
Eco-Finance
Beschreibung
Eco-Finance is the first in-depth legal analysis of this extraordinary hybrid of environmental regulation and global financial markets. It deals with what are currently the two dominant types of market-based environmental instruments: market-traded environmental instruments (which include the tradable pollution allowances envisaged by the Kyoto Protocol), and environmental financing instruments (which include the emerging class of environmental and socially responsible investment funds). Among the numerous topics and issues treated by Ali and Yano are the following:
- the 'cap-and-trade' regime;
- debt-for-environment swaps;
- forestry securitisations;
- greenhouse gas emissions markets;
- carbon funds and swaps;
- tradable green certificates
- weather derivatives;
- duty to hedge climatic risks;
- catastrophe bonds;
- protected cell companies;
- the prudent investor rule; and
- ethical security indices.
The authors deal searchingly with the critical legal issues that arise in connection with these market-based environmental instruments, such as the danger that courts might recharacterise underlying risk transfer agreements as illegal insurance products. For this reason, and for its wealth of practical, theoretical, and informational detail, Eco-Finance will be of enormous value to a broad range of legal, governmental, and business professionals, including environmental regulators, securities regulators, financial market professionals, institutional and other fiduciary investors, corporate risk managers, and investment fund managers, as well as practitioners and academics in both environmental law and financial law.
Weitere Details
Weitere Ausgaben
Inhalt
- Cover
- Half Title Page
- Editorial Board
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- PREFACE
- TABLE OF ABBREVIATIONS
- CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION
- CHAPTER 2 TRADABLE POLLUTION INSTRUMENTS AND BIODIVERSITY FINANCE
- 1. INTRODUCTION
- 2. POLLUTANT TRADING
- 2.1. Tradable Pollution Allowances and Credits
- 2.1.1. Key Markets and Recent Developments
- 2.1.2. Attributes of Emissions Markets
- 2.1.3. Cap-and-Trade Emissions Markets
- 2.1.3.1. US SULPHUR DIOXIDE ALLOWANCE PROGRAM
- 2.1.3.2. US NOx EMISSIONS TRADING
- 2.1.3.3. SOUTHERN CALIFORNIAN RECLAIM AND CHICAGO ERMS MARKETS
- 2.1.3.4. TEXAS MASS EMISSIONS CAP AND TRADE PROGRAM AND NEW HAMPHSIRE MULTIPLE POLLUTANT ANNUAL BUDGET TRADING AND BANKING PROGRAM
- 2.1.3.5. HCFC EMISSIONS TRADING
- 2.1.4. Open Emissions Markets
- 2.1.5. Hybrid Emissions Markets
- 2.1.6. Emissions Derivatives
- 2.2. Nutrient Trading
- 2.3. Salinity Trading
- 3. MARKET-BASED STRATEGIES FOR PROMOTING BIODIVERSITY
- 3.1. Financing Biodiversity Conservation
- 3.1.1. Mitigation Banking of Wetland and Endangered Species
- 3.1.2. Tradable Native Vegetation Obligations
- 3.2. Environmental Funds and Biodiversity Enterprise Funds
- 3.3. Debt-for-Environment Swaps
- 3.4. Forestry Securitisations
- CHAPTER 3 CARBON FINANCE
- 1. INTRODUCTION
- 2. GREENHOUSE GAS TRADING
- 2.1. Kyoto Protocol - Tradable Greenhouse Gas Allowances and Credits
- 2.1.1. Flexibility Mechanisms
- 2.1.2. Kyoto-Carbon Instruments
- 2.2. European Union and Domestic Greenhouse Gas Emissions Markets
- 2.2.1. European Union GHG Emissions Market
- 2.2.2. Australian GHG Emissions Markets
- 2.2.3. Danish and UK GHG Emissions Markets
- 2.2.4. Other GHG Emissions Markets
- 2.2.5. GHG Emissions Derivatives
- 3. FINANCING CARBON CREDITS
- 3.1. Carbon Funds
- 3.2. Carbon Swaps
- 4. TRADABLE GREEN CERTIFICATES
- 4.1. Attributes of TGC Markets
- 4.2. Australian TGC Markets
- 4.3. US TGC Markets
- 4.4. European TGC Markets
- CHAPTER 4 WEATHER DERIVATIVES
- 1. INTRODUCTION
- 2. MANAGING CLIMATIC RISKS
- 2.1. Weather Derivatives
- 2.2. Catastrophic Risk Swaps
- 3. KEY REGULATORY ISSUES
- 3.1. Weather Derivatives and Insurance
- 3.2. Weather Derivatives and the Duty to Hedge Climatic and Other Risks
- CHAPTER 5 NATURE-LINKED SECURITIES
- 1. INTRODUCTION
- 2. SECURITISATION OF NATURAL DISASTER AND CLIMATIC RISKS
- 2.1. Background
- 2.2. Structure of Nature-Linked Securities
- 2.2.1. Catastrophe and Weather Bonds
- 2.2.1.1. SYNTHETIC SECURITISATIONS
- 2.2.1.2. CATASTROPHE BONDS
- 2.2.1.3. WEATHER BONDS
- 2.2.2. Contingent Surplus Notes
- 3. KEY REGULATORY ISSUES
- 3.1. Insurance Business
- 3.1.1. Catastrophe and Weather Bonds
- 3.1.2. Contingent Surplus Notes
- 3.2. Protected Cell Companies
- 3.3. Fiduciary Purchasers of Nature-Linked Securities
- CHAPTER 6 ENVIRONMENTAL INVESTMENT FUNDS
- 1. INTRODUCTION
- 2. ENVIRONMENTAL INVESTMENT FUNDS
- 2.1. Background
- 2.2. Environmentally-Oriented Investing
- 2.3. Implementing Environmentally-Oriented Investment Strategies
- 2.4. Assessing Environmentally-Oriented Investments: the Prudent Investor Rule
- 2.4.1. Authorised Investments
- 2.4.2. Prudent Investor Rule - Traditional Formulation
- 2.4.3. Prudent Investor Rule - the Influence of Modern Portfolio Theory
- 2.4.4. Prudent Investor Rule - United Kingdom
- 2.4.5. Prudent Investor Rule - Australia
- 2.4.6. Prudent Investor Rule - United States
- 2.4.7. Prudent Investor Rule - Canada
- 2.5. Prudent Investor Rule - Implications for Environmentally-Oriented Investing
- 2.6. Performance of Environmentally-Oriented Investment Funds
- 2.7. Hedge Funds and Environmental Investments
- 2.7.1. Attributes of Environmental Hedge Funds
- 2.7.2. Investment Strategy of Environmental Hedge Funds
- 2.7.3. Environmental Hedge Funds and the Prudent Investor Rule
- 3. ENVIRONMENTAL INVESTMENTS AND INDEX-TRACKING
- 3.1. Background
- 3.2. Ethical Security Indices
- 3.2.1. Calvert Social Index
- 3.2.2. Citizens Index
- 3.2.3. Dow Jones Sustainability Group indices
- 3.2.4. FTSE4Good indices
- 3.2.5. Domini 400 Social Index
- 3.3. Passive Environmentally-Oriented Investing
- 3.4. Assessing Passive Environmentally-Oriented Investments: the Anti-Delegation Rule
- 3.4.1. Delegation of Investment Powers - United Kingdom
- 3.4.2. Delegation of Investment Powers - Australia
- 3.4.3. Delegation of Investment Powers - United States
- 3.4.4. Delegation of Investment Powers - Canada
- 3.5. Assessing Passive Environmentally-Oriented Investments: the Prudent Investor Rule
- BIBLIOGRAPHY
- INDEX
- Back Cover
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