Seminar “Beyond Financed Emissions: Moving
to Transition Finance in Practice,” National Assembly, July 7, 2026
On July 7, 2026, a seminar titled “Beyond
Financed Emissions: Moving to Transition Finance in Practice” was held at the
National Assembly in Korea. Co-hosted by Rep. Kim Hyun-jung and the Korea
Sustainability Investing Forum (PCAF-KOREA), the event featured three
presentations, an introduction to the PCAF Standard, transition-finance
implementation strategies for Korea’s financial sector, and data-driven
risk-management approaches, followed by a panel discussion on advancing
transition finance in Korea.
Opening Remarks
Opening remarks by Chun Seung Yang,
Executive Director, Korea Sustainability Investing Forum
The event opened with remarks from Chun Seung
Yang, Executive Director of the Korea Sustainability Investing Forum. “What
isn’t measured cannot be managed, and what isn’t managed cannot be reduced,” he
noted, adding that PCAF marked an important milestone by providing a common
language for understanding the carbon emissions that follow the flow of
capital. He emphasized that the sector must now move beyond simply calculating
financed emissions toward mobilizing the real economy to deliver a low-carbon
transition.
Congratulatory Remarks
Congratulatory remarks by Rep. Hyun Jung
Kim, Democratic Party of Korea
Congratulatory remarks followed. Rep. Hyun
Jung Kim of the Democratic Party of Korea underscored the role of finance in
supporting the transition of high-carbon industries. He noted that for core
manufacturers in steel, chemicals, automobiles and other sectors to fully
transform into low-carbon, environmentally sound businesses in step with global
environmental regulation, large-scale capital investment and funding for technology
development are essential. For transition finance to expand on a stable
footing, he argued, market participants need clear, credible guidelines and a
solid policy foundation.
Joint congratulatory remarks by Kyung Nam
Kim, Executive Managing Director, KB Financial Group (Chair, PCAF-KOREA)
A joint congratulatory address followed by
Kyung Nam Kim, Executive Managing Director of KB Financial Group, who chairs
PCAF-KOREA. Reflecting that the concept of financed emissions, unfamiliar at
the time of PCAF-KOREA’s launch, has now become standard language across the
financial sector, she assessed that institutions’ practical capacity to measure
financed emissions accurately and disclose them transparently has steadily
strengthened. She said finance must serve as a bridge for the transition:
supplying capital at the right time and supporting systematic roadmaps so that
carbon-intensive companies can transform into environmentally sound ones.
Presentation I — Updates on PCAF Standards and the Broader Financed
Emissions Lnadscape
Speaker: Tiange Wei, Head of Asia-Pacific,
PCAF
The first presentation was delivered by
Tiange Wei, Head of Asia-Pacific at PCAF. Her core message was that measuring
financed emissions is no longer a mere reporting exercise but has become a
strategic imperative for financial institutions. PCAF is focused on securing
alignment with major global reporting frameworks, including IFRS S1·S2, the GHG
Protocol and the CSRD, and she stressed that PCAF works in cooperation with
regulators rather than in competition with them. Wei closed by quoting the
proverb, “If you want to go fast, go alone; if you want to go far, go
together.”
Presentation II — Transition Finance Implementation Strategies for
Korea’s Financial Sector
Speaker: Ji Hyun Kim, Research Fellow, Hana
Institute of Finance
The second presentation, by Ji Hyun Kim,
Research Fellow at the Hana Institute of Finance, focused on domestic
transition-finance market trends, regulatory changes and implementation cases
from global banks. She assessed that, with transition finance guidelines now
finalized, transition finance is emerging within Korea’s financial sector as a
key agenda that will expand the corporate and investment banking markets over
the next decade.
She set out three success principles of
global banks: (1) building ESG assessment models that reflect science-based
transition pathways for carbon-intensive industries (2) building transition
partnerships with clients, and (3) scaling transition finance pilots. She also
noted that, given the enormous capital needs of high-carbon sectors, there are
many cases of blended finance drawing on policy finance and government
guarantees.
Presentation III — Transition Finance Risk Management and Implementation
Using S&P Data
Speaker: Young Jin Lee, Sustainability Director,
S&P Global Sustainable 1
The third presentation, by Young Jin Lee, Sustainability
Director at S&P Global Sustainable 1, introduced approaches to
transition-finance risk management from a data perspective. She noted that
S&P Global Sustainable 1 has entered a partnership with PCAF to pursue
synergies between its data capabilities and the PCAF Standard. S&P holds
emissions data on more than 30,000 listed companies and over 4.5 million
private companies, and she highlighted its bottom-up data structure enabling
portfolio analysis and its transparent methodology as key strengths. Because
the financial industry has the highest Scope 3 share of any sector, around 99%,
she emphasized that measuring financed emissions is especially important.
Panel Discussion
Moderator: Prof. Hyeong Na Oh, Kyung Hee
University
Following the three presentations, a panel
discussion was moderated by Prof. Hyeong Na Oh of Kyung Hee University.
Panelists included Song Yi Lee, Deputy Director at the Financial Services
Commission; Dr. Si Hyung Lee, at the Korea Chamber of Commerce and Industry;
and Tae Han Kim, COO at the Korea Sustainability Investing Forum, joined by
presenters Tiange Wei, and Young Jin Kim. Together they discussed concrete
methodologies and challenges for putting Korea’s transition finance into
practice.
The discussion emphasized the need to
advance financed-emissions calculation by asset class and to prioritize the
application of country-specific data. Panelists further noted that resolving
the funding difficulties of high-carbon sectors requires more than simply
supplying capital, it calls for creating genuine market demand for low-carbon
products and putting incentives in place. There was also agreement that
preventing transition-washing requires establishing clear taxonomy criteria,
alongside feasibility assessments of companies’ transition plans and systems to
monitor implementation after the fact.
The conversation went on to raise the need
for a cooperative governance model, built on blended-finance structures that
organically combine public and private capital, that extends to small and
medium-sized enterprises within the supply chain. Audience and panelists
offered in-depth suggestions, in particular on organic support to help SMEs set
science-based (SBTi) targets, and on the urgency of transforming the systems
used to manage financial institutions’ concentrated exposure to fossil-fuel
investments.
The panelists concluded by reaffirming that
the true essence of transition finance is not the passive step of simply
lowering the emissions figures in a financial institution’s portfolio but
preventing high-carbon lock-in and driving real, economy-wide emissions
reductions.
Closing
This seminar served as an important signal
of a paradigm shift, moving beyond carbon accounting as a mere response to
regulation toward an “implementation-focused transition finance” that can drive
genuine structural change in Korean industry. Building on the insights gathered
today from experts and audience members across many fields, the Korea
Sustainability Investing Forum (PCAF-KOREA) will take the lead in developing, beyond
standard-setting, effective implementation-monitoring systems and
risk-management approaches. We will ensure that this event, prepared together
with the office of Rep. Hyun Jung Kim, is not a one-off discussion, and we will
continue to serve as a steadfast bridge so that Korean financial institutions
and companies can secure sustainable competitiveness amid the great transition
toward Net-zero.
Inquiries: mileysong@kosif.org