4.5 Article

Ecologies of green finance: Green sukuk and development of green Islamic finance in Malaysia

Journal

ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING A-ECONOMY AND SPACE
Volume 53, Issue 8, Pages 1896-1914

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0308518X211038349

Keywords

Islamic finance; Malaysia; financial ecologies; green bond; sukuk

Funding

  1. King's College London Centre of Doctoral Studies (King's College London-National University of Singapore Joint-PhD Studentship by the King's College London Centre of Doctoral Studies)

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Green sukuk, also known as Islamic green bonds, have seen rapid development since their issuance in Malaysia in 2017, but there are limitations in addressing contradictions in green finance. Through a financial ecologies approach, the study found an increasing international adoption of green sukuk, but doubts remain about its potential to improve the current green bond regime.
In this paper, we analyse the recent development of green sukuk (often referred to as an Islamic green bond) since its issuance in Malaysia in 2017, and critically evaluate whether it addresses some of the existing contradictions of green finance. Using a financial ecologies approach, we examine Malaysia's configuration of green sukuk as drawing from the existing international green bond regime, partnership with the World Bank, and Malaysia's own experience and expertise in Islamic finance, with the objective of building Kuala Lumpur's competitiveness as a global Islamic financial centre. Through documents analysis and interviews with key market actors in Kuala Lumpur and other financial centres, our findings point to the emergent international adoption of green sukuk. While this achieves Malaysia's state-building objectives, specifically through expanding Malaysia's sukuk market and advancing its status as a frontier of Islamic financial innovations, the potential for improving the current green bond regime has been more doubtful. A key limitation is the incorporation of existing Green Bond Principles, which enables not only green sukuk's international acceptance but also renders it susceptible to greenwashing. By examining the intersection of different ecologies of green and Islamic finance, we reveal the contradictions and limitations of green sukuk in contributing to Malaysian state-building and climate action.

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