This paper explores how data-based forecasting methodologies could enhance the knowledge base about the behavior of corporate green bonds market in the climate-related financial decision-making setting. Conventional economic frameworks tend to be weak in reflecting the dynamic and intricate interactions that define green bond values, especially when environmental and market indicators interrelate over a period. To find a solution to this dilemma, the study creates a foreseeing model on the basis of simulated financial and weather connected statistics that would embody the green bond and standard bond market dynamics in 10 years. The control data environment analysis is aimed at establishing patterns, trends and predictive relationships in this controlled data environment. The findings prove that sophisticated data-driven techniques are capable of representing nonlinear correlations and generating robust forecasts in case of simulated scenarios. The findings indicate that these methods can provide useful methodological information to future studies on the subject of sustainable finance and the valuation of green bonds. Although the research is not based on actual market statistics, it gives a systematic basis to further empirical research with actual green bond statistics in the world. On the whole, the research the work adds to the existing body of literature on climate-conscious financial modeling by demonstrating how simulation-based forecasting models can be used to facilitate the process of long-term financial planning and sustainability-based analysis, though it needs to be furthered supported by real-world market data.
Biswal et al. (Sun,) studied this question.