(Bloomberg) -- The government bond market needs to wake up to climate-related risks, according to a report calling for more countries to follow Chile's lead in issuing debt linked to sustainability targets.
Current efforts to value natural capital and price sovereign risks are ad-hoc, fragmented and small scale, according to research group Finance for Biodiversity (F4B). Use of sustainability-linked bonds would connect environmental outcomes to the cost of national debt.
“We need a fundamental change in the way sovereign debt markets operate,” said Simon Zadek, chair of F4B, pointing to three-quarters of sovereign bond prospectuses in 2020 not disclosing any climate risks. “Thorough integration of natural capital considerations and scaling-up the use of performance-linked instruments is urgently needed.”
The sustainability-linked bond market has exploded in the past year but issuance so far has almost all been by companies. Sovereign issuers have preferred green bonds, where the proceeds are ring-fenced for environmental projects. SLBs would instead tie the country to goals such as greenhouse gas emissions cuts.
Chile broke that mold this week by selling $2 billion in sustainability-linked bonds maturing in 20 years, the first nation to do so. The country, already Latin America's biggest ESG debt issuer, will pay a set penalty to investors if it fails to meet targets on emissions and renewable energy generation.
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Some of these bonds issued by companies have come under fire for setting goals that are too soft. Many governments have set aggressive long-term targets, yet are struggling to bring down actual emissions, making such debt trickier. Earlier this year, the World Bank released guidance for sovereigns thinking about SLBs.
The F4B report argues the cost of capital for countries is increasingly driven by climate vulnerability and raises the chance of defaults, a risk starting to be highlighted by others such as FTSE Russell. It calls for more innovation to address this, citing a deal Belize struck to restructure its debt with environmental conditions last year.
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