Full Description
Green bonds have evolved from niche to systemically relevant instruments for reallocating capital toward a low-carbon, circular economy. This book offers a rigorous, accessible guide to green finance—using Europe as the main laboratory—and maps the landscape of labelled instruments while addressing risks such as greenwashing and data fragmentation. It traces the regulatory architecture—from the EU Taxonomy to the European Green Bond framework and supervisory standards—showing how credible definitions, disclosure, and verification underpin market integrity.
The book also clarifies how green bonds differ from conventional debt through use-of-proceeds discipline, ex-ante/post-issuance reporting, and independent external review. Its empirical core examines primary-market issuance yields (the greenium): once controlling for rating, sector, size, and timing, the average greenium is not statistically different from zero; any discount is concentrated in the market's early expansion and appears tied to scarcity and disclosure credibility rather than the label per se.
Finally, the book provides a forward agenda on taxonomy alignment, decision-useful MRV/assurance, and the role of AI in impact measurement and risk management. The volume serves scholars, students, regulators, and practitioners financing environmentally sustainable projects.
Contents
Chapter 1: Introduction to green finance and sustainable financing.- Chapter 2: The role of green bonds in the fight against climate change.- Chapter 3: Green versus Brown bonds: are they really priced differently?.- Chapter 4: Conclusion.



