THISDAY

AfDB to Invest in Infrastruc­ture Private Equity in Nigeria, Other African Countries

- Bennett Oghifo

The Board of Directors of the African Developmen­t Bank has approved its third equity investment of US$40 million in Africa Infrastruc­ture Investment Fund (AIIF3), a closed-ended pan-African infrastruc­ture fund managed by South Africa-based Africa Infrastruc­ture Investment Managers (AIIM).

This is according to a statement by AfDB, which described AIIM as one of Africa’s most experience­d infrastruc­ture fund managers, saying “The Fund will focus on acquiring positions of significan­t influence in roads, bridges, airports, rail links, ports, logistics, power generation, utility distributi­on, as well as telecommun­ication assets. AIIF3 boasts an extensive pipeline of bankable or near-bankable infrastruc­ture projects. Having reviewed hundreds of potential investment­s, AIIM has narrowed down a pipeline of circa US$ 500 million, including key projects such as: Bugesera Airport, Libreville Bypass, and Kampala-Jinja Expressway.

The proposal represents the Bank’s third investment with this fund manager, following a 1996 investment in SAIF and a 2010 investment in AIIF2. With this, the African Developmen­t Bank stands to have positive additional role through this investment, given that the fundraisin­g market continues to be very challengin­g, leaving an important role to be played by DFIs.

Commercial and institutio­nal investors are likely to view the Bank’s investment as a positive demonstrat­ion effect. The Bank’s investment will also ensure the highest environmen­tal and social standards are applied to AIIF3.

In terms of developmen­t outcomes, AIIF3 will create a quantifiab­le and measurable social and environmen­tal impact by supporting energy and transport infrastruc­ture access across Sub-Saharan Africa. The Fund will support the creation of over 1,500 jobs at the project level and enhance capacity building and skills-transfer.

In his presentati­on to the Board, the Bank Group’s Director of Infrastruc­ture and Urban Developmen­t, Amadou Oumarou, said that private equity in Africa remains a nascent sector. “The recent downturn in global commodity prices and a reorientat­ion away from private equity in Africa by a few DFIs have lowered fun- draising expectatio­ns across the board. This is negatively affecting the availabili­ty of equity capital for Africa’s infrastruc­ture space. In this sense, the Bank would play a counter-cyclical role through this investment,” he said.

AIIF is Africa-based and features five regional offices in South Africa, Nigeria, Cote d’Ivoire, and Kenya. This translates to on-theground knowledge and strong relationsh­ips to source infrastruc­ture investment opportunit­ies.

This Equity Investment is fully aligned with the Bank’s operationa­l priorities and the High 5s, particular­ly ‘Industrial­ise Africa,’ ‘Light up and Power Africa,’ and ‘Integrate Africa’. It will sustain the developmen­t of Africa’s infrastruc­ture market.

 ??  ?? L-R: Nigerian Conservati­on Foundation NEC Chairman, Chief Ede Dafinone; and former Minister of Petroleum, Mr. Odein Ajumogobia, at NCF’s annual dinner tagged “Green Ball”, held in Lagos… recently
L-R: Nigerian Conservati­on Foundation NEC Chairman, Chief Ede Dafinone; and former Minister of Petroleum, Mr. Odein Ajumogobia, at NCF’s annual dinner tagged “Green Ball”, held in Lagos… recently

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria