Will green mortgages help U.S. banks reach climate goals?

Green mortgages are one of the great mysteries of green finance.

For years, there has been an expectation that markets and governments would figure out how to provide enough incentives for homeowners to make energy efficiency upgrades and environmental improvements. They would ideally be rewarded with green mortgages that lower borrowing rates and technology that cuts their energy costs. Jobs would be created to make those upgrades. Borrowers with reduced energy costs would have more disposable income to pay down their mortgages and lower default rates.

It hasn’t happened yet. But as lenders around the globe redouble their efforts to measure the carbon impact of their loans, they’re finding that residential mortgages are often one of the biggest line items on their books. That adds some urgency to the discussion, and a lot of questions. How is a lender to know if an older house subject to a 15- or 30-year mortgage is energy efficient now? Does it have solar panels and electric heat pumps or does it have drafty windows and wasteful emissions?

Bloomberg

In the U.S., PACE financing, short for Property Assessed Clean Energy, is expected to provide homeowners and businesses with $2 billion annually (by 2025) for upfront funding for solar panels, battery storage and hurricane-resilient windows and roofs. That’s tiny in the existing $11 trillion U.S. home mortgage market. But it may have a catalytic effect: A $1 million investment in PACE upgrades can avoid the equivalent of 1,400 metric tons of carbon dioxide emissions, about the same amount of carbon 300 passenger cars emit in one year.

Europe is further ahead. Over 40 banks there are participating in the Energy efficient Mortgages Action Plan, which aims to create cheap financing for green homes and retrofits.

Some investors and lenders are taking action on the fringes, as BloombergNEF’s Michael Liebreich notes: Barclays offers green mortgages that give borrowers a lower rate for energy efficient home purchases, as does a joint effort by the French bank BNP Paribas and German utility EON. Also, the pension fund ABP has committed 500 million euros to creating green mortgages. The European Union’s COVID-19 green recovery plan could include 91 billion euros a year in grants and guarantees for sealing up drafty buildings and offering home buyers green mortgages.

But any mortgage product at scale really depends on the ability to package them into securities. A few, small green bond sales by the U.S. government-backed mortgage finance giant Fannie Mae last week may show the way.

Fannie Mae, which has sold over $75 billion in multifamily green mortgage-backed bonds, priced its first single-family home green bonds on July 27. The $40 million in debt included securitized mortgages for new homes that meet Energy Star green certification standards. Those homes, on average, are about 20% more energy efficient than others simply built to code, according to Fannie Mae.

Fannie Mae said it expects to incorporate other types of efficiency standards in future single-family green securities, such as residences that meet passive house or LEED standards. It may be a good year to start: COVID-19 has caused a surge in home buying as city dwellers leave for the suburbs amid record low interest rates. Fannie Mae said it hopes that by selling the bonds monthly, it will convince builders and lenders there’s investor appetite for green single-family mortgages, and that securitization will ultimately make such mortgages more common.

“A greener home truly creates a better space to work, live and play in, which is especially important considering how much time we’re all spending at home right now,” said Chrissa Pagitsas, vice president of enterprise ESG for Fannie Mae.

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