- $700 million facility ties financing to greenhouse gas and water-use targets, aligning with global sustainability-linked loan principles.
- Marks one of India’s largest sustainability-linked trade facilities, following L&T’s $60 million sustainability bond earlier this year.
- Annual third-party assurance of targets aims to build investor confidence and reinforce market transparency.
L&T expands sustainable financing portfolio
Indian multinational Larsen & Toubro (L&T) has secured a $700 million Sustainability-Linked Trade Facility (SLTF) with Standard Chartered, advancing its access to capital tied to environmental performance metrics. The deal comes just months after L&T issued India’s first listed sustainability-linked bond under the Securities and Exchange Board of India’s ESG Bond Framework in June.
The agreement binds financing terms to measurable reductions in greenhouse gas intensity and fresh-water withdrawal—two material risks for the company’s heavy industries and infrastructure businesses. By integrating these indicators into trade financing, the company strengthens its alignment with international sustainability-linked loan principles set by the Loan Market Association.
Financing tied to measurable outcomes
The SLTF framework requires L&T to disclose progress on the agreed key performance indicators annually, with data assured by an independent third party. Global assurance provider DNV has already issued a second-party opinion validating the targets and methodology.
The structure follows a broader trend in global finance where corporates face stronger scrutiny over both climate and resource use. For investors, third-party verification reduces reputational risk, while annual disclosures reinforce transparency in markets that have faced growing concerns over greenwashing.
Corporate targets and strategic positioning
L&T has set long-term goals of achieving carbon neutrality by 2040 and water neutrality by 2035. For a conglomerate with significant exposure to energy, construction, and manufacturing, these goals are designed to address both operational efficiency and regulatory headwinds.
“By securing this SLTF, L&T reaffirms its leadership in driving sustainable business practices,” an L&T spokesperson said. “Sustainability is integral to our corporate ethos, guiding investments in low-carbon technologies, resource optimisation, and biodiversity conservation. Our ESG performance has bolstered investor confidence, facilitating access to sustainable finance and reinforcing our position as a leader in responsible growth and long-term value creation.”
The company has increasingly tied financial strategy to its ESG profile, recognizing that access to lower-cost capital is now linked to its ability to show progress on emissions and water use.
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Bank perspective and India’s financial landscape
For Standard Chartered, the transaction demonstrates the growing role of international lenders in shaping India’s corporate sustainability agenda.
“Through this financing instrument, Standard Chartered will support L&T on their decarbonisation journey,” said Shobana Chawla, Head of Sustainable Finance Origination at Standard Chartered, India. “Sustainability is a strategic focus for Standard Chartered, and we continue to play a role in supporting the development of a more sustainable economy in India.”
The facility comes as India intensifies its policy push on energy transition and resource efficiency. With domestic regulators pressing for more robust ESG disclosures and international investors looking for credible corporate climate strategies, sustainability-linked financing has become a preferred tool to bridge capital needs.
Implications for investors and corporates
For global investors, the deal provides a case study of how Indian conglomerates are integrating ESG criteria into mainstream financing. It also shows the shift from one-off green bonds toward trade-linked facilities that tie day-to-day business operations to sustainability outcomes.
The scale of the facility—at $700 million—places L&T among the larger issuers of sustainability-linked financing in emerging markets. Its adoption may encourage other Indian corporates to pursue similar instruments, particularly as competition for international capital intensifies.
For executives and boardrooms, the lesson is clear: ESG performance is now inseparable from financial strategy. L&T’s case suggests that robust target-setting, independent assurance, and transparent reporting can open access to large-scale, lower-cost financing, while also positioning companies competitively as global capital pools increasingly price in climate and resource risks.
Global relevance
While the SLTF is an Indian transaction, its structure aligns with a broader international trend in sustainable finance. Emerging market corporates are expected to play an outsized role in global emissions trajectories. The ability of firms like L&T to access international capital through sustainability-linked instruments could shape whether developing economies can finance their transition at scale.
For policymakers, the transaction highlights the importance of robust verification frameworks and consistent disclosure standards. For investors, it offers a tangible example of how sustainability metrics can be embedded into financing in high-emissions sectors.
As global finance accelerates toward climate-aligned portfolios, India’s largest industrial groups are demonstrating that access to capital now depends as much on ESG credibility as on traditional creditworthiness.
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