Sugar Valley Energy project verified to issue green bonds for financing

Sugar Valley Energy’s Green Bonds will finance a project that has many environmental benefits. Kestrel’s Second Party Opinion on the bonds aimed to describe technical aspects of the project while ensuring all audiences can appreciate the uniquely innovative approach to construction and management of natural resources throughout the lifecycle of the biofuel production process.

Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority is a leader in forward-thinking transportation planning. Kestrel’s verification process revealed Metro’s active role in achieving regional climate action goals. The inaugural Climate Bonds will finance improvements to an existing low carbon transportation system and lay critical groundwork for large-scale fleet electrification.

Stanford University became the first US university campus to offer bonds with both Climate and Sustainability Bond designations, demonstrating their comprehensive commitment to sustainability. Kestrel provided external verification of the alignment of the financed activities with the Climate Bonds Standard and the positive social impacts. The projects support exemplary health equity research, housing access, and systemic academic equity initiatives, and enable the continued growth of the University while aligning with the school’s trajectory to reach zero greenhouse gas emissions by approximately 2030.

The Accounting & Finance Virtual Roundtable is an opportunity for public power professionals to learn, network, and discuss current trends and issues with peers from around the country. Kestrel CEO Monica Reid provided an introduction to green bonds for utilities.

Connecticut Green Bank’s fourth webinar in the Renewable Energy of Community series. This webinar highlights some of the latest sustainable investing practices and tools, including the Green Bank’s upcoming second issuance of Green Liberty Bonds, a bond created for retail investors. Kestrel CEO Monica Reid gives an introduction to green bonds and describes how green bonds can be used as an innovative finance tool.

To commemorate Earth Day, the Connecticut Green Bank planned a $23.6 million negotiated issuance of state-supported solar home renewable energy credit Green Liberty Bonds. The bank’s inaugural $16 million issuance last July won The Bond Buyer’s annual award for innovative deal of the year. This issuance is the second bond issued under their Climate Bonds Programmatic Framework that was originally verified by Kestrel Verifiers in 2020.

A social bond may represent the next big tool in the impact investor playbook, with a record $154 billion in Social Bonds issued in 2020. Independent verification of the bona fide social benefits derived from the bond-financed activities, like Kestrel Verifiers’ opinion for the social bonds issued by Equitable School Revolving Fund, should alleviate concerns about impact-washing and assure impact investors that their capital is generating a positive social impact.

Kestrel is pleased to share a study we worked on with Steer Davies Gleave for the European Commission to support development of the EU Taxonomy for the Aviation sector. The study results will help the Commission, supported by the Platform on Sustainable Finance, to design a methodology to assess the green impacts of projects and investment in the aviation sector.

Bank of America gained attention for its role in the first green bond transaction from the City of Boston. As part of the overall $272 million Boston general obligation transaction, the green bonds were issued to finance energy efficiency and climate resiliency projects.