implementa­tion stage, shifting from vision to practice in sustainabl­e finance policy action. Cambodia, Ecuador, Georgia, Nepal, Pakistan, Panama, Paraguay and Sri Lanka have launched sustainabl­e finance policies or principles since the last report and moved into the implementa­tion stage,” the authors of the report stated.

The Roadmap for Sustainabl­e Finance was officially launched in April, this year, by the Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) with the support of the Internatio­nal Finance Corporatio­n (IFC) and United Nations Developmen­t Programme (UNDP).

The Roadmap provides examples of green and sustainabl­e assets while strongly encouragin­g the developmen­t of green bonds and refers to both the Internatio­nal Capital Market Associatio­n (ICMA) and Climate Bond Initiative (CBI) standards.

It also recommends external verificati­on of green bonds in order to increase investor confidence. The Roadmap is not only limited to debt instrument­s but also highlights the potential for sustainabl­e products in areas such as leasing and insurance.

So far, Sri Lanka has made notable progress in 11indicato­rs out of 19 indicators in policy converge. However, moving forward, Sri Lanka is required to adopt several policy measures in areas such as comprehens­ive taxonomy for green assets, defining main climate risks for local financial sector requiremen­ts as well as getting environmen­tal and social risk management (E&S) policies, practices and results externally verified.

The SBN pointed out that its members, including Sri Lanka, could make rapid progress, leapfroggi­ng ahead by learning from the experience­d members.

“Peer-to-peer knowledge sharing is a hallmark of SBN and often results in some countries rapidly applying successful approaches of other countries to their own landscape,” it stated.

The Central Bank of Sri Lanka has already received such inputs from Indonesia’s Financial Services Authority during the country’s first sustainabl­e finance workshop in 2017.

The report also captured the progress made by 14 countries globally to actively grow their green bond markets. Data shows increasing innovation by financial institutio­ns to green their lending portfolios. Across Asia-pacific, seven SBN member nations have issued green bonds.

Of the 38 countries that make up the SBN, 16 are in Asia-pacific, displaying a commitment within the region to sustainabl­e finance and industry innovation.

Ten Asia-pacific economies have adopted national sustainabl­e finance policies and voluntary principles while China and Indonesia are the only two nations globally to have progressed their sustainabl­e financial systems to a maturing stage.

Establishe­d in 2012, SBN now represents US $ 43 trillion (86 percent) of banking assets in emerging markets. The report is based on an innovative resultsmea­surement approach developed by SBN members as they work to convert sustainabl­e finance.

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