By Adnan Adams Mohammed
As Ghana prepares to open a new chapter in its capital market history, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is moving swiftly to ensure that the transition to “green” finance is paved with transparency and trust.
With corporate green and sustainability bonds on the horizon, the regulator has issued a firm guarantee: investor protection remains the non-negotiable priority.
Speaking at a high-level Executive Capacity-Building Workshop in Accra, SEC Director-General Dr. James Klutse made it clear that while these new instruments are designed to tackle environmental challenges, the SEC’s “referee” role remains as sharp as ever.
A key theme of the 2026 workshop was the distinction between sovereign debt and these new corporate instruments. Dr. Klutse emphasized that these bonds are issued by private entities to fund the “real sector” industries like agriculture, tourism, and renewable energy rather than being direct government securities.
“There is no reason to fear,” Dr. Klutse assured prospective investors. “The SEC is there to protect the interests of investors. We will ensure they conform to the guidelines we issued in 2024. Once they qualify, we will give approval so they can trade well on the Ghana Stock Exchange.”
The SEC’s 2024 Green Bond Guidelines act as the blueprint, mandating strict adherence to:
● Project Eligibility: Only projects with verified environmental benefits (e.g., clean transport, sustainable water) qualify.
● Use of Proceeds: Every cedi raised must be tracked and applied exclusively to the approved green project.
● External Verification: Third-party reviews are required to prevent “greenwashing”—the practice of making misleading claims about environmental impact.
A New Frontier for Impact and Income
The workshop, supported by the International Finance Corporation (IFC), highlighted that green bonds are more than just “feel-good” investments; they are designed for financial performance.
Nathalie Koussi Akon, Division Director for the Gulf of Guinea and West Africa, noted the emergence of a “new class of investors” who want more than just a coupon payment.
“These investors need access to new products to participate fully in the economy,” she explained. “The opportunity of green bonds is to offer not only attractive returns but also participation in impact.”
The Road Ahead: High Expectations for Growth
By training bank executives and corporate leaders on issuer readiness and reporting disclosure, the SEC is laying the groundwork for a robust secondary market. The goal is for these bonds to not only provide steady income but also to see their values grow on the Ghana Stock Exchange (GSE).
For the young Ghanaian professional or the seasoned pension fund manager, the message from the SEC is one of confidence. As the first corporate green bonds hit the market later this year, they will do so under the watchful eye of a regulator determined to prove that in Ghana, green growth and investor safety go hand-in-hand.
Quick Guide: Why Green Bonds Matter to You
Feature Traditional Bond Green Bond
Returns Interest (Coupon) + Capital Gain Interest (Coupon) + Capital Gain
Funding General corporate purposes Specifically “Green” projects
Transparency Standard financial reporting Enhanced reporting on environmental impact
Risk Issuer credit risk Issuer credit risk (monitored by SEC)
