Opinion | How yuan internationalisation is helping to close the climate finance gap


As the United States renounces its climate commitments, a chain reaction of wavering pledges and scaled-back investments by other donors and multilateral institutions has followed. This trend raises the stakes for everyone else, underscoring the urgency of closing the financing gap for climate adaptation and mitigation in the developing world.
Fortunately, China has increasingly been projecting itself as a source of alternative, low-cost funding for climate and sustainability projects across the Global South. Its outreach features a trifecta of interconnected, renminbi-denominated bond markets: the onshore panda bond market, the offshore dim sum bond market and the free-trade zone (FTZ) offshore bond market.
The recent growth of these markets has been nothing short of remarkable. In the first three quarters of 2025, offshore entities raised nearly 120 billion yuan (US$17 billion) in panda bonds and 667 billion yuan in dim sum bonds, according to Wind, a Chinese financial data provider. Meanwhile, the FTZ offshore bond market’s cumulative issuance had reached US$18 billion by September. Together, these figures indicate a significant surge in international capital mobilisation through renminbi-denominated channels.
Many countries are already using these markets to support their own sustainable development strategies. For example, in 2021 and 2022, Hungary issued a total of 3 billion yuan in green sovereign panda bonds to finance renewable energy and clean transport projects in Central and Eastern Europe. This year, OTP Bank became the first Hungarian private entity to issue an offshore renminbi-denominated bond, raising 900 million yuan through a green dim sum bond.

Meanwhile, Egypt issued a 3.5 billion yuan sustainable panda bond in 2023 – the first of its kind in Africa – with backing from the African Development Bank and the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank.

A view of the Lujiazui area in the Shanghai Pilot Free Trade Zone, on January 10, 2023. Photo: Xinhua
A view of the Lujiazui area in the Shanghai Pilot Free Trade Zone, on January 10, 2023. Photo: Xinhua

These examples demonstrate how Chinese capital markets can support domestic sustainability goals elsewhere. The three platforms form a complementary ecosystem for foreign issuers, each serving a distinctive role.

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