By Siddhartha Sivaramakrishnan (Partner), Ranajoy Basu (Partner) and Raminta Dereskeviciute (Counsel), McDermott Will & Emery
On 12 October 2021, the European Commission (EC) issued its first-ever NextGenerationEU green bond, raising a total of €12 billion that will be used exclusively to fund green and sustainable investments across the EU. More than 11 times oversubscribed – the final order book exceeded €135 billion –the issuance provides a solid launch for the NextGenerationEU green bond programme and its plan to issue up to €250 billion in similar bonds by the end of 2026. With 29 per cent of investors coming via the UK, the issuance also underscores the depth of liquidity in the UK and its continuing position as a premier centre for global investment.
The timing and success of this first NextGenerationEU green bond is significant, as it was scheduled just weeks before COP26, the UN Climate Change Conference held in Glasgow from 31 October through 12 November 2021. Adopted in September 2021 and fully compliant with the Green Bond Principles of the International Capital Market Association (ICMA), the NextGenerationEU Green Bond framework is designed to achieve the following goals, among others:
Under the NextGenerationEU green bond framework, funds are to be used for nine broad categories of expenditure, including energy efficiency, clean energy and climate change adaptation. A minimum of 37 per cent of every Recovery and Resilience Plan must be devoted to green transition and the EC will report on how the funds have been spent (allocation reporting) and what the funds have achieved (impact reporting).
The NextGenerationEU green bond marks a monumental shift for issuers and other market participants in continually evolving capital and financial markets and represents another step in international bodies’ collective efforts to support green projects worldwide. For example, since its inaugural issue in 2008, the World Bank has issued more than 160 green bonds in nearly two dozen currencies totalling approximately $15 billion. In the private sector, sustainability-linked bonds have also come into vogue in recent years. Unlike green bonds, sustainability-linked bonds have no restrictions on how the proceeds are used; the coupon paid to investors is tied to the achievement of specific performance objectives, such as reductions in CO2 emissions and increased use of energy from renewable sources.
The high level of interest in this first issuance of NextGenerationEU green bonds and the EC’s announced plan to issue substantially more green bonds over the next five years:
· Underscore the EU’s determination to fully embrace the challenges of addressing climate change and achieve the goal of climate neutrality by 2050 through the deployment of a historical stimulus package to boost the EU’s economy.
· Confirm that the EU’s climate policy objectives and investors’ expectations are fully aligned when it comes to climate issues.
· Demonstrate that green bonds are an efficient instrument to channel private capital to fund climate investments.
While the transaction is a welcome development in the overall growth of the green bond sustainable finance market, there is also a significant push to structure these deals to:
· Determine the benefit to issuers from a green bond labelling/certification, by gaining access to significantly lower cost of capital as compared to non-green-labelled bond issuances.
· Develop global, standardised green definitions and a set of global taxonomies, disclosures and principles, such as the EU Green Bond Standards (EUGBS), that will help “commoditise” these transactions to grow market confidence, identify responsible financial structures and ensure legal consistency of transaction terms.
· Establish independent certification of alignment and compliance that will become a requirement for purposes of labelling a bond instrument as "green."
· Define representations and warranties, covenants, and events of default relating to alignment and compliance with principles, reporting obligations and other undertakings that will become standard in green bond documentation.
Development of some or all of the above will be key to supporting a sustainable and more rapid growth of the green bond market in furtherance of the fulfilment of global climate objectives.
For its part, the UK government has recently announced that large companies will be required to disclose climate financial information from April 2022. In so doing, the UK will become the first G20 country to make these disclosures mandatory for its largest businesses, in line with recommendations from the Financial Stability Board’s (FSB) Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD).
In conclusion, to achieve climate neutrality by 2050, issuers, investors, regulators and the legal community will be required to coordinate extensively over the coming years in catalysing the growth of the market. While the EC’s green bond transaction is a clear sign of its commitment and ambition, businesses will be watching closely as detailed policy proposals follow.
For a number of sectors, a difficult transition may lie ahead. For others, there are clear opportunities, particularly as European governments and central banks look to drive public- and private-sector investment into new and emerging technologies. Perhaps David Attenborough was right when he said at the recent COP26 meetings, “We are, after all, the greatest problem solvers to have ever existed on Earth[…] If working apart we are forces powerful enough to destabilise our planet, surely working together we are powerful enough to save it.”