Pearson targets SDG4 with €75m sustainable loan

Pearson's new RCF will push the education giant to expand educational access |Credit: Vazovsky

Education giant will be rewarded with lower interest rates if it can get more children studying

Education giant Pearson is pioneering a new method of using financial incentives to drive progress on education targets set out under the UN's Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), it revealed yesterday.

The firm launched a tender offer for a €75m loan under which Pearson's interest rates will be linked to its performance against SDG4, the UN SDG targeting universal access to education.

Pearson said up to €75m of its €500m loan will be available to tenders under the Revolving Credit Facility (RCF), with the margin linked to the firm's commitment to extend its vocational educational reach internationally in support of SDG4.

An RCF is a lending structure that allows for the loan amount to be withdrawn, repaid, and redrawn again in any manner and any number of times, until the arrangement expires.

Pearson's loan is believed to be the first of its kind in the world to link margins to education, although similar lending structures are becoming more popular among corporates as a means to incentivise progress in areas such as carbon emissions reduction.

"It is pleasing to see the alignment between finance and sustainability with our refinancing marking Pearson's debut of an education linked loan in line with our mission of helping people make progress in their lives through learning," said CEO Coram Williams.

In related news, earlier this week US-based water technology company Xylem agreed a new $800m RCF which links interest rates to Xylem's overall sustainability performance as rated by ESG assessor Sustainalytics.

"We are excited to be the first water technology company in the US to secure a sustainability-improvement loan that rewards our continued efforts to integrate sustainability and social value creation across our operations, and helps advance our strategy and mission to solve global water challenges," said Mark Rajkowski, senior vice president and CFO of Xylem.