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OECD Guidance on Transition Finance

Ensuring Credibility of Corporate Climate Transition Plans

image of OECD Guidance on Transition Finance

This guidance sets out elements of credible corporate climate transition plans, which aim to align with the temperature goal of the Paris Agreement. Such plans are needed to address the growing risk of greenwashing in transition finance and facilitate a global, whole-of-economy climate transition. Based on extensive stakeholder consultations, including an industry survey, the guidance provides market actors, policy makers, and regulators with a comprehensive overview of existing transition finance approaches, identifying the main challenges and solutions. The guidance is relevant to: (i) policy-makers and regulators seeking to develop or revise relevant policy frameworks or regulations; (ii) corporates developing transition plans and seeking to identify the most salient elements of existing initiatives; and (iii) financial market participants planning to provide finance for the implementation of net-zero strategies. The guidance emphasises greater transparency, comparability and granularity in corporate transition plans, and the need for adequate environmental and social safeguards. In light of challenges for some corporates, especially in emerging markets and developing economies, and the risk of excluding key actors from transition finance, the guidance highlights the need for policy-makers to take stronger action to bolster domestic enabling environments for transformative investments.

English

Key challenges in transition finance

This chapter identifies key challenges in transition finance, drawing on insights gathered through the OECD Industry Survey on Transition Finance, bilateral stakeholder consultations, and literature review. Scaling up financing for the transition across all sectors globally requires transition finance approaches to consider and respond to the current challenges and barriers that are encountered by market actors in this space. In this context, the challenges of corporates in emerging markets and developing economies (EMDEs) and micro, small and medium-sized enterprises (MSMEs) deserve special attention. The chapter concludes that credible corporate climate transition plans and increased transparency by corporates can address some key challenges, while others have additional, broader implications for policymakers and would require the use of complementary tools, including through the involvement of multilateral development banks (MDBs).

English

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