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Carbon specialist devises method of measuring green bond impacts
03 February 2016A US carbon offset registry is drafting a methodology for measuring the carbon impact of green bonds.
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HASI agrees $161m term loan for residential solar assets
08 January 2016Hannon Armstrong Sustainable Infrastructure Capital (HASI) has agreed $161.6 million of debt from Deutsche Bank, secured by the cash-flows generated by rooftop solar assets.
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ITC extension won't replicate 2016 build rate in 2017
07 January 2016The extension of investment tax credits (ITC) is expected to boost solar construction in the US by 25GW over the next five years, but won't stop build rates crashing next year, according to a respected analyst.
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Hannon Armstrong raises $103.5m in equity raise
21 October 2015Hannon Armstrong Sustainable Infrastructure Capital (HASI) has managed to secure the full $103.5 million it planned to raise in its latest share offering, announced earlier this month.
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Hannon Armstrong plans $100m equity raise
14 October 2015Clean energy investor Hannon Armstrong Sustainable Infrastructure Capital (HASI) is planning to issue a further $100 million of equity.
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Hannon Armstrong issues $100.5m green bond
01 October 2015Investment firm Hannon Armstrong Sustainable Infrastructure (HASI) has raised $100.5 million through issuing an asset-backed green bond.
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Solar ABS: Securitising sunshine
19 August 2015After recent issues from SolarCity and Sunrun, how much potential is there for solar asset-backed securitisations, asks Peter Cripps
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Hannon Armstrong to issue $125m ABS bond
05 August 2015Hannon Armstrong Sustainable Infrastructure (HASI) is to issue a $125 million asset-backed bond in a private placement.
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People Moves
10 July 2015A round-up of the latest new appointments and moves in the industry, including changes at Senvion, Hannon Armstrong and Abengoa
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Under scrutiny: green bond impact reporting
01 July 2015Issuers' reports on the environmental impact of their green bonds range from a few paragraphs on hard-to-find webpages to 80-page documents. But, given the costs and assumptions involved, some question whether more is necessarily better. Graham Cooper reports