Grants to Support Banks in Developing Green and Sustainability-linked Liabilities Frameworks
Prime Minister's OfficeSpeakers
Summary
This question concerns whether the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) will introduce grants to help banks develop green and sustainability-linked liabilities frameworks to support green deposits. Mr Don Wee raised the query, and Senior Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam responded that MAS currently provides grants for green financing to cover costs like external reviews and sustainability monitoring. The Senior Minister explained that banks encounter less friction in offering green deposits, citing existing products from HSBC and OCBC that serve corporate and retail segments. He noted that healthy market interest has already driven the creation of these solutions without the need for additional government support. Consequently, the Senior Minister concluded that no market failure or gap exists to justify MAS providing grants for green deposits at this time.
Transcript
1 Mr Don Wee asked the Prime Minister whether MAS has plans to introduce grants that support banks in developing green and sustainability-linked liabilities frameworks so as to take in green deposits to fund banks' green and sustainability related loans.
Mr Tharman Shanmugaratnam (for the Prime Minister): Businesses accessing green and sustainability-linked financing generally face higher costs compared to conventional financing. The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) therefore provides grants to the businesses to help them defray the additional expenses associated with obtaining an external review on the eligibility of the project being financed, or the monitoring, measurement and reporting of the borrower's progress in meeting the sustainability metrics.
On the other hand, there is comparatively less friction for banks to offer green deposits or similar products. Indeed, some local financial institutions have introduced green and sustainability-linked deposit products given healthy interest from both corporate and retail segments. These include HSBC Singapore's Green Deposit Account launched in January 2020 for corporate clients to finance green initiatives, and OCBC's sustainability-linked structured deposit for retail investors launched in September 2021. There is currently no market failure or gap that requires MAS to support green deposits with grants, as it currently does for other sustainable and sustainability-linked solutions which face additional costs or other constraints.