Select
Category

Service Co.
registration

Signup/Login
ARZEGA

Tool set

Category

Green bonds to help push GCC net zero agenda

Estimated reading time: 4 minutes

Green and sustainable debt issuance has been growing rapidly in the Middle East, despite the comparative lack of regulation of green financial instruments. In 2021, the total issuance of green and sustainability-linked debt in the region increased more than four times compared to 2020.

In these early stages of the climate transition, there is a critical need for patient, high-risk capital for investments in sectors whose paths to decarbonisation are dependent on technologies that are still in the early stages of development, such as iron and steel, heavy road transport, and shipping.

A new report titled “Financing a Net-Zero Middle East” by Boston Consulting Group (BCG) shows how regulatory pressure in most Middle East countries is not yet strong enough to compel banks to take immediate action on climate issues, even though climate change poses an array of risks to their portfolio. 

Larger banks in fossil fuel-exporting countries typically have high exposures to the oil and gas industry and other high-emitting sectors of the economy such as transportation, construction and infrastructure, and shipping.

Shelly Trench, managing director and partner at BCG and co-author of the report said, “The Middle East banking sector has an opportunity to benefit significantly from financing the transition of the oil and gas industry and other strategically important sectors to cleaner, more sustainable technologies.

They could create financial and other incentives to support decarbonization and develop environmental and industrial policies that align with climate objectives.”

sustainable green finance

Considering development banks and funds have a critical role to play in supporting green investments, BCG’s report offers three core recommendations to meet the above mandate:

  1. Providing financing for non-bankable green projects with lower risk-adjusted returns or higher investment risks, such as supporting research and development of innovative technologies such as renewable power and CCUS.
  2. Mobilising private capital investments in green projects by improving their risk-adjusted returns with various risk mitigation instruments.
  3. Using their expertise to provide support and advice to policymakers and regulators on the reforms needed to scale up climate finance.

Regional bank alliances prove key to this end, such as the Net Zero Banking Alliance (NZBA) and the Science-Based Targets initiative (SBTi), as well as joining working groups such as the Partnership for Carbon Accounting Financials, to influence the global standard-setters.

The report further draws on the need for key regulatory interventions to drive climate action through climate reporting and disclosure to then create taxonomies of sustainable activities.

The Network for Greening the Financial System (NGFS), an association of central banks and supervisors, is a key forum for coordinating these efforts and exchanging best practices among regulators. Currently, several of the Middle East region’s financial services regulators have already joined NGFS, including the Abu Dhabi Financial Services Regulatory Authority, the Dubai Financial Services Authority, the Financial Regulatory Authority of Egypt, and the central banks of Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, and Tunisia.

trade sustainability

The report highlights another potential intervention such as the creation of carbon pricing structures that could stimulate demand for investments in renewables and low-carbon technologies while reducing subsidies for high-carbon projects, levelling the playing field and making cleaner projects more economically attractive.

For instance, Abu Dhabi Global Markets (ADGM), one of the UAE’s international financial centres, is working on a regulatory framework for the first-ever regulated voluntary carbon market and supporting the UAE’s transition to net zero greenhouse gas emissions.

Emmanuel Givanakis, CEO of the Financial Services Regulatory Authority at ADGM, said, “The Financial Services Regulatory Authority at ADGM is facilitating, through a proposed comprehensive sustainable finance regulatory framework, the ability to establish the world’s first regulated voluntary carbon exchange and clearing house, where carbon offsets, while traded and settled as spot commodities, are treated as regulated financial instruments.”

At the initial stage, the roles of regulators and development finance will be key, with the former developing the policies and regulations needed to stimulate demand for climate finance in the region.

Development finance institutions can help attract private sector investment by de-risking investment in climate projects via blended finance solutions.

Aytech Pseunokov, project leader at BCG concludes, “With time, as climate finance regulation is rolled out and green projects become more bankable, banks and financial institutions will become the key source of funding for the climate transition.

arzega

Select whether you need business services or want to register your own business service company.

Register
factory

Services

arzega

The First and Largest International Terminal for Trade & Services

Buy and sell goods, raw materials, and services worldwide with ease.

Attention Traders, Manufacturers, Producers, Suppliers, and Wholesale Buyers!

The International Online Trading Terminal now extends its services to the Islamic Republic of Iran, facilitating global market access for Iranian businesses.

🎉 Free User Panel & License – Limited-Time Opening Offer! 🎉

Exclusive free access to business users in Iran until March 15, 2025 (Equivalent to Esfand 25, 1403).

💰 Membership Fee Post-Offer: €2500 for All Countries