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ECB to Impose Climate-Based Haircuts on Corporate Bonds from June 2026

Published Jul 8, 2026
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Summary:
  • The ECB began applying additional valuation deductions to corporate bonds that carry climate risk in June 2026.
  • ECB experts Dirk Broeders and Daniel Gybas detailed the policy in a July 7, 2026 blog post.
  • The Bank of England intends to introduce comparable climate-based haircuts later in 2026.

The ECB has introduced extra valuation discounts on collateral linked to environmental dangers, aimed at protecting against potential financial hits. A haircut is a percentage reduction applied to the market value of an asset used as collateral, meant to cushion losses if the asset must be sold quickly. By imposing additional climate haircuts, the ECB effectively requires banks to hold more capital against bonds issued by high‑polluting companies. This approach is part of a broader central‑bank effort to integrate climate risk into financial stability frameworks, following recommendations from the Network for Greening the Financial System.

The ECB's policy, launched last month, ensures that a bond issuer's climate vulnerability is "considered when assessing the value of corporate bonds used as collateral in lending to banks," the bank said.

In May, ECB Executive Board member Frank Elderson warned that an orderly global transition to a low‑carbon economy is unlikely, increasing the importance of managing the associated financial risks. According to the OECD, central banks worldwide are slowly integrating climate factors into their policies.

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The ECB assigns each bond an "uncertainty score" that flags those most vulnerable to climate shocks; heavy polluters and firms without strong transition plans receive high scores. These scores determine the climate haircut, which reduces the bond's collateral value. The ECB noted that the immediate impact is expected to be small because current bank borrowing levels are low and corporate bonds are rarely used as collateral. The ECB will periodically review these climate risk factors, it added.

The uncertainty score system evaluates issuers based on their carbon intensity, exposure to physical climate risks, and the credibility of their transition plans. Firms lacking a clear path to net‑zero emissions receive the highest scores, resulting in larger haircuts. This mechanism is designed to gradually incentivize companies to adopt greener practices, as lower haircuts improve the collateral value of their bonds for banks seeking ECB liquidity.

Policy Rationale and Broader Context

While the direct effect on lending may be modest initially, the policy sends a strong signal to financial markets that climate considerations will increasingly shape collateral valuations. Both institutions emphasize that the primary objective is financial stability, not direct climate policy, though the incentives created by these haircuts are expected to encourage borrowers to improve their transition plans over time.

The ECB has stressed that because corporate bonds are currently seldom used as collateral and bank borrowing is low, the initial impact on valuations will be limited. However, the periodic review of uncertainty scores means the haircuts can grow in influence as climate risks evolve and as more data becomes available. This phased approach aligns with how central banks globally are gradually embedding climate risk into their frameworks.

In June, the OECD noted that central banks across the globe are steadily embedding climate change considerations into their monetary policy frameworks.

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