The global sustainable bond market is expected to bounce back in sales this year, following a dip last year amid worsening credit conditions.
Sales of those bonds — green, social, sustainable and sustainability-linked — are projected to reach $900 billion to $1 trillion in 2023, which would put them just behind the sales levels seen in 2021, according to a report this week from S&P Global Ratings.
Such sales hit a record of $1.06 trillion in 2021, falling to just over $850 billion in 2022.
As sales potentially rebound, eyes will be on one specific type of sustainable bond — sustainability linked bonds. Those relatively new bonds were on track for the first half of 2022 to surpass their already rapidly growing levels seen in 2021, although they closed out the year lower, at $70.5 billion compared with $94.4 billion, according to data from S&P.
Sustainability-linked bond sales all but exploded in 2021 — sales in 2020 were just $8.8 billion and $4.5 billion in 2019. Those bonds have appealed to investors as a way to help encourage companies issuing them to improve their sustainability practices, and thus pay lower rates to bond holders.
The dip that that subset of sustainable bonds saw last year was almost certainly a symptom of the credit conditions that affected the bond market widely. However, sustainability-linked bonds came under scrutiny as questions arose about the targets their issuers had been setting and whether they were effective at improving sustainability. Those bonds, unlike use-of-proceeds bonds, have flexible conditions that vary as companies meet or fail objectives set at issuance.
“To get back to growth in 2023 and beyond, issuers of sustainability-linked bonds (SLBs) will have to find ways to address concerns flagged by market participants about the credibility of SLBs, namely surrounding issuer ambitions and incentives to achieve sustainability targets,” the report read.
Last month, nonprofit Mighty Earth filed a complaint with the Securities and Exchange Commission about four sustainability-linked bond issuances by meat processor JBS. That group alleges that JBS’ emissions have increased in recent years, despite the company’s net zero by 2040 pledge. Mighty Earth also claims that JBS has obfuscated its carbon footprint by not disclosing the total number of animals it slaughters and not including Scope 3 emissions as part of its net-zero pledge.
JBS did not respond to a request for comment.
Traditional use-of-proceeds bonds will be the predominant driver of sales this year, according to the report. Those bonds, which require issuers to use proceeds to finance projects, include green bonds, social bonds and sustainability bonds. Green bonds, which raise money for environmental initiatives, represented more than half of all sustainable bond sales last year. They are poised to continue strong sales as companies look to finance net-zero commitments, according to S&P.
Social bonds, which as their name suggests are issued to support social issues, represented less than 20% of total sustainable bond sales in 2022 but saw strong growth in 2020 and 2021 amid Covid. Issuance of those bonds has tapered off and could continue to do so this year, as demand for pandemic relief funds has waned, the report noted. However, increasing need for affordable housing could contribute to some growth for social bonds.
That need will also help fuel issuance of sustainability bonds, which address both social and environmental concerns, according to S&P.
“Issuers in the public housing sector may look to develop green social housing options. Banks, in addition, could look to combine access to affordable finance with existing green lending initiatives,” the report stated. “Further, public finance and supranational entities may look to the sustainability bond market to finance more environmentally friendly social infrastructure such as schools, municipal buildings, hospitals, roads and energy.”
Some politicians are pushing against the use of ESG broadly, the bond market is not being spared from that. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who has been among the most vocal critics of sustainable investing practices, Monday announced a package of anti-ESG legislation in the state. That bill includes a prohibition on state and local governments from considering ESG factors when issuing bonds, for example.
Sustainable bonds represented just 2% of the overall municipal bond market in 2018, though that figure surpassed 10% in 2022, according to S&P. This year, the firm projects that sustainable bond sales will increase to account for 13% of all muni bond sales.
This story was originally published on ESG Clarity.
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