Brazil to be the first country to receive sustainable financing from the World Bank

The entity’s board of directors approved a US$400 million financing facility with Banco do Brasil SA for long-term sustainable loans

Compradores en el Mercado Municipal de Uruguaiana en Río de Janeiro, Brasil, el miércoles 10 de agosto de 2022. Los precios altísimos de los alimentos y el combustible en América Latina están afectando más a los pobres, creando un polvorín político que es una advertencia para el mundo. Fotógrafía: María Magdalena Arrellaga/Bloomberg
By Maria Eloisa Capurro
December 25, 2022 | 12:14 PM

Bloomberg — Brazilian companies will be the first to receive financing from the World Bank at the global level. The goal is to reduce their carbon footprint.

The bank’s board of directors on Thursday approved a US$400 million financing line with Banco do Brasil SA for long-term sustainable loans for small and medium-sized companies, it said in a press release.

The bank expects to make the first loan during the second half of 2023, said Shireen Mahdi, project manager at the World Bank.

The project also includes an additional US$98 million to create a climate debt fund that will leverage private capital and focus on larger companies, especially in agribusiness. The financing will aim to reduce emissions through supply chains and not just within the company’s own structure. A further US$2 million will go toward building the technology needed to help companies and access high-quality carbon markets within Banco do Brasil.

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“We will adopt high-quality standards for mitigation plans and carbon markets,” said Mahdi, who is the World Bank’s lead economist for Brazil. “A company that is able to succeed will be prepared for export markets and value chains that are becoming greener.”

The credit lines will be for up to 20 years and are likely to have a reducing coupon, used in green financing so that issuers pay less interest when they meet their targets. Banco do Brasil expects agribusiness to lead applications for financing, although the project is open to all sectors of the economy. The banks are still working on how the targets will be defined, measured and validated.

The project aims to reduce CO2 emissions by up to 4.5% of what Brazil needs to stay on track toward its commitment of zero net emissions by 2030. It is expected to mobilize US$1.4 billion in private capital, according to the bank. Its “one-stop shop” approach, which concentrates all the necessary steps within the same banking structure, can give small and medium-sized companies better access to carbon markets, Mahdi said.

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Brazilian companies and banks raised US$20 billion through green or sustainable bonds during 2020-2021, according to recent central bank data. The country’s companies account for about 1% of global emissions, the second highest in Latin America after Chile.

The nation’s central bank is also pushing the financial system to adopt a green focus in its risk framework, while investors are calling on the government to issue a sustainability-linked bond that would pay interest if the country protects the Amazon rainforest.

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