Can credit rating assessments and sustainability coexist? | Report
INSIGHT by the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA)

“A company can have a weak ESG credit score, be carbon intensive or lack a clear carbon transition pathway, and yet be assigned a high investment-grade rating due to its high ability to repay its debt in the next three to five years.”
-Hazel Ilango, Analyst at the IEEFA
Credit rating agencies have the potential to play an important role in driving sustainable debt financing, particularly in view of the need to carry out 70% of clean energy investment over the next decade to achieve net-zero emissions by 2050, according to an International Energy Agency estimate.As such, one critical step is to directly integrate ESG factors in their rating methodology, Ilango says.She acknowledges that the three agencies examined in the report — S&P Global Ratings, Moody’s Investors and Fitch Ratings — are increasingly viewing risk through an ESG lens to assess an entity’s creditworthiness, as articulated in their development of ESG credit scores. However, that is not enough. “Based on IEEFA’s analysis of 721 companies as of September 2022, we find that there is no direct relationship between their ESG credit scores and credit ratings,” Ilango says. “While the three agencies all provide detailed ESG credit scores to bond investors, it is difficult to establish a straightforward link between their ESG scores and credit ratings.“Such scores merely represent a detailed and transparent ESG diagnosis on how these factors could impact the final credit outcome.”She believes that if rating agencies had overhauled their conventional assessments by integrating ESG factors as a central component in addition to business, financial and supplementary risks, it would likely have prompted disruptive changes to companies’ ratings across sectors and regions.As things stand, bond investors cannot adequately assess an issuer’s long-term credit risk based on the credit rating alone. They also have to refer to the ESG credit scores to somehow gauge its ESG exposure. Case study: China Huaneng versus Denmark’s Orsted Ilango illustrates her analysis outcome by comparing state-owned enterprise China Huaneng Group Co with offshore wind power company Orsted of Denmark. Orsted has only a “BBB” credit rating from S&P and Fitch. Huaneng is reliant on fossil fuel and vulnerable to high stranded asset risks, but maintains a “A” credit rating range across all three agencies. This underscores the research finding that credit ratings do not change if a business model moves toward a low-carbon transition economy, until the company’s creditworthiness is affected.“Bond investors will continue to fund carbon-intensive companies due to their high investment-grade ratings, and decarbonization challenges will persist.”
-Hazel Ilango, Analyst at the IEEFA
“Consequently, bond investors will continue to fund carbon-intensive companies due to their high investment-grade ratings, and decarbonization challenges will persist,” says Ilango.IEEFA considers that the current methodology does not encourage debt financing of sustainable initiatives, so bondholders may keep supporting businesses that have fundamentally poor green standards. If the credit framework remains “business as usual,” real-world problems such as climate change and social inequality will continue.
“Just as businesses and risk managers are expected to think beyond the short term, so should credit rating agencies. However, this challenges the conventional perception of a credit assessment.”
-Hazel Ilango, Analyst at the IEEFA
Rating agencies can also introduce double rating measures. For example, they can give a company a “BBB” rating based on the conventional credit assessment, then issue an upgrade or an ESG-adjusted rating to an “A” to recognize its substantial decarbonization strategy and robust social and governance attributes.In addition, rating agencies could take a more granular approach to ESG considerations by including and publishing scenario analysis to quantify long-term trends and risk trajectories. “In our report, we’ve explored possible models for how to better integrate ESG in credit rating assessments,” Ilango says. “The aim is to study the possibility of creditworthiness and sustainability coexisting in a credit rating assessment.”Read the report
Can credit rating assessments and sustainability coexist?
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