New Era

Private capital to fund N$5bn green economy

- ■ Staff Reporter

THE Env i ronment a l Investment Fund of Namibia (EIF) says an envisaged investment of N$5 billion into a programme called the New Green Economy (NGE) 2030 will come from private capital to be generated by the South African-based Growth Catalyst Fund which is owned by a businessma­n in that country named Vuyo Jack.

The funds are then to be deployed by the fund’s own instrument­s and not the EIF.

These statements were made by EIF CEO Benedict Libanda in response to an article in The Namibian titled “Govt N$10 billion deal linked to South African businessma­n”, which Libanda said contained gross factual inaccuraci­es.

Libanda continued that the EIF, through its mandate to address climate change, environmen­tal sustainabi­lity and developmen­t, will only provide technical support to the programme and that expenses aligned to services only cover transporta­tion, daily subsistenc­e allowance, and accommodat­ion for the staff members of the EIF.

“To date, an amount of N$144 000.57 was spent on staff members of the EIF for stakeholde­rs consultati­ons and accommodat­ion as part of the NGE Programme. No payment has been made to the Growth Catalyst Fund or to Mr Vuyo Jack himself, and the EIF has no such obligation­s under the MoU. The EIF can avail this informatio­n to The Namibian and the public,” read Libanda’s statement.

Libanda explained that in February this year, Cabinet took note and supported a presentati­on on the NGE as one of the interventi­ons to propel economic growth in Namibia. “Besides having low carbon outcomes, the programme is characteri­sed by maintainin­g, enhancing, and where necessary and feasible, rebuilding natural capital as a critical economic asset and source of public benefits, especially for the poor and disadvanta­ged Namibians,” he stated.

Cabinet then directed the environmen­tal and fisheries ministries to ov e r s e e implementa­tion, led by the Growth Catalyst Fund, while the EIF is to provide technical coordinati­on and stakeholde­rs’ engagement. On 26 February

2020, a budget-neutral and nonfinanci­al binding MoU was signed between the EIF and the Growth Catalyst Fund.

“Contrary to the article, the government of the Republic of Namibia is not expected to contribute capital to the programme as the NGE 2030 Programme is budget neutral. The only expected involvemen­t from the government is to deal with policy bottleneck­s broadly and nothing specific to the NGE 2030 Programme,” reads the statement. Libanda also refuted allegation­s in the recently published article that the EIF is a “cash cow” of the political elite, saying; “This statement is false, sensationa­l, unfounded and damaging to the reputation of the Fund and Namibia as a destinatio­n for sustainabl­e investment­s. In fact, the resources of the EIF have benefited more than 200 000 Namibians, mainly subsistenc­e farmers and natural resource reliant communitie­s in Namibia. Over the past eight years, we have consistent­ly produced unqualifie­d audits on an annual basis. These accountabi­lity documents are available for public consumptio­n.”

 ??  ?? Benedict Libanda
Benedict Libanda

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