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To Avoid Default, Sri Lanka Might Need to Get Tougher on Climate Change

To Avoid Bankruptcy, Sri Lanka Might Need to Get Tougher on Climate Change

Sri Lanka is hurtling toward a default of its international debt and needs to restructure. Its government may be surprised to find that a group of its creditors have more than money on their mind.

One of its lenders, Nordea Bank Abp’s asset management unit, wants to tie any agreement to climate goals, according to a letter from the asset manager to Sri Lankan authorities last month that was seen by Bloomberg. In the letter, the Helsinki-based manager outlined targets set under the Paris agreement including increasing forest cover, reducing greenhouse gases, achieving 70% renewable energy in electricity generation by 2030 and carbon neutrality by 2050.

“Sri Lanka has the unique chance to become the first country that has all its international bonds aligned to the Paris agreement,” said Thede Ruest, Nordea’s head of emerging markets debt, who signed the letter. The asset manager is seeking the backing of other creditors. To be successful it will need them because it holds less than 1% of Sri Lanka’s international debt.

To Avoid Default, Sri Lanka Might Need to Get Tougher on Climate Change

Sri Lanka is in a precarious position. Unable to both service its debt and buy enough food and fuel for its population, it has stopped all payments on its foreign debt and faces its first default since independence from Britain in 1948. While the World Bank has for now stepped in to help pay for food and medicines, a debt restructure is key to winning a bailout from the International Monetary Fund.

In March, the country had less than enough dollars in its foreign exchange reserves to buy one month’s worth of imports such as food and fuel after the pandemic and then the war in Ukraine decimated its tourism industry. 

The move by Nordea is the latest iteration of a trend that is slowly emerging in the fund management industry: Using sovereign debt talks to push a climate agenda. In November, Belize and its creditors, with the help of U.S. charity the Nature Conservancy, agreed a $553 million restructuring that saw the government commit to spending millions on marine conservation

To Avoid Default, Sri Lanka Might Need to Get Tougher on Climate Change

Convincing countries and creditors to agree to such demands is not easy. Governments are nervous about making policy based on fund managers’ requests and bondholders might care more about making money than pushing for green commitments. 

Some recent efforts have been unsuccessful. In 2020 Ecuador rejected a proposal to eliminate fuel subsidies that encouraged gasoline use, and the following year Argentina resisted the chance to get lower coupon payments if it hit targets tied to United Nations ambitions on education and clean water.

Ruest believes that proposing goals to which Sri Lanka has already committed makes his suggestion easier to digest. 

“The ESG element is becoming a recurring feature in restructurings,” said Joe Delvaux, an emerging markets distressed debt portfolio manager at Amundi SA, which was involved in debt talks with Ecuador and Argentina’s governments. “It is not always successful for various reasons, but it has become a difficult topic to avoid.”

Sri Lanka's Finance Minister Ali Sabry didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.

Amundi is one of the creditors to Sri Lanka and some of the debt is held in funds Delvaux oversees. The asset manager will also bring up environmental, social and governance questions when the time comes, Delvaux said.

To Avoid Default, Sri Lanka Might Need to Get Tougher on Climate Change

Ajata Mediratta, president at Greylock Capital Management, a Connecticut-based hedge fund that was among creditors pushing for Belize to adopt climate goals, said bondholders are increasingly open to including such goals in debt restructurings but that it has to be something that works for both the country and its creditors. 

“It is still the early days, and months of difficult work are ahead before the real negotiations begin,” Mediratta said, referring to the Sri Lanka talks.

BlackRock Inc. and Pacific Investment Management Co., which are among Sri Lanka’s biggest creditors, declined to comment about whether they plan to use the debt talks to push an ESG or climate-related agenda. 

©2022 Bloomberg L.P.