Abstract:
Green Finance is a new topic emerged from the need of finding funds to develop projects
aimed at protecting the environment for a sustainable future and to keep global warming
under 2ºC above preindustrial levels. To reach that goal, the United Nations estimates an
investment of $1 trillion dollars per year by 2030, however, the world barely reached
USD$272.9 billion in 2018. This research studies the green instruments applied by 5
countries with the greatest renewable capacity investment in the last 10 years, according to
a ranking developed by Bloomberg. Through the case study of fiscal and monetary policies
of each country in the period from 2007 to 2018, and the correlation analysis of greenhouse
gas emission, renewable energy consumption, fossil fuel consumption, carbon emission and
renewable investment capacity, the author will search whether the funds invested in
renewable energies have helped to reduce greenhouse gas and carbon emissions or not.
Results show that, in order to reduce greenhouse gas and carbon emissions, it is not enough
to only invest in renewable energies and increase renewable energy consumption, but to
strengthen the labeling systems and green financial instruments guidelines in order to
allocate the funds properly. Despite that China and Germany occupied the first and fourth
places of Bloomberg’s ranking, their poor definition of “green” investment allowed them
to allocate funds in “clean coal” and biomass, respectively. As a consequence, those two
countries show a rising pattern in their data of oil and coal consumption and carbon
emission as they increase their investment in renewable energies.