Exclusive-China tightens green bond rules to align them with global 
		norms
						
		 
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		 [August 24, 2022]  By 
		Samuel Shen and Brenda Goh 
		 
		SHANGHAI (Reuters) - China has raised the 
		bar for issuances in the world's second-biggest green bond market, 
		taking a major step towards adopting global standards and eliminating 'greenwashing'. 
		 
		Starting this month, the Shanghai Stock Exchange, China's premier 
		bourse, requires 100% of the proceeds from green bond issuances to be 
		invested in green projects such as clean energy - compared with at least 
		70% previously - according to a notice seen by Reuters. 
		 
		Separately, the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) has 
		instructed both the Shanghai and Shenzhen bourses to revise rules to 
		bring issuances of such bonds in line with the newly published China 
		Green Bond Principles, said two sources. 
		 
		China published the Principles - a set of self-disciplinary green bond 
		frameworks largely based on international standards - on July 29. The 
		planned rule changes would make the guidelines mandatory for 
		exchange-traded bonds, and reduce the risk of 'greenwashing', or 
		exaggerated environment-friendly claims.  
		  
						
		
		  
						
		 
		Sean Kidney, CEO of Climate Bonds Initiative (CBI), a London-based 
		non-profit body that promotes investment in the low-carbon economy, said 
		the changes would make China a leader in global green bond regulation.
		 
		 
		Many securities regulators set voluntary green bond guidelines, "but to 
		the best of my knowledge, China would be the first to make it 
		mandatory", he said. 
		 
		It also means a lot more green bonds in China will become 
		internationally recognised, potentially enabling China to overtake the 
		United States as the world's largest green bond market, he added.  
		 
		China had issued roughly $200 billion of green bonds by the end of 2021, 
		compared with slightly over $300 billion by the United States, according 
		to CBI.  
		 
		The bourses and the CSRC did not respond to requests for comment. 
		 
		TWIN GOALS  
		 
		China has stepped up efforts to develop green finance, seeking to 
		channel low-cost funding into areas including renewable energy and 
		electric vehicles so as to achieve President Xi Jinping's twin goals of 
		peak emission by 2030, and carbon neutrality by 2060. 
		 
		
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            A Chinese national flag flutters outside 
			the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) building on the 
			Financial Street in Beijing, China July 9, 2021. REUTERS/Tingshu 
			Wang 
            
			
			  
Although a record $109.5 billion of Chinese green bonds were issued in 2021 - 
making China the fastest-growing major market for such bonds - nearly 40% of the 
issuance was not aligned with global definitions, according to CBI, which sets 
international standards.  
 
The glitch was that in China's fragmented bond market various regulators define 
green bonds differently, Kidney said. 
 
Although green bond issuers in China's interbank bond market already use 100% of 
proceeds on green projects, the CSRC, which regulates exchange-traded corporate 
bonds, only sets a green "use of proceeds" threshold of 70%, while the National 
Development & Reform Commission (NDRC), the watchdog of state-owned enterprise 
bonds, requires a minimum of 50%. 
 
To promote rule harmonisation both at home and abroad, China published its own 
Green Bond Principles late last month, which are largely in line with principles 
issued by the International Capital Market Association (ICMA). China's 
guidelines made it clear green bonds must use 100% of proceeds on green 
projects, in a nod to global practices. 
 
In the notice sent to market participants, the Shanghai Stock Exchange, home to 
more than 300 billion yuan ($43.72 billion) worth of green bonds, asked 
underwriters to ensure future issuance complies with the principles. 
 
In addition, the exchanges in both Shanghai and Shenzhen - a smaller corporate 
bond market - have been told by the CSRC to update relevant rules based on the 
principles, according to the sources.  
 
($1 = 6.8616 Chinese yuan renminbi) 
 
(Reporting by Samuel Shen and Brenda Goh; Additional reporting by Simon Jessop 
in London; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman) 
				 
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