EURONIA and Equator Principles: Difference between pages

From ACT Wiki
(Difference between pages)
Jump to navigationJump to search
imported>Doug Williamson
(Update due to name change.)
 
imported>Doug Williamson
(Mend link.)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
This Euro overnight index average tracks actual average market euro funding rates each day for settlement that day where repayment is made on the following business day.  
''Project finance - environmental and social concerns.''


It is published by WMBA Ltd (part of European Venues and Intermediaries Association - EVIA) in London at 5 pm each day. It is the weighted average rate to four decimal places of all unsecured euro overnight cash transactions brokered in London by EVIA member firms between midnight and 4 pm London time with all counterparties.


(Distinguish from EONIA, the Euro Overnight Index Average.)
'''''From the Equator Principles website:'''''


:"The Equator Principles (EPs) is a risk management framework, adopted by financial institutions, for determining, assessing and managing environmental and social risk in projects and is primarily intended to provide a minimum standard for due diligence and monitoring to support responsible risk decision-making.


== See also ==
:Currently 94 Equator Principles Financial Institutions (EPFIs) in 37 countries have officially adopted the EPs, covering the majority of international project finance debt within developed and emerging markets.
* [[EONIA]]
 
* [[European Venues and Intermediaries Association]]
:EPFIs commit to implementing the EPs in their internal environmental and social policies, procedures and standards for financing projects and will not provide project finance or related loans to projects where the client will not, or is unable to, comply with the EPs.
* [[Over night index average rate]]
 
* [[Overnight indexed swap]]
:The EPs have greatly increased the attention and focus on social/community standards and responsibility, including robust standards for indigenous peoples, labour standards, and consultation with locally affected communities within the project finance market. They have also promoted convergence around common environmental and social standards. Multilateral development banks, including the European Bank for Reconstruction & Development, and export credit agencies through the OECD Common Approaches are increasingly drawing on the same standards as the EPs."
* [[SONIA]]
 
 
==See also==
*[[Due diligence]]
*[[Environmental concerns]]
*[[European Bank for Reconstruction and Development]]
*[[ESG investment]]
* [[Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development]] (OECD)
*[[Principles for Responsible Investment]]
*[[Project finance]]
*[[Risk management]]
*[[Social concerns]]
 
 
==External link==
[https://equator-principles.com/about/ The Equator Principles webpage]

Revision as of 13:13, 25 June 2022

Project finance - environmental and social concerns.


From the Equator Principles website:

"The Equator Principles (EPs) is a risk management framework, adopted by financial institutions, for determining, assessing and managing environmental and social risk in projects and is primarily intended to provide a minimum standard for due diligence and monitoring to support responsible risk decision-making.
Currently 94 Equator Principles Financial Institutions (EPFIs) in 37 countries have officially adopted the EPs, covering the majority of international project finance debt within developed and emerging markets.
EPFIs commit to implementing the EPs in their internal environmental and social policies, procedures and standards for financing projects and will not provide project finance or related loans to projects where the client will not, or is unable to, comply with the EPs.
The EPs have greatly increased the attention and focus on social/community standards and responsibility, including robust standards for indigenous peoples, labour standards, and consultation with locally affected communities within the project finance market. They have also promoted convergence around common environmental and social standards. Multilateral development banks, including the European Bank for Reconstruction & Development, and export credit agencies through the OECD Common Approaches are increasingly drawing on the same standards as the EPs."


See also


External link

The Equator Principles webpage