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Global sustainable bond issuance to reach $1tn in 2025: ѴǴǻ’s

Global sustainable bond issuance to reach $1tn in 2025: ѴǴǻ’s
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Updated 26 January 2025

Global sustainable bond issuance to reach $1tn in 2025: ѴǴǻ’s

Global sustainable bond issuance to reach $1tn in 2025: ѴǴǻ’s
  • Impending maturity wave is set to escalate, signifying additional refinancing requirements alongside regular issuance goals
  • ѴǴǻ’s said ESG risks this year will be influenced by policy decisions and financing.

RIYADH: Global sustainable bond issuance is projected to reach $1 trillion in 2025, driven by a worldwide focus on green development, according to global credit rating agency ѴǴǻ’s.

In their latest report, the New York-based firm said that increased examination of greenwashing, changes in market norms and regulations, and a more intricate landscape, which includes political challenges in certain nations, are expected to impede growth.

This aligns with the green bond market, which has advanced a decade beyond the international treaty on climate change that was signed in 2016, known as the Paris Agreement. The market provides a boost to the sector as initial issuances are gradually approaching maturity. 

The impending maturity wave is set to escalate this year and 2026, signifying additional refinancing requirements alongside regular issuance goals, according to capital market firm AXA Investment Managers.

“We expect global sustainable bond issuance to total $1 trillion in 2025, in line with 2024. Social bonds will be constrained by a lack of benchmark-sized projects, while transition-labeled bonds and sustainability-linked bonds will remain niche segments as they navigate evolving market sentiment,” ѴǴǻ’s report said.

“A continued focus on climate mitigation financing, as well as growing interest in climate adaptation and nature, will spur green and sustainability bond issuance,” it added. “Meanwhile, the widening gaps between decarbonization ambitions and implementation will be brought into focus by the contrast of fresh pledges and increasingly destructive climate events.”

Regarding the outlook on environmental, social, and governance factors, ѴǴǻ’s said the risks this year will be influenced by policy decisions and financing.

“Companies will encounter challenges in handling environmental and social risks within their supply chains. Additionally, technological disruptions, climate change, and demographic shifts could exacerbate social risks and pose policy obstacles for governments,” the agency added.

In November, ѴǴǻ’s said that global issuance of sustainable bonds in the third quarter of last year reached $216 billion, marking a 9 percent annual increase.

It said at the time that the year-on-year increase in green, social, sustainability, and sustainability-linked bonds came despite a quarter-on-quarter drop, with the volume issued down 14 percent in the three months to the end of September compared to the preceding period. 

For the first nine months of 2024, sustainable bond volumes reached $769 billion, marking a 3 percent decline compared to the same period last year. 

Despite the quarterly dip, ѴǴǻ’s forecasted that the total sustainable bond volumes will reach $950 billion in 2024 “buoyed by relatively robust volumes in the first half of the year and continued issuer appetite for funding environmental and social projects with labeled bonds.”


After luxury push, ֱ targets broader tourist market, minister says

After luxury push, ֱ targets broader tourist market, minister says
Updated 08 November 2025

After luxury push, ֱ targets broader tourist market, minister says

After luxury push, ֱ targets broader tourist market, minister says
  • ֱ is looking to encourage people in the region to come to the kingdom, including via a plan to create a Schengen-style visa for Gulf Cooperation Council countries

RIYADH: ֱ is building up its mid- and upper-mid-range tourism options and plans to increase access to hotel accommodation for religious pilgrimages after years focused on developing expensive luxury resorts, the kingdom’s tourism minister said.
“We started with building luxury destinations for luxury travelers. And we have already started building destinations for the middle class and upper middle class,” Saudi Tourism Minister Ahmed Al-Khateeb told Reuters.
“We will not ignore this segment,” he said on the sidelines of the UN’s yearly tourism conference, being hosted in Riyadh for the first time.
Attracting tourists is a central pillar of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s Vision 2030 plan to diversify the kingdom’s economy away from oil and transform society in the once-ultra conservative kingdom.
Under the plan, ֱ aims to attract 150 million tourists per year by 2030, at least a third of them from abroad.
With flagship Red Sea coast resorts running at around $2,000 per night, few mid-income travelers currently have hotel options.
Khateeb said 10 new resorts due to open in the coming months on the Red Sea’s Shebara Island would offer a “much lower price point” than existing options, without providing figures.
Religious tourism remains at the core of ֱ’s economic plans.
Khateeb said ֱ planned to nearly double the number coming to the kingdom for pilgrimage to the holy cities of Makkah and Medina to 30 million by 2030, enabled by tens of thousands of new hotel rooms.
ֱ is looking to encourage people in the region to come to the kingdom, including via a plan to create a Schengen-style visa for Gulf Cooperation Council countries.
Khateeb said that should become available “in 2026, maximum 2027.”