Climate Change

GEK Terna to raise EUR 300 million via green bonds with obligation to cut emissions

GEK Terna raise EUR 300 million via green bonds obligation cut emissions

Photo: GEK Terna

Published

December 6, 2021

Country

Comments

0

Share

Published:

December 6, 2021

Country:

Comments:

0

Share

Greek construction and energy giant GEK Terna is preparing to sell common sustainability-linked bonds with a target of EUR 300 million. The investors will get paid more if the company fails to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 25% through 2025.

The GEK Terna Group has a plan to boost the capacity of wind farms, photovoltaic plants and electricity storage systems to 3 GW by 2028. Through its member company Terna Energy, as of June 30 it had a portfolio of over 1.3 GW in operation, under construction or ready for construction in Greece, Central and Eastern Europe.

The construction giant, which is also active in the areas of real estate and waste management, announced it would offer common sustainability-linked bonds to be traded at the Athens Exchange. The goal is to raise EUR 300 million, but the issue will be canceled if the demand is lower than EUR 200 million.

Emission cut target is 25% by end-2025

The seven-year green bond sale, which should be completed by December 10, comes with a clause that GEK Terna must lower greenhouse gas emissions by 25% through the end of 2025. It said that if it fails, investors would get an increase in the interest rate of 0.2 percentage points.

The company expressed confidence that its energy projects would contribute to the plan to reduce the environmental and energy footprint.

EnergyPress learned the funds would be used to partially finance an 877 MW gas-fired power plant project in Komotini, which GEK Terna is developing with Motor Oil. The facility is valued at EUR 375 million and it is scheduled to come online in three years.

Energy companies in Greece adding green bonds to portfolios

Terna Energy sold green bonds for EUR 150 million in 2019 to fund its renewable energy projects. National electricity producer Public Power Corp. (PPC or DEI) raised EUR 775 million in sustainability-linked debt securities in March, followed by a EUR 500 million issue in July. It said it would cut greenhouse gas emissions by 40% by the end of 2022 or that it would pay creditors back 0.5 percentage points more in interest.

The National Bank of Greece or NBG issued green bonds of EUR 500 million in total a year ago with the obligation to invest in hydropower, wind parks and photovoltaic projects.

Mytilineos raised EUR 500 million in April in its first green bond issue.

Green or climate bond arrangements are an emerging segment in the global debt market. Companies, governments and financial institutions are turning to the tool to provide funds in line with new, stricter environmental standards. Such projects mitigate climate change and its impact and introduce the principles of circular economy.

Comments (0)

Be the first one to comment on this article.

Enter Your Comment
Please wait... Please fill in the required fields. There seems to be an error, please refresh the page and try again. Your comment has been sent.

Related Articles

G7-andrew-bowie-coal-phaseout

UK minister: G7 reaches ‘historic’ deal to abandon coal in first half of 2030s

30 April 2024 - An official statement on the G7 decarbonization commitments is due later today

China’s energy transition on track for carbon neutrality by 2060

24 April 2024 - China is making huge progress toward its goal of reducing net emissions to zero, Norwegian consulting firm DNV estimated in a report

BiH drafts first interactive GIS map of locations vulnerable to forest fires

BiH drafts first interactive map of locations vulnerable to forest fires

24 April 2024 - Authors have identified key risk factors for forest fires as well as priority areas for conducting preventive measures

Mitsotakis Greece EUR 2 billion fund decarbonization islands

Mitsotakis: Greece to launch EUR 2 billion fund for decarbonization of islands

19 April 2024 - Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis said Greece would create a special fund for islands of up to EUR 2 billion for phasing out fossil fuels