- €13 million ($14.1 million) financing to modernize production lines and cut natural gas and electricity use at one of Türkiye’s largest bread manufacturers
- Backed by a broader Spain–Türkiye sustainability agreement of up to $100 million via Instituto de Crédito Oficial
- Part of Garanti BBVA’s TL 3.5 trillion sustainable finance commitment through 2029, with TL 1 trillion already deployed
Istanbul Anchors Cross-Border Sustainable Finance Push
Garanti BBVA has extended €13 million, equivalent to approximately $14.1 million, to UNO, one of Türkiye’s leading bread manufacturers, to modernize its production infrastructure and reduce energy consumption across its facilities.
The financing will support upgrades aimed at lowering natural gas and electricity use, improving energy efficiency and reducing carbon emissions in large-scale bread production. For a sector that operates on thin margins and high energy intensity, the investment links operational efficiency directly to climate performance.
The deal forms part of a broader agreement signed in November between Garanti BBVA and Spain’s Instituto de Crédito Oficial, which provides up to $100 million in long-term financing for sustainability and investment projects by companies in Türkiye with ties to Spain. The structure reflects growing alignment between European public finance institutions and private banks seeking to accelerate decarbonization in emerging markets.
Industrial Decarbonization Through Efficiency
Food manufacturing is often overshadowed by heavy industry in climate debates, yet it remains energy intensive and exposed to fuel price volatility. Modernizing production lines can deliver measurable emissions reductions while strengthening competitiveness.
Garanti BBVA positions the transaction within its wider strategy to channel capital into renewable energy, energy efficiency and low carbon transformation initiatives across the real economy. The bank recently surpassed TL 1 trillion in sustainable financing, part of a commitment to mobilize TL 3.5 trillion between 2018 and 2029.
Garanti BBVA CEO Mahmut Akten framed the financing as both strategic and measurable. “is a concrete demonstration of our commitment to this area, and the impact we are creating together with our customers,” he said, referring to the bank’s sustainable finance milestone. He added, “We will continue to add value to the Turkish economy with the global strength of the BBVA group, offering long-term solutions to our customers in their sustainable transformation journeys.”

For corporate borrowers, such financing increasingly functions as a bridge between regulatory pressure and operational reform. Türkiye’s exporters, particularly those integrated into European supply chains, face tightening carbon expectations as the EU advances mechanisms such as carbon border adjustments and stricter sustainability reporting frameworks.
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Corporate Strategy Meets Climate Imperative
UNO’s leadership has made clear that the investment goes beyond cost savings. Federico Caruncho, Chair of UNO’s Board, described the modernization as central to the company’s long-term environmental strategy. “The investment in the modernization of our production lines will not only increase operational efficiency, it will also contribute to our goal of reducing our environmental impact. We are delighted to work with a reliable financial partner like Garanti BBVA,” he said.
For investors and C-suite executives, the takeaway is practical. Energy efficiency projects in food manufacturing can produce rapid returns while reducing exposure to carbon pricing risk and supply chain scrutiny. Access to long term, sustainability linked capital reduces upfront strain and aligns corporate transformation with banking sector climate commitments.
Finance as a Policy Lever
The involvement of Spain’s Instituto de Crédito Oficial adds a geopolitical dimension. By supporting sustainability investments in Türkiye, the arrangement strengthens cross-border economic ties while exporting European climate finance standards into adjacent markets.
Such blended public private frameworks are increasingly central to scaling industrial decarbonization. They reduce perceived risk for lenders, extend maturities for borrowers and embed environmental criteria into credit allocation.
For Garanti BBVA, surpassing TL 1 trillion in sustainable financing signals scale and intent. For UNO, the funding accelerates tangible emissions reductions within a high-volume consumer goods sector. More broadly, the transaction illustrates how banks are moving beyond headline renewable projects to target the less visible, but equally critical, efficiency upgrades inside factories.
As global climate policy tightens and supply chain transparency intensifies, access to structured sustainable finance is becoming a competitive differentiator. Deals such as this suggest that the next phase of decarbonization will be driven not only by new energy assets, but by incremental, data-backed transformation across the industrial base.
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The post Garanti BBVA Provides $14.1 Million to Decarbonize UNO’s Bread Production in Türkiye appeared first on ESG News.


