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The issuance of green bonds has dropped by almost a third as a result of climate change backtracking

The issuance of green bonds has dropped by almost a third as a result of climate change backtracking

New figures reveal that the amount of "green bonds" sold by governments and banks has dropped by nearly a third in this year due to the rollbacks of climate change policies across the United States, Europe and Australia.

Data published by Fitch Ratings agency showed overall "labelled" bond issuance, which also includes other types of sustainability-focused bonds, was down 25% year-on-year to $440 billion, with Q2 also the weakest quarter since 2019.

The amount of green bonds, where money is raised for climate or environmental projects, dropped by nearly $100 billion or 32 percent in one year. Meanwhile, the share of bonds with environmental, social, and governance labels has decreased to 10.2% from 11.7% of the total global bond issue for 2024.

The U.S., under President Donald Trump, is withdrawing from a number of global sustainability initiatives while rolling back environmental standards.

The European Union is also working on proposals to loosen corporate reporting requirements for sustainability. This would affect a majority of companies.

Fitch stated that the biggest factor impacting the markets was the uncertainty surrounding capital expenditures, which is driven by macro-challenges and geopolitical instabilities.

It added that "ongoing uncertainty about ESG-related regulation - amid implementation delay and rollbacks - may prompt issuers wait for regulatory clarification." (Reporting and editing by Ed Osmond, Simon Jessop)

(source: Reuters)