“…Modern banking theory has extensively studied the potential of credit guarantees or interest rate subsidies to mitigate inefficient credit rationing (Arping et al, 2010;Hainz & Hakenes, 2012;Janda, 2011;Minelli & Modica, 2009;Philippon & Skreta, 2012). These insights on de-risking measures have been extended to the case of low-carbon technologies (Haas & Kempa, 2023), but there is less theoretical clarity about which role the public provision of loans to clean energy projects is supposed to play, if any. The extant literature is primarily centered around public (green) banks-which typically engage both in loan provision and de-risking (Eslava & Freixas, 2021;Whitney et al, 2020)-and suggests various reasons for how these institutions could limit the extent of credit rationing for low-carbon technologies.…”