Germany on Monday announced details of its first “green” bond placing, tapping financial markets to fund environmental projects for the first time. The finance ministry said it would raise up to 11 billion Euros in 2020 to support climate-related projects.
The first issue in September of a 10-year bond, or Bund, will have a minimum of four billion Euros in volume. The German government announced late last year that it would launch the bonds in the second half of 2020 as part of its efforts to combat climate change.
The country earmarked €54 billion in spending to 2023 as part of a climate package that includes introducing a carbon tax to cut greenhouse gases by 55 per cent by 2030 compared with 1990 levels.
Rita Schwarzeluehr-Sutter, parliamentary state secretary for environment, said the bonds will contribute to the government's efforts. Green federal bonds create a clear incentive. In this way, we are showing how green and climate-friendly economic activities can be made transparent and predictable, she said.
The green bonds will be twin bonds, issued alongside conventional federal bonds with the same maturity and coupon, the finance ministry said.
It means investors will be able to swap their bonds from one variant to the other, with the aim of making them more attractive to investors, according to Joerg Kukies, parliamentary secretary to the finance ministry.
Germany joins the green bond trend relatively late. Poland launched the world's first sovereign green bonds in 2016 and France, currently the world leading issuer of the instrument, in 2017.
Yet environmental issues are high on the German political agenda: Greta Thunberg and representatives of the environmental activist group Fridays For Future had an audience with Chancellor Angela Merkel last week.
Green bonds accounted for 2.85% of global bond issuance in 2019, or around US$205 billion, according to the European Central Bank (ECB). Almost half of green bonds issued worldwide last year were in Euros, the ECB added.
ECB chief Christine Lagarde said in July that climate protection was a top priority for the bank, after it unveiled a plan worth €1.35 trillion to help the European economy recover from the coronavirus pandemic.
Lagarde started at the ECB late last year with a pledge to pursue a greener monetary policy, raising the prospect that the bank could increase the share of climate-friendly investments in its portfolio.
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