Barclays paper urges UK to accelerate transition finance policies to meet decarbonisation goals

The UK is expected to require as much as £60bn of capital investment each year through the late 2020s and 2030s

Union Jack flag representing green and environmental actions in the United Kingdom of Great Britain

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Michael Nelson

Barclays has called on the UK government to take action in three areas to meets decarbonisation goals and facilitate the delivery of the Transition Finance Market Review (TFMR).

Commissioned in 2023, the latest update from the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero and HM Treasury has found the decarbonisation of the UK is expected to require as much as £60bn of capital investment each year through the late 2020s and 2030s. 

However, the growth of underlying capital required to support this – transition finance – is hampered by a number of strategic challenges including a lack of clear and consistent political and regulatory support for transition finance; evolving future transition needs and the high uncertainty associated with forward-looking transition planning; the lack of a common interpretation or definition; and reputation and legal risks associated with potential accusations of perceived greenwashing.

Transition financing also faces barriers similar to those present in wider green financing, including poor risk/return ratios when investing in climate technologies, infrastructure challenges, challenges with providing and accessing data to fully integrate into decision-making, and international fragmentation in approaches. Additionally, the capital intensity of transition technologies further complicates the financing landscape.

These challenges mean financial institutions remain cautious about allocating or facilitating capital into transition activities, or identifying such financing as transition-focused. Despite market-led efforts, there has not to date been consolidation around consistent definitions, frameworks or support mechanisms needed to enable the scale-up of transition finance to the levels needed to meet financial and decarbonisation targets.

Three focus areas

In response, Barclays has published Transition Finance: what is needed from UK public policy to support the scaling of high-integrity transition finance to achieve climate and decarbonisation goals?, a policy paper that spotlights three focus areas where policymakers should take action to facilitate the delivery of the TFMR’s recommendations.

First, policymakers are urged to create the economic conditions for transition finance to thrive by supporting real economy measures and incentives. This includes implementing a National Transition Plan with clarity on sector decarbonisation pathways, and developing a suite of strong incentives to enable the UK to compete with international jurisdictions. These could include new innovative financial products such as transition or ‘greening’ bonds, and financing mechanisms that de-risk and facilitate the growth of transition finance in the UK.

Second, policymakers should develop a supportive political and regulatory environment for transition finance to scale. The papers says they can achieve this by developing a balanced regulatory and policy framework that complements and is interoperable with existing green finance and sustainability-related frameworks in different jurisdictions.

Additionally, they should provide a flexible and broad definition of, or principles for, transition finance. This would bring much-needed clarity to the market, Barclays’ paper argues, while remaining sufficiently flexible to accommodate rapidly evolving industries and technologies.

Finally, the paper recommends that policymakers and standard setters should articulate clear principles for a just transition and provide detailed guidance on how this can be delivered in the real economy.

Daniel Hanna, group head of sustainable and transition finance, Barclays, said: ” We need ambition to credibly scale transition finance and today’s report from the Transition Finance Market Review is an important milestone in this discussion, and we welcome its publication.

“Scaling transition finance is a necessary step in mobilising sufficient capital to tackle the climate crisis and it presents an opportunity for the UK to show international leadership and unlock growth and economic opportunities. Transition finance needs a strong, supportive policy and regulatory environment, with the public and private sectors working together to help set the standard for, and develop the financial mechanisms required to scale it at pace.  With a framework for progress published by the TFMR, our paper provides additional clarity on the areas where work is needed.”

Barclays has committed to facilitate $1trn in sustainable and transition finance between 2023 and the end of 2030, and introduced its Transition Finance Framework in early 2024.