SEBI mandates fresh norms for non-green ESG debt securities to enhance ESG compliance and strengthen responsible business disclosures. ESG BROADCAST shares key takeaways.
Regulatory Extract:
India’s Securities and Exchange Board (SEBI) has formally issued a comprehensive framework for the issuance and listing of Environment, Social and Governance (ESG) debt securities excluding green bonds. This regulation introduces a standardized operational structure for social bonds, sustainability bonds, and sustainability-linked bonds, in alignment with international ESG principles.
The framework was finalized following inputs from the Industry Standards Forum (ISF), a body formed under the aegis of stock exchanges to support regulation implementation. These new norms are intended to broaden India’s ESG debt market and establish rigorous procedures to address “purpose-washing” risks in capital markets.
Social bonds, defined under the circular, are debt securities aimed at financing or refinancing projects that directly mitigate specific social issues or deliver positive social outcomes for target populations. These include affordable housing, healthcare, education, employment generation, and food security. SEBI’s circular mandates that funds raised through such bonds must align with global standards such as the International Capital Market Association (ICMA) Principles, Climate Bonds Standards, ASEAN Standards, or any framework specified by Indian financial regulators.
Sustainability bonds will finance a combination of green and social projects, whereas sustainability-linked bonds (SLBs) will feature financial structures linked to the issuer’s sustainability Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) and Performance Targets (SPTs).
Issuers must now appoint an independent third-party reviewer or certifier to validate the purpose, methodology, and post-issuance disclosures of ESG debt securities. Initial and continuous disclosures must align with SEBI’s Non-Convertible Securities Regulations and the Listing Obligations and Disclosure Requirements (LODR) Regulations, 2015.
For SLBs, the issuer must disclose KPIs and SPTs in the offer document and continue performance tracking in annual reports. The bonds’ financial terms must clearly reflect the issuer’s sustainability performance—underscoring accountability.
To ensure ESG integrity and prevent misuse of labels, SEBI has laid down strict guidelines. These include prohibitions on misleading claims, cherry-picking data, and hiding trade-offs. Further, any non-compliance, such as failure to meet declared social or sustainability objectives, must be disclosed to investors, and early redemption may be triggered by a majority of debenture holders.
Importantly, all ESG debt issuers must quantify negative externalities arising from the funded projects and present a balanced impact narrative. SMEs intending to list ESG debt securities on SME exchanges are also covered under this framework, with biannual disclosure mandates per Annexure-A and B of the circular.
The regulation is legally binding under SEBI’s powers granted by the SEBI Act, 1992 and the SEBI (Issue and Listing of Non-Convertible Securities) Regulations, 2021. The full text is available on SEBI’s official website.
Strategic significance lies in the elevated scrutiny and transparency this framework brings to India’s evolving sustainable finance ecosystem. By clarifying definitions, standardizing processes, and enforcing performance-linked compliance, SEBI is enhancing investor trust and catalyzing a credible ESG debt market aligned with India’s net zero targets and sustainable development commitments.
ESG BROADCAST will continue monitoring the updates related to this topic. Stay tuned to be updated on the related policy and pivotal regulatory shift.