Sustainable finance integrates environmental, social and governance (ESG) considerations into lending and investment decisions to strengthen long-term resilience and inclusive growth. As Malaysia advances toward its 2050 net-zero target, sustainable finance has shifted from a niche agenda to a central pillar of the low-carbon transition.
This shift is driven by Bank Negara Malaysia and the Securities Commission Malaysia through the Joint Committee on Climate Change (JC3), a regulator–industry platform advancing climate resilience and financial system greening reported The Malay Mauil.
In December 2025, JC3 launched the Sustainable and Transition Finance Guidance, outlining principles for banks to assess borrowers at both asset and entity levels, strengthening the evaluation of sustainability performance and transition pathways. Together with the Climate Change and Principle-based Taxonomy (CCPT) and the Sustainable and Responsible Investment (SRI) Roadmap, these initiatives translate climate ambition into operational lending standards and steer financial institutions toward climate-aligned financing.
Financial institutions are expanding green, transition and sustainability-linked facilities for SMEs. For example, SME Bank Malaysia, under its Sustainability Roadmap 2.0, targets RM10 billion in sustainable financing by 2030, with cumulative disbursements rising in recent years. Commercial banks have also launched SME-focused programmes aligned with national transition priorities.
At the policy level, the direction is clear. On the ground, however, access remains uneven. The gap between national ambition and practical inclusion persists, particularly for smaller, resource-constrained businesses.
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