EBRD contributes €20 mn to Greek developer’s first green bond

EBRD contributes €20 mn to Greek developer’s first green bond

The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) has invested €20 million into a 7-year €230 million green bond issued by Lamda Development S.A., a leading Greek real estate developer specialising in the development, investment, and management of real estate assets.

On 26 July the EBRD released the project summary documents announcing its participation, which was officially signed and approved on 6 July.

The bond is listed on the Athens Stock Exchange and is the first ever green bond issued by Lamda.

Proceeds from the new green bond will be invested solely into green investments including sustainable buildings and urban landscapes, green energy, and smart technology.

€20 million from the green bond, an amount equivalent to that invested by EBRD, will be earmarked to finance new green-certified assets that meet the LEED ‘Gold’ or BREEAM ‘Very Good’ levels.

Lamda’s current investment portfolio includes three retail centres with gross leaseable areas of 157,000 square meters, as well as smaller investments in other real estate assets.

According to the EBRD, the development bank’s participation will provide several additional benefits to the Green Bond initiative.

These added benefits include:

  1. risk mitigation: as it sends a confirming signal towards the re-opening of the domestic debt capital markets, whose activity was halted in 2022 due to the global instability, 
  2. an innovative instrument: as it supports an innovative green finance instrument integrating climate and environmental considerations of urban regeneration, and 
  3. standard setting: as it encourages Lamda to achieve higher level building certifications.

In addition to meeting the green building certification requirements for mitigation, the project will include climate resilience measures into the design to address climate adaptation vulnerabilities.

This is not Lamda’s first time using debt instruments to allow multiple investors to play a role in financing their projects. 

In July 2020, Lamda issued a €320 million common bond loan providing the opportunity to more than 10,000 Greek investors to help fund the company’s Ellinikon project, which aims to transform the former Athens airport into a sustainable commercial, residential, and hospitality area. 

This project will be characterised by the implementation of an eco-friendly design based on the principles of sustainability.

This comes as part of Lamda’s commitment to set environmental and social responsibility as one of the main components of its business and commercial operations, something that it is continuing with this latest green bond offering. 

By Carter Hoffman

Carter is a Research Associate at Trade Finance Global focusing on the impact of macroeconomic trends and emerging technologies on international trade. He holds international business and science degrees from the European Business School in Germany as well as Brock University and Queen's University in Canada where he served as the director of operations and finance for the student executive council and as an operations associate for the Queen's University Alternative Asset Fund. Carter’s work has been featured in publications and articles supported by the SME Finance Forum, managed by the International Finance Corporation, World Trade Organization, and International Chamber of Commerce.

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