Masdar deploys $1.69bn green bond proceeds in clean energy

18 August 2025

Abu Dhabi Future Energy Company (Masdar) allocated more than $1.685bn from its 2023 and 2024 green bond issuances to clean energy projects by the end of 2024.

The funds were directed to new solar, onshore and offshore wind, and energy storage schemes in the UAE, Saudi Arabia, the US, Germany, the UK, Uzbekistan, Azerbaijan and Serbia.

In its newly released 2024 Green Finance Report, Masdar says the projects financed by its bonds will avoid more than 6.28 million tonnes of CO₂ emissions a year.

The report shows that for every $1m invested through its green bonds, around 3,700 tonnes of CO₂ emissions are avoided annually.

Masdar’s green bond allocations reflect a broader industry trend, with global investment in the energy transition reaching a record $2.1tn in 2024.

Of this, $728bn was spent on renewable energy projects – ranging from wind to solar to hydropower – a record high but only about 8% more than in 2023.

In March 2025, Masdar updated its Green Finance Framework to include investments in green hydrogen and standalone battery storage. Moody’s Investors Service reaffirmed Masdar’s Sustainability Quality Score of SQS1 (Excellent) and confirmed its alignment with ICMA’s Green Bond Principles and Green Loan Principles.

Masdar raised $1bn in a green bond issuance in May 2025, which was 6.6 times oversubscribed. International investors received 85% of the allocation, with 15% going to Middle East and North Africa investors. Since launching its green bond programme in 2023, Masdar has raised $2.75bn.

Deploying bond proceeds under strict criteria has enabled “clean energy progress while maintaining a high level of financial efficiency and investor confidence,” Mazin Khan, chief financial officer at Masdar, said.

Alongside its bond programme, Masdar revealed it secured $6bn in non-recourse financing in 2024 to develop 11GW of clean energy capacity across 12 projects in nine countries.

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Mark Dowdall
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