The EU Green Bond Regulation entered into force on 20 December 2023 and came into effect on 21 December 2024. It sets a standard for EU Green Bonds that issuers can choose to adopt when labelling their bonds to raise finance for environmentally sustainable projects. One of the requirements for the voluntary ‘gold’ standard is that the proceeds from a bond labelled as an EU Green Bond must be used to finance or invest in economic activities aligned with the EU Taxonomy Regulation. Other requirements include a statement in the bond prospectus that the bond is a ‘EU Green Bond’ issued in accordance with the Regulation; and the publication of post-issuance annual allocation reports until full allocation of proceeds and post issuance annual external review after full allocation; and a one-time post allocation impact report on the environmental of the bond proceeds. It has been reported that two bonds that comply with it have already been announced.
The introduction of a green bond standard that requires alignment with a regional or national taxonomy is a world-first and may represent the next step in the evolution of the green bond market with the creation of a new tier of credibility.
Here in Singapore, the Singapore-Asia Taxonomy (“Taxonomy”)was launched in December 2023 by the industry-led Green Finance Industry Taskforce (GFIT) convened by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) to focus on initiatives to catalyse the sustainable and transition financing needs for the region and globally. More recently, the Singapore government has blazed a trail by revising its Singapore Green Bond Framework to align it with the Taxonomy.
This article explores how the Taxonomy may potentially strengthen green bond issuance market practice, foster investor confidence, and drive the finance of a sustainable transition to a greener economy in Singapore and the broader Southeast Asia to greater heights.
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