India’s capital markets are on the cusp of a major transformation, and sustainability is at the center of it. The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI)’s June 2025 circular marks a pivotal moment for sustainable finance in the country. For the first time, India now has a comprehensive regulatory framework not only for green bonds but also for social bonds, sustainability bonds, and sustainability-linked bonds, collectively referred to as ESG debt securities.
Sprih, we’ve long believed that sustainability, when approached with rigor and responsibility, can be a long-term business driver. This development is a strong signal that India is moving from ESG intent to ESG action.
But with greater opportunity comes greater responsibility. The new framework opens access to global sustainable capital, but it also raises the bar for transparency, governance, and performance accountability. Here’s what issuers need to know about SEBI’s New ESG Debt Framework:
Until now, regulatory attention largely focused on green bonds. SEBI has now expanded its scope to include:
Critically, these bonds must align with internationally accepted frameworks like the ICMA Principles, EU Green Bond Standard, or ASEAN Guidelines, with SEBI also open to a future Indian taxonomy.
SEBI’s definitions align with global norms, offering clarity around:
This clarity helps build issuer confidence, reduce interpretational ambiguity, and make Indian ESG bonds more investable for global capital pools.
Issuers are now required to maintain:
These disclosures go beyond marketing, they are about building trust with investors. An auditable, data-driven approach is no longer a nice-to-have; it’s a requirement.
Sprih helps issuers set robust sustainability targets and establish performance tracking systems that support compliance while building long-term business resilience.
Every ESG bond now requires validation from an independent external reviewer, whether it’s a second-party opinion provider, external verifier, or SEBI-accredited ESG rating agency.
For SLBs, reviewers must also evaluate whether KPIs are ambitious, material, and measurable. This enhances market integrity but can increase the compliance load if not managed well.
The question then becomes: How do you ensure audit readiness without increasing operational complexity?
Our answer lies in a blend of deep sustainability expertise and intuitive technology, a system that aligns with SEBI’s framework and scales with your ESG ambitions.
SEBI has gone a step further by embedding safeguards to maintain the credibility of ESG labels:
Purpose-washing is no longer an option. Data quality, transparency, and governance are now strategic imperatives.
Sprih’s platform helps you collect, manage, and validate sustainability data across your operations, so you can focus on delivery, not just disclosure.
SEBI’s ESG debt framework mirrors global best practices, especially from the ICMA and EU Green Bond Standards, while preserving flexibility with a principles-based approach.
Notably, SEBI becomes one of the few regulators globally to formalize rules around Sustainability-Linked Bonds, showing India’s regulatory commitment to sustainable transformation.
This opens the door for Indian issuers to tap global ESG capital, and puts non-compliant or ESG-inactive businesses at reputational risk.
Sprih supports you in turning compliance into capability, through expert-led frameworks and integrated sustainability tech.
SEBI’s ESG debt framework is not just regulatory evolution, it’s a strategic opportunity. It rewards those who invest early in sustainable transformation and demands accountability from those who don’t.
At Sprih, we believe sustainability leadership is the foundation of business resilience. Whether you’re a first-time issuer or scaling your sustainable finance strategy, whether you are structuring KPIs or managing disclosures, Sprih equips you with the strategy and systems to issue ESG bonds that stand up to global scrutiny.
Let’s make your sustainability vision investable. Connect with our climate experts now.