海外发展研究所-新兴经济体的转型融资(英)-2023-WN7.pdf
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1、 CIFF WP4 Policy Brief Transition finance for emerging economies Policy priorities for the G20 Judith Tyson and Prashant Vaze July 2023 Key policy recommendations Finance to support investments to reduce greenhouse gas(GHG)emissions from hard-to-abate sectors,also referred to as transition finance,n
2、eeds to be expanded.This will require:Mandatory climate-related disclosures and capital adequacy frameworks aligned to major export markets regulatory requirements,with weightings that favour credible and ambitious transition planning.Carbon pricing to align transitioning industries economic and env
3、ironmental performance incentives while protecting industry from high-carbon substitutes produced outside jurisdictions and permitting imports from jurisdictions with effective carbon pricing policies.Strengthened supply-side public policy including tighter regulations to oblige new technology uptak
4、e,national decarbonising visions,innovation subsidies and procurement standards,streamlined legal and licensing procedures,and transition project pipelines.Greater use of public expenditure including blended finance,leveraging government subsidies,issuance of public transition bonds,public technolog
5、y development and transfer and capacity-building for finance professionals.Increased policy lending such as mandatory sector targets,higher sectoral and borrower limits and coordinated national policy for hard-to-abate sectors.CIFF WP4 Policy Brief:Transition finance for emerging economies 2 Readers
6、 are encouraged to reproduce material for their own publications,as long as they are not being sold commercially.ODI requests due acknowledgement and a copy of the publication.For online use,we ask readers to link to the original resource on the ODI website.The views presented in this paper are thos
7、e of the author(s)and do not necessarily represent the views of ODI or our partners.This work is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.How to cite:Tyson,J.and Vaze,P.(2023)Transition finance for emerging economies:policy priorities for the G20.Policy Brief.London:ODI(https:/odi.org/en/publications/transiti
8、on-finance-for-emerging-economies/)CIFF WP4 Policy Brief:Transition finance for emerging economies 3 Contents 1 Introduction 6 2 Supporting private transition finance 8 2.1 The landscape for private transition finance 8 2.2 Adapting bank regulatory frameworks to discourage climate risky lending 9 2.
9、3 Developing specialist instruments and funds 10 2.4 Policy lending 10 3 Transition taxonomies and standards 11 3.1 Transition taxonomies and green taxonomies 11 3.2 International taxonomies 12 3.3 Voluntary standard setting and disclosure 14 4 Creating an enabling policy environment 15 4.1 Supply-s
10、ide public policies 15 4.2 MDB and DFI support 16 4.3 Funding research and development 17 4.4 Demand-side public policy interventions 17 4.5 Cross-cutting policy interventions 18 CIFF WP4 Policy Brief:Transition finance for emerging economies 4 Acknowledgements We would like to thank Sarah Colenbran
11、der and Lorena Gonzalez for supervision and helpful comments on the outline and an earlier version of this draft.We are grateful to The Childrens Investment Fund Foundation for their financial support to Unlocking finance for Indias transition to a resilient,Paris-aligned economy.The usual disclaime
12、rs apply.About the authors Judith Tyson Judith Tyson is a specialist in finance for development,including financial market development,private investment and climate finance.Her research interests include green bonds,private climate finance and financial development.Prashant Vaze Prashant Vaze is an
13、 environmental economist and climate finance specialist.He has held positions in the UK civil service,environmental NGOs,a pensions firm,and a green finance think tank.He has worked in Hong Kong and is currently based in India.Acronyms AfDB African Development Bank ADB Asian Development Bank ASEAN A
14、ssociation of Southeast Asian Nations CA 100+Climate Action 100 plus CBI Climate Bonds Initiative CDP Carbon Disclosure Project EM Emerging market ESG Economic,social and governance EU-ETS EU Emissions Trading System G20 Group of 20 GHG Greenhouse gas MDB Multilateral development bank METI Ministry
15、of Economy,Trade and Industry(Japan)NGFS(Central banks and supervisors)Network for Greening the Financial System OECD Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development OJK Otoritas Jasa Keuangan(Indonesian financial regulator)SBTi Science Based Target Initiative SFAC Sustainable Finance Action
16、Council(Canada)SFWG Sustainable Finance Working Group SLB/L Sustainability linked bond/loan TCFD Taskforce on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures CIFF WP4 Policy Brief:Transition finance for emerging economies 5 TPI Transition Pathways Initiative US-ICEF United States-India Clean Energy Facility C
17、IFF WP4 Policy Brief:Transition finance for emerging economies 6 1 Introduction An unresolved item on the climate agenda is accelerating the transition in high-emission,hard-to-abate sectors such as cement,steel,plastics,trucking,shipping and aviation.Together these represent 30%of energy-related gr
18、eenhouse gas(GHG)emissions.They are also essential for economic development in a net-zero world.Technological innovation,financial support and an enabling policy environment are needed to transition them to low-or zero-GHG emissions(IPCC,2023;Energy Transitions Commission,2023).Substantial bank lend
19、ing is available to these sectors including in major emerging markets1 but it is not applied to transition investments.International private finance for emerging economies is limited because of general risk aversion and disincentives to investment in hard-to-abate sectors.This adds to the challenges
20、 for emerging economies,including that their hard-to-abate industrial sectors constitute a larger share of their economy2 with proportionately larger fossil fuel production and emission-intensive industries,such as mining,agriculture and heavy industry(Ahman,2020).Under the Indonesian Presidency the
21、 G20 highlighted the need for private transition finance for emerging economies and established the G20 Transition Finance Framework.This document set the agenda through five pillars to mobilise more sustainable finance(G20 FMCB,2022;G20 SFWG,2023).These five pillars are:1)Identifying transitional a
22、ctivities and investments 2)Reporting information on transition activities and investments 3)Developing transition-related finance instruments 4)Designing policy measures 5)Assessing and mitigating negative social and economic impacts of transition activities and investments.1 Defined as 95 emerging
23、 market and middle-income economies(MICs).https:/www.imf.org/external/datamapper/datasets/FM 2 By contrast,in low-income countries(LICs)there is a lack of a substantive existing private sector that will require transitioning,although pure green finance and development finance will continue to be cri
24、tical.CIFF WP4 Policy Brief:Transition finance for emerging economies 7 This paper looks at what more the G20 can do to unlock transition finance for emerging economies,with a focus on Pillars 1,2,3 and 4 of this framework.Pillar 5 is a cross-cutting recommendation running through the other four.Sec
25、tion 2 discusses the landscape for private finance for transition and how central banks and governments can direct more private finance into transition investments,including through adaptive capital adequacy frameworks,encouraging innovative financial instruments and using policy lending.Section 3 d
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