ESG
The ESG Phenomenon – Citigroup, IBRD, World Bank

The latest developments in the ESG space.
Citigroup, IBRD, World Bank
Citigroup has acted for a World Bank (International Bank for
Reconstruction and Development, IBRD) deal that raises $100
million of debt finance, part of which helps pay for a plastic
waste reduction programme. The bond carries a seven-year
maturity.
Returns on the debt are linked to credits for collecting and
recycling plastic waste via projects in Ghana and Indonesia.
In the transaction, Citigroup acted as the lead.
The debt issuance is an example of the green bond trend that has
been in evidence for several years.
Outcomes from the waste-reduction/recycling projects are measured
against plastic and carbon credits issued on the Verra Registry,
Citigroup said in a statement.
Investors are providing about $14 million in up-front financing
required by the projects.
“Given the huge needs for development, channelling private
capital to support development challenges has been a fundamental
part of our work. Outcome bonds, like the Plastic Waste
Reduction-Linked Bond align incentives, so that investors benefit
financially when positive development outcomes are achieved,”
Anshula Kant, managing director and World Bank group chief
financial officer, said.
The bond’s issuers said the debt is 100 per cent principal
protected with the $100 million proceeds used to support the
World Bank’s sustainable development activities globally.
The plastic collection and recycling projects in Ghana and
Indonesia are not World Bank projects. Investors in the bond will
forego a portion of ordinary coupon payments, with the equivalent
amounts instead being provided, through a hedge transaction with
Citigroup, to support the financing of the projects selected by
Plastic Collective UK, who manage the projects' plastic and
carbon credit programmes. In return, the investors will receive
annual coupons composed of a fixed amount plus payments linked to
the sale of a portion of the plastic and carbon credits produced
by the projects.