Topic: finanzas públicas

El potencial de financiamiento con bonos verdes en China

Por Carl Hooks, Mayo 27, 2020

 

Por debajo de la necesidad urgente de urbanización sostenible y de alta calidad en China (un enfoque nuevo que se asienta luego de décadas de crecimiento sin control) está el asunto del dinero. Los fondos públicos solo pueden cubrir una pequeña cantidad de la inversión total necesaria para construir infraestructura baja en carbono en las ciudades de todo el país. En las zonas específicas de conservación energética y protección ambiental, algunos estiman que los fondos públicos estatales cubrirán menos del 25 por ciento de los costos (Bond Magazine 2018). En las ciudades de China, esto significa que es imperativo movilizar capital privado. Un mayor interés en los bonos verdes (cuya intención específica es financiar proyectos relacionados con la sostenibilidad) sugiere que esta herramienta de financiamiento podría ser una opción viable.

El Banco Mundial emitió los primeros bonos verdes oficiales en 2009. En los 10 años que siguieron, la emisión global acumulada en bonos verdes superó los US$ 521.000 millones. Hacia 2018, los bonos verdes representaban alrededor del uno por ciento del mercado global (Tay 2019). Después de emitir las pautas nacionales de financiamiento ecológico, en 2016, China se convirtió rápidamente en el segundo mercado más grande del mundo en bonos verdes; en 2018, la cantidad total de dinero recaudado mediante bonos verdes emitidos por el país (de los cuales no todos coinciden con las definiciones y estándares internacionales) fue de unos US$ 31.000 millones (Meng et al. 2018), y llegaron a casi US$ 22.000 millones en la primera mitad de 2019 (Meng, Shangguan y Shang 2019).

En general, los proyectos que más se benefician de los ingresos por bonos verdes son grandes, tienen amplios horizontes de inversión y dependen de tecnología comprobada; las líneas de metro y otros transportes no contaminantes son buenos ejemplos. Los ingresos por bonos verdes se pueden asignar a activos existentes, como una planta de energía solar en una ciudad, o a inversión capital futura.

En junio de 2019, la Nueva Zona Ganjiang de la provincia de Jiangxi emitió el primer bono municipal de China con una etiqueta “verde” (Red de Seguridad de China 2019). El bono seguía las reglamentaciones del Banco Popular de China, el banco central del país, y se emitió para financiar tuberías inteligentes de servicios públicos. La emisión se suscribió en exceso (12 veces), lo cual indica que los inversionistas de china están dispuestos a financiar proyectos ligados a infraestructura e industria sostenibles (ibídem).

Más al sur, en Shenzhen, dos bonos verdes sin etiquetar ayudaron a financiar un proyecto de Ciudad Internacional Baja en Carbono (CIBC) lanzado en 2012. CIBC es un proyecto de demostración insignia de la Sociedad China y Europea de Urbanización Sostenible. Cuando se complete, cubrirá más de 53 kilómetros cuadrados y exhibirá una serie de edificios ecológicos y tecnologías bajas en carbono (Zhan, de Jong y de Brujin 2018).

Las ciudades como Shenzhen, que ya tienen un PIB y un presupuesto municipal relativamente altos, pueden permitirse experimentar con métodos innovadores de financiamiento para sortear barreras y restricciones financieras. Muchas ciudades aún dependen de la venta del suelo como principal recurso municipal de financiamiento para inversiones capitales. Este es un problema grave, en particular para las ciudades más pequeñas, porque el valor y la cantidad del suelo, así como el nivel de interés del sector privado en el suelo, son inferiores que en ciudades más grandes. A menudo, los gobiernos locales más pequeños se deben conformar con vender suelo a una industria contaminante o no ideal, como una empresa siderúrgica. Las ciudades chinas que desean reducir la huella de carbono podrían observar ciertos aspectos de las labores de financiamiento de Shenzhen para diversificar el financiamiento y no recurrir a la venta del suelo.

Esta alternativa se validó más en noviembre de 2018, cuando un medio de financiamiento local de Wuhan emitió bonos verdes con ventajas fiscales y recaudó US$ 400 millones (Davis 2018). Los ingresos por bonos se asignarán para expandir el transporte público sostenible (Moody’s Investors Service 2018).

Los funcionarios municipales pueden aumentar la eficacia y la viabilidad de los bonos verdes si ofrecen incentivos como subsidiar las tasas de interés; reunir distintos activos ambientales (como inversiones en energía solar, agua y limpieza de contaminación) y formar bonos más grandes para atraer a grandes inversionistas; y adjuntar indicadores mensurables para crear responsabilidad y transparencia (IISD 2018). El monitoreo, los informes y la verificación también son parte esencial de los bonos verdes.

Los bonos verdes son un instrumento de deuda que puede aprovechar capital privado para proyectos orientados a prevención contra eventos climáticos; como tales, resultan naturalmente adecuados para las necesidades de las ciudades chinas cortas de efectivo que intentan lograr la transición a ser bajas en carbono. En adelante, es casi seguro que los bonos verdes tendrán una función más importante en el sector financiero de China y el mundo.

 


 

Extraído y adaptado de “Green Bond Financing and China’s Low-Carbon City Development” (“Financiamiento por bonos verdes y el desarrollo de ciudades bajas en carbono en China”), por Carl Hooks. Tesis de maestría, Universidad de Pekín, 2019.

Fotografía: Los bonos verdes ayuradon a financiar la construcción del sitio de demostración de la Ciudad Internacional Baja en Carbono (CIBC) en Shenzhen. Crédito: Instituto Paulson.

 


 

Referencias

Bond Magazine. 2018. “王琰: 关于我国发展绿色市政债券的探讨” [Exploración del desarrollo de bonos verdes municipales en China]. 中央财经大学绿色金融国际研究院 [Instituto Internacional de Financiamiento Verde de la Universidad Central de Finanzas y Economía] (blog). 24 de octubre. https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/z9-3ndosGAIwxSmNNYFDOQ.

Red de Seguridad de China. 2019. “江西赣江新区发行全国首单绿色市政专项债” [La nueva área Ganjiang en Jiangxi emite el primer bono verde municipal del país]. 新浪财经 [Sina Finance], 21 de junio. http://finance.sina.com.cn/stock/relnews/hk/2019-06-21/doc-ihytcerk8306348.shtml.

Davis, Morgan. 2018. “Wuhan Metro Seals Landmark Green Deal for LGFVs.” Global Capital Asia, 29 de noviembre. https://www.globalcapital.com/article/b1c12qj1rmd7p2/wuhan-metro-seals-landmark-green-deal-for-lgfvs.

IISD (Instituto Internacional de Desarrollo Sustentable). 2018. “How to Issue a Green Bond in China: A Step-by-Step Guide.” Londres: Iniciativa de Bonos Climáticos. https://www.climatebonds.net/files/files/How-to%20GreenBonds%20China.pdf.

Meng, Alan Xiangrui, Monica Filkova, Ivy Lau, Sherry Shangguan, Jin Shang y Xiaopeng Chen. 2019. “China Green Bond Market 2018.” Londres: Iniciativa de Bonos Climáticos, Pekín: China Central Depository & Clearing Company (febrero). https://www.climatebonds.net/resources/reports/china-green-bond-market-2018.

Meng, Alan Xiangrui, Sherry Shangguan y Jin Shang. 2019. “China Green Bond Market Newsletter H1 2019 / 中国绿色债券市场季报 2019 上半年度.” [En inglés y en chino.] Londres: Iniciativa de Bonos Climáticos, Pekín: China Central Depository & Clearing Company (31 de julio). https://www.climatebonds.net/resources/reports/china-green-bond-market-newsletter-h1-2019.

Moody’s Investors Service. 2018. “Moody’s Assigns Green Bond Assessment (GBA) of GB1 to Wuhan Metro’s Proposed Green Senior Perpetual Securities.” 20 de noviembre. https://www.moodys.com/research/Moodys-assigns-Green-Bond-Assessment-GBA-of-GB1-to-Wuhan–PR_391149.

Tay, Shirley. 2019. “Investors Are Pouring into Green Bonds. That May Not Be for the Best.” CNBC, 29 de enero. https://www.cnbc.com/2019/01/30/investors-are-pouring-into-green-bonds-that-may-not-be-for-the-best.html.

Zhan Changjie, Martin de Jong y Hans de Brujin. 2018. “Funding Sustainable Cities: A Comparative Study of Sino-Singapore Tianjin Eco-City and Shenzhen International Low-Carbon City.” Sustainability 10, n.º 4256 (17 de noviembre de 2018): 1–15.

Methodology of FiSCs

Author: Adam H. Langley

Publication Date: September 2020

32 pages

Methodology Used to Create the Fiscally Standardized Cities Database PDF

Abstract

This paper details the methodology used to create the fiscally standardized cities (FiSCs) database. The data are available for 212 U.S. cities for the 1977–2017 period on the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy’s website. FiSCs allow for comparisons of local government finances across the nation’s largest cities by accounting for differences in the structure of local government. The construction of FiSCs involves adding together revenues and expenditures for the city government plus an appropriate share from overlying counties, school districts, and special districts. The allocations are based on a city’s share of county population, the percentage of students in each school district that live in the central city, and the city’s share of the estimated population served by each special district. FiSCs provide a full picture of revenues raised from city residents and business and spending on their behalf, whether done by the city government or a separate overlying government.

Tags: Local Government, Public Finance

Resources

Current Property Tax Trends

Property Tax Trends 2020–2021 (Catherine Collins, George Washington Institute of Public Policy)
This report provides an overview of current trends in the property tax, including updates on recent ballot measures, the impact of Covid-19 on public transportation, tax base shifting patterns, and recent state actions to reduce the business personal property tax.

Property Tax Trends 2019–2020 (Catherine Collins, George Washington Institute of Public Policy)
This report provides an overview of current trends in the property tax, including updates on property tax actions taken by states and local governments in response to the COVID-19 crisis.


Property Tax Fundamentals

What Policy Makers Should Know About Property Taxes (Land Lines, January 2009)
Although property taxes continue to be a fundamental and important revenue source for local government, they also remain exceptionally controversial. This article discusses issues for which improved education and understanding is especially necessary.

Property Tax Rates

2013 Fifty-State Property Tax Comparison Study (Minnesota Center for Fiscal Excellence)
This study compares effective property tax rates for four classes of property located in the largest city of each state and D.C., the 50 largest cities in the United States, and a rural area of each state.

2012 Fifty-State Property Tax Comparison Study (Minnesota Center for Fiscal Excellence)
This study compares effective property tax rates for four classes of property located in the largest city of each state and D.C., the 50 largest cities in the United States, and a rural area of each state.

2011 Fifty-State Property Tax Comparison Study (Minnesota Taxpayers Association)
This study compares effective property tax rates for four classes of property located in the largest city of each state and D.C., the 50 largest cities in the United States, and a rural area of each state.

2010 Fifty-State Property Tax Comparison Study (Minnesota Taxpayers Association)
This study compares effective property tax rates for four classes of property located in the largest city of each state and D.C., the 50 largest cities in the United States, and a rural area of each state.

Estimating the Responsiveness of Residential Capital Investment to Property Tax Differentials (Lincoln Working Paper)
This paper analyzes the impact of property taxes on housing investment.

2009 Fifty-State Property Tax Comparison Study (Minnesota Taxpayers Association)
This survey compares property tax burdens in different regions and for different types of property in all the states and the District of Columbia.

A Reconnaissance of Currently Available Measures of Effective Property Tax Rates (Lincoln Working Paper)
Findings of a 50 state survey investigating available information on effective tax rates, and how those rates are calculated and reported.

Tax Limits

Property Tax Assessment Limits: Lessons from Thirty Years of Experience (Lincoln Policy Focus Report)
This study examines the structure and effects of different property tax limitation measures.

Property Tax Limitations and Local Fiscal Conditions: The Impact of Proposition 2 1/2 in Massachusetts (Lincoln Working Paper)
This is a study of the tax limitation measure introduced by ballot initiative in Massachusetts and its effect on local government finance.

The Algebra of Tax Burden Shifts from Assessment Limitations (Lincoln Working Paper)
A mathematical model that demonstrates how taxes must rise for some groups in order to provide tax relief to others.

The Variety of Property Tax Limits (State Tax Notes, November 2007)
Limitations on taxable values will not prevent tax increases if rates rise, and rate limitations may not restrict taxes if values rise. Restricting the total tax burden will not address problems in its distribution among taxpayers. Conversely, an equitably distributed burden may still rise rapidly if total spending increases substantially.

Surprise! An Unintended Consequence of Assessment Limitations (Land Lines, July 2007)
Early experiences with assessment limitation measures reveal an unanticipated result: some property owners seemingly targeted to benefit from lower assessments may be harmed instead.

Taxable Personal Property

Tax Flights (Lincoln Working Paper)
This report considers the special challenges posed by attempts to tax moveable property.

Real Estate Transfer Charges

Taxing Property Transactions Versus Taxing Property Ownership (Chapter 7 of Challenging the Conventional Wisdom on the Property Tax, Lincoln Book 2010)
This chapter examines the variety of transfer tax programs currently in use in the United States and compares them to annual property taxes in terms of equity, efficiency, and revenue potential and stability.

Legal Definition of Real Property


The Property Tax Base

Assessed Values by Property Class

Analysis of Detroit Property Tax Revenue Options (Lincoln Working Paper)
This paper considers fiscal alternatives available to a municipality facing a declining property tax base.

The Value of Residential Land and Structures During the Great Housing Boom and Bust (Lincoln Working Paper)
This is a major study of land and building values over the course of the current economic cycle.

Value Standard and Assessment Ratios

Assessment Regressivity: A Tale of Two Illinois Counties (Land Lines, January 2011)
This article provides an econometric analysis of assessment sale ratios in Illinois.


Property Tax Relief and Incentive Programs

Are Property Tax Abatements for Business Structures an Indirect Form of Land Value Taxation (Lincoln Working Paper)
This paper considers whether business tax incentives that generally reduce taxes on new construction may serve as a step towards land value taxation.

Tax Treatment of Agricultural Property

Preferential Assessment of Rural Lands in the United States (Lincoln Working Paper)
This paper provides an overview and critical analysis of special property tax provisions for agricultural land.

Taxing and Untaxing Land: Current Use Assessment of Farmland (State Tax Notes, September 2005)
The debate over appropriate property tax treatment of farmland touches on many complex issues, and tax and land policies addressing them often have contradictory elements as well. Nearly a half-century of experience with agricultural taxes based on use value rather than market value provides a vantage point from which to consider these controversies.

Current-Use Property Assessment and Land Development (Lincoln Working Paper)
This paper seeks to explore whether current use assessment can protect rural lands from development, surveys the actual penalties operative in the various states during 2002, and speculates about which states are more likely to have effective land preservation programs.

Incentives for Economic Development

Rethinking Property Tax Incentives for Business (Lincoln Policy Focus Report)
This policy focus report provides an overview of property tax incentives offered to businesses to promote economic development.

A Duration Analysis of Tax Increment Finance District Lifespans: The Case of Wisconsin (Lincoln Working Paper)
An empirical study of tax increment financing in times of declining value increments.

TIF at a Turning Point: Defining Debt Down (Lincoln Working Paper)
A review of arguments for and against the use of tax increment financing as a means of authorizing municipal debt.

Tax Increment Financing (Land Lines, January 2006)
Tax increment financing (TIF), designed to promote economic development by earmarking property tax revenue from increases in assessed values within a designated TIF district. Empirical analysis, using data from Illinois, suggests that the non-TIF areas of municipalities that use TIF grow no more rapidly, and perhaps more slowly, than similar municipalities that do not use TIF.

Incentives for Specific Property Improvements

Preferential Property Tax Programs

State Income Tax Credits for Conservation Easements: Do Additional Credits Create Additional Value? (Lincoln Working Paper)
This report analyzes the effect of state credits in encouraging donation of conservation easements.

Preferential Property Tax Treatment of Land (Lincoln Working Paper)
This report reviews the effectiveness of preferential taxation to achieve its intended goals, and describes current preferential tax programs for agricultural, forest, open space, recreational and other vacant land uses in the United States.

Residential Property Tax Relief Programs

Residential Property Tax Relief Programs (2012): Summary Table on Exemptions and Credits
Homestead exemptions and property tax credits are common ways for states to ease the tax burden on homeowners. This table summarizes the detailed information presented in the Residential Property Tax Relief Programs section of Significant Features of the Property Tax. It includes data for 167 programs, with information on the value of exemptions expressed in terms of market value; criteria related to age, disability, income, and veteran status; the type of taxes affected; whether tax loss is borne by state or local government; local options; and more. The summary table makes it easy to conduct quantitative analysis of these programs or make quick state-by-state comparisons, because it accounts for differences across states in assessment ratios and describes the details of each program using a series of variables instead of relying on text descriptions.

Are Property Taxes Forcing the Elderly Out of Their Homes (Lincoln Working Paper)
Research in Wisconsin indicates that for homeowners under the age of 80 increases in the property tax had almost no impact on decisions to move, and only 1 in 600 Wisconsin homeowners over the age of 79 moved because their property taxes grew at an above-median rate.

Property Tax Relief: The Case for Circuit Breakers (Land Lines, April 2010)
This article argues that most efforts to provide property tax relief, such as assessment limits and homestead exemptions, are inefficient and create substantial unintended consequences. Circuit breaker programs deserve renewed attention because they target aid to those who need it most.

A Critical Review of Property Tax Relief in Wisconsin: The School Levy Credit and the First Dollar Credit (Lincoln Working Paper)
Analysis of Wisconsin property tax data finds that a substantial proportion of tax credits go to non-residents, to high-income individuals, and to others not in serious need of property tax relief.

Property Tax Circuit Breakers: Fair and Cost Effective Relief for Taxpayers (Lincoln Policy Focus Report)
By targeting property relief to those most in need, circuit breakers promote tax equity at minimal cost to state and local budgets. Recommendations for the best design for property tax circuit breakers are included in this policy focus report.


More…

Payments in Lieu of Taxes By Nonprofits: Case Studies (State Tax Notes article)
This article provides a brief overview of payments in lieu of taxes by nonprofits and case studies for six cities: Baltimore (MD), Boston (MA), New Orleans (LA), Princeton (NJ), Providence (RI), and Worcester (MA).

Recession, Recovery, and State and Local Finances (Lincoln Working Paper)
A review of the effect of the current economic downturn on state and local revenues.

The Effect of Increasing the Number of Property Tax Payment Installments on the Rate of Property Tax Delinquency (Lincoln Working Paper)
An examination of the impact of different payment options on tax compliance.

The Economic Implications of House Price Capitalization: A Survey of an Emerging Literature (Lincoln Working Paper)
A review of current literature analyzing the effect of various economic factors on residential property values.

The Impact of the Great Recession and the Housing Crisis on the Financing of America’s Largest Cities (Lincoln Working Paper)
The housing crisis and the recession have placed tremendous fiscal pressure on the nation’s central cities. This paper uses data on the financing of the nation’s largest central cities from 1997 to 2008 to forecast the impact of the recession and the housing crisis on central city expenditures between 2009 and 2013.

Revenue Diversification and the Financing of Large American Central Cities (Lincoln Working Paper)
This paper analyzes the financing of the nation’s largest central cities from 1997 to 2008. It explores whether revenue diversification supports higher levels of government spending and also examines vertical tax competition between states and their large cities.

The Effect of Land Value Ratio on Property Tax Protests and the Effects of Protests on Assessment Uniformity (Lincoln Working Paper)
This paper presents new research on assessment protests and their possible relationship to land values.

Centralization of School Finance and Property Values (Lincoln Working Paper)
A case study of Vermont presenting lessons based on research about the impact on property values of changes the structure of school finance.

Thirty Years of Judicial Education on Property Tax Issues (Land Lines, July 2010)
Reflections on the history of the National Conference of State Tax Judges.

Payments in Lieu of Taxes: Balancing Municipal and Nonprofit Interests (Lincoln Policy Focus Report)
Payments in lieu of taxes are payments made voluntarily by tax-exempt nonprofits as a substitute for property taxes. This report provides case studies of several municialities that have pursued PILOTs in the past decade, as well as a broader picture of PILOT use in the United States.

Assessing the Theory and Practice of Land Value Taxation (Lincoln Policy Focus Report)
The land value tax is a variant of the property tax that imposes a higher tax rate on land than on improvements, or taxes only the land value. This report summarizes research on the topic and presents recommendations for local policy makers considering alternative property tax measures.

The Property Tax – School Funding Dilemma (Lincoln Policy Focus Report)
There is an active policy debate across the country regarding funding public schools with property tax dollars. This report addresses the twin challenges of court mandates regarding school funding and constituent pressure to lower property taxes. It also corrects some common misconceptions through a critical analysis of nine myths regarding school funding litigation, property tax characteristics, and the state role in funding education.

The Valuation of Federally Subsidized Housing: Ten Questions for the Property Tax (Lincoln Working Paper)
The enormous volume of thoughtful legal analysis on the complex federal incentives for private investment in low- and moderate-income housing offers insights into issues beyond the valuation of subsidized housing. Many subsidized developments are not in any simple sense public housing. The federal government has long offered incentives for private parties to own and operate low- and moderate-income rental apartments as a financial investment. These structures are generally not tax-exempt, and courts have struggled to characterize them for property tax purposes. This paper examines the questions and implications raised by the decades of judicial decisions on the appropriate treatment of these properties and includes an appendix with examples of cases and legislation addressing the taxation of subsidized rental housing in 40 states.

Centralization of School Finance and Property Values (Lincoln Working Paper)
In June 1997 the elected leaders of Vermont enacted Act 60, potentially the most radical reform of a state’s system of public school financing since the changes in California in the late 1970s. Little has been known about the effects on property values of changes like those that occurred in Vermont – which combined redistribution of education spending, a statewide property tax, and limits on property tax liabilities based on the taxpayer’s income. This research closes that knowledge gap by quantifying the capitalization effects of Act 60.

Private Conservation Easements: A Record of Achievements and the Challenges Ahead (Land Lines, October 2009)
A conservation easement is a restriction on land that prevents the owner of the burdened property from altering the natural, ecological, open, or scenic attributes of the property. Private conservation easements have become a major factor in preservation efforts. They have made a positive impact on the landscape of today and tomorrow. With some modifications in their form and use, conservation easements can become an even more powerful vehicle to ensure natural preservation while serving the public interest.

Reinventing Conservation Easements (Land Lines, October 2009)
Conservations easements are a valuable land protection tool (complementing regulation, land acquisition, and tax policies), but the laws and conventions governing conservation easements require reforms to ensure and sustain their public benefits.

Who Pays the Property Tax? (Land Lines, April 2006)
This article examines the “economic incidence” of the property tax, that is, who actually bears the burden of the tax. The classic example is a landlord who pays the tax but raises rent to do so. In the same context, “capitalization” of property taxes into the market value of real estate is discussed and analyzed.

Local Property Tax: An Assessment (Land Lines, May 1999)
“The property tax is, in my view, a good local tax, though it is far from perfect.” Professor Wallace E. Oates reviews property tax issues and some “telling but, in part, misplaced criticism.”

Successful Property Tax Reform: The Case of Massachusetts (Lincoln Online Course)
Registration required. This course examines the deep problems of the Massachusetts property tax in the 1970s and the subsequent reforms that created one of the most functional and fair property tax systems in the United States.

Contact

For questions about the FiSC database, or to receive email notifications when new FiSC data is released, please contact Adam Langley.

Adam Langley
Department of Valuation and Taxation
Lincoln Institute of Land Policy
113 Brattle Street
Cambridge, MA 02138
617-661-3016 x117
alangley@lincolninst.edu

List of FiSCs

Download lists of cities in FiSC database:

The Potential of Green Bond Financing in China

By Carl Hooks, Abril 14, 2020

 

Underlying the urgent need for sustainable, high-quality urbanization in China—a new approach taking hold after decades of unchecked growth—is the question of money. Public funds can supply only a small amount of the total investment needed to build low-carbon infrastructure in cities across the country. In the specific areas of energy conservation and environmental protection, some estimates state public funds will cover less than 25 percent of costs (Bond Magazine 2018). For Chinese cities, this means mobilizing private capital is imperative. A growing interest in green bonds—bonds specifically intended to fund projects related to sustainability—suggests this financing tool could be a viable option.

Chart shows sales of green bonds going up from 2015 to 2020

The World Bank issued the first official green bonds in 2009. In the 10 years following, cumulative global green bond issuance exceeded $521 billion. As of 2018, green bonds account for about one percent of the global market (Tay 2019). China has rapidly become the world’s second largest green bond market since releasing national green finance guidelines in 2016; the total amount of money raised through state-issued Chinese green bonds—not all of which align with international definitions and standards—was about $31 billion in 2018 (Meng et al. 2018) and hit almost $22 billion in the first half of 2019 (Meng, Shangguan, and Shang 2019). 

Generally speaking, the projects that benefit most from green bond proceeds are large, have long investment horizons, and rely on proven technology—metro lines and other clean transportation are good examples. Green bond proceeds can be allocated to existing assets, such as a solar energy plant operating in a city, or to upcoming capital investment.

In June 2019, the Ganjiang New Area in Jiangxi Province issued the first municipal bond in China bearing a “green” label (China Securities Network 2019). The bond followed the regulations of the People’s Bank of China, the country’s central bank, and was issued to finance smart utility pipelines. The issuance was 12 times oversubscribed, indicating that investors in China are willing to finance projects tied to sustainable infrastructure and industry (Ibid). 

Farther south, in Shenzhen, two unlabeled green bonds helped finance an International Low Carbon City (ILCC) project launched in 2012. The ILCC is a flagship demonstration project of the China-E.U. Partnership on Sustainable Urbanization. When completed, it will cover more than 53 km2 and display an array of green buildings and low-carbon technologies (Zhan, de Jong, and de Brujin 2018).

Cities like Shenzhen, which have a relatively large GDP and municipal budget, can afford to experiment with innovative financing methods in order to circumvent financial barriers and constraints. Many cities still rely on sales of land as the main municipal finance resource for capital investment. This is a serious problem for smaller cities in particular, because the value and amount of their land and level of private sector interest in the land are all lower than in larger cities. Oftentimes, smaller local governments will have to settle for selling land to a nonideal or polluting industry, such as a steel company. Chinese cities hoping to reduce carbon footprints could look to aspects of Shenzhen’s financing efforts to diversify funding away from land sales. 

This alternative was further validated in November 2018 when a local finance vehicle in Wuhan issued offshore green bonds and raised $400 million (Davis 2018). The bond proceeds will go toward expanding sustainable public transportation (Moody’s Investors Service 2018).

Municipal officials can increase the efficacy and feasibility of green bonds by providing incentives such as interest rate subsidies, bundling different environmental assets (such as solar, water, and pollution cleanup investments) into larger bonds to attract big investors, and attaching measurable indicators to create accountability and transparency (IISD 2018). Monitoring, reporting, and verification is also a key part of green bonds.

As a debt instrument that can harness private capital for climate-oriented projects, green bonds appear naturally suited to the needs of cash-strapped cities in China that are trying to achieve low-carbon transition. Green bonds will almost certainly play a larger role in the Chinese and global financial sector going forward.

 


 

Excerpted and adapted from “Green Bond Financing and China’s Low-Carbon City Development” by Carl Hooks. Master’s thesis, Peking University, 2019.

Photograph: Green bonds helped finance construction of the International Low-Carbon City demonstration site in Shenzhen. Credit: Paulson Institute.

 


 

References

Bond Magazine. 2018. “王琰: 关于我国发展绿色市政债券的探讨” [Exploring the development of green municipal bonds in China]. 中央财经大学绿色金融国际研究院 [International Institute of Green Finance of the Central University of Finance and Economics] (blog). October 24. https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/z9-3ndosGAIwxSmNNYFDOQ.

China Securities Network. 2019. “江西赣江新区发行全国首单绿色市政专项债” [Jiangxi Ganjiang New Area issues country’s first municipal green bond]. 新浪财经 [Sina Finance], June 21. http://finance.sina.com.cn/stock/relnews/hk/2019-06-21/doc-ihytcerk8306348.shtml.

Davis, Morgan. 2018. “Wuhan Metro Seals Landmark Green Deal for LGFVs.” Global Capital Asia, November 29. https://www.globalcapital.com/article/b1c12qj1rmd7p2/wuhan-metro-seals-landmark-green-deal-for-lgfvs.

IISD (International Institute for Sustainable Development). 2018. “How to Issue a Green Bond in China: A Step-by-Step Guide.” London: Climate Bonds Initiative. https://www.climatebonds.net/files/files/How-to%20GreenBonds%20China.pdf.

Meng, Alan Xiangrui, Monica Filkova, Ivy Lau, Sherry Shangguan, Jin Shang, and Xiaopeng Chen. 2019. “China Green Bond Market 2018.” London: Climate Bonds Initiative; Beijing: China Central Depository & Clearing Company (February). https://www.climatebonds.net/resources/reports/china-green-bond-market-2018.

Meng, Alan Xiangrui, Sherry Shangguan, and Jin Shang. 2019. “China Green Bond Market Newsletter H1 2019 / 中国绿色债券市场季报 2019 上半年度.” [In English and Chinese.] London: Climate Bonds Initiative; Beijing: China Central Depository & Clearing Company (July 31). https://www.climatebonds.net/resources/reports/china-green-bond-market-newsletter-h1-2019.

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