Does the Greening of Banks Impact the Logics of Sustainable Financing? The Case of Bank Lending to Merchant Renewable Energy Projects in the Philippines
As the Philippines pursues its mission of decarbonization in the energy sector by 2030, a target which aims to achieve a 35% share of renewable energy (RE) in the country's power generation mix, the broad participation of merchant plant developers and banks is crucial. Developers of merchant pl...
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ph-ateneo-arc.finance-and-accounting-faculty-pubs-10022022-01-21T08:19:58Z Does the Greening of Banks Impact the Logics of Sustainable Financing? The Case of Bank Lending to Merchant Renewable Energy Projects in the Philippines Sunio, Varsolo Mendejar, Jaime Nery, Justin Reginald As the Philippines pursues its mission of decarbonization in the energy sector by 2030, a target which aims to achieve a 35% share of renewable energy (RE) in the country's power generation mix, the broad participation of merchant plant developers and banks is crucial. Developers of merchant plants can generate supply of renewable energy, while banks can provide the financing. Nonetheless, banks traditionally do not lend to fully merchant plants, particularly by small proponents who have no implicit guarantor. In recent years, as more banks embed sustainability principles in their corporate philosophy, the question arises on whether this trend has also impacted the bank lending logics, especially with respect to how banks evaluate the risk-return profiles of RE projects, including pure merchant plants by small developers. Using qualitative research methods, we collected data through interviews and desk research from six banks in the Philippines (private and government-controlled, as well as universal and rural). To unpack the lending logics of banks, we presented ten credit enhancement options for the banks to appraise. We found that government-controlled banks, partly due to their mandate in supporting national development, have more appetite towards small merchant plants, unlike private banks, despite the latter's aggressive pursuit of sustainability targets. In the end, a fundamental gap between private banks and merchant plants remains. Since addressing it is crucial for the Philippines to achieve its mission of energy decarbonization, we end with some recommendations on how this gap may be bridged. 2021-12-21T08:00:00Z text https://archium.ateneo.edu/finance-and-accounting-faculty-pubs/3 https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589791821000177 Finance and Accounting Faculty Publications Archīum Ateneo merchant renewable spot market bank lending energy transition Finance and Financial Management Power and Energy |
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merchant renewable spot market bank lending energy transition Finance and Financial Management Power and Energy Sunio, Varsolo Mendejar, Jaime Nery, Justin Reginald Does the Greening of Banks Impact the Logics of Sustainable Financing? The Case of Bank Lending to Merchant Renewable Energy Projects in the Philippines |
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As the Philippines pursues its mission of decarbonization in the energy sector by 2030, a target which aims to achieve a 35% share of renewable energy (RE) in the country's power generation mix, the broad participation of merchant plant developers and banks is crucial. Developers of merchant plants can generate supply of renewable energy, while banks can provide the financing. Nonetheless, banks traditionally do not lend to fully merchant plants, particularly by small proponents who have no implicit guarantor. In recent years, as more banks embed sustainability principles in their corporate philosophy, the question arises on whether this trend has also impacted the bank lending logics, especially with respect to how banks evaluate the risk-return profiles of RE projects, including pure merchant plants by small developers. Using qualitative research methods, we collected data through interviews and desk research from six banks in the Philippines (private and government-controlled, as well as universal and rural). To unpack the lending logics of banks, we presented ten credit enhancement options for the banks to appraise. We found that government-controlled banks, partly due to their mandate in supporting national development, have more appetite towards small merchant plants, unlike private banks, despite the latter's aggressive pursuit of sustainability targets. In the end, a fundamental gap between private banks and merchant plants remains. Since addressing it is crucial for the Philippines to achieve its mission of energy decarbonization, we end with some recommendations on how this gap may be bridged. |
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Sunio, Varsolo Mendejar, Jaime Nery, Justin Reginald |
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Sunio, Varsolo Mendejar, Jaime Nery, Justin Reginald |
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Sunio, Varsolo |
title |
Does the Greening of Banks Impact the Logics of Sustainable Financing? The Case of Bank Lending to Merchant Renewable Energy Projects in the Philippines |
title_short |
Does the Greening of Banks Impact the Logics of Sustainable Financing? The Case of Bank Lending to Merchant Renewable Energy Projects in the Philippines |
title_full |
Does the Greening of Banks Impact the Logics of Sustainable Financing? The Case of Bank Lending to Merchant Renewable Energy Projects in the Philippines |
title_fullStr |
Does the Greening of Banks Impact the Logics of Sustainable Financing? The Case of Bank Lending to Merchant Renewable Energy Projects in the Philippines |
title_full_unstemmed |
Does the Greening of Banks Impact the Logics of Sustainable Financing? The Case of Bank Lending to Merchant Renewable Energy Projects in the Philippines |
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does the greening of banks impact the logics of sustainable financing? the case of bank lending to merchant renewable energy projects in the philippines |
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Archīum Ateneo |
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2021 |
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https://archium.ateneo.edu/finance-and-accounting-faculty-pubs/3 https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589791821000177 |
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