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EBRD supports Egyptian small and medium businesses with $175m in green financing

▶ The lender will provide local banks with new funds under its Green Economy Financing Facility

- NADA EL SAWY Cairo

The European Bank for Reconstruc­tion and Developmen­t will provide $175.5 million in green finance to invest in Egyptian small and medium businesses, supporting the decarbonis­ation of the country’s economy.

The new funds will be made available to local financial institutio­ns to lend to the private sector for climate change mitigation and adaptation projects.

It is the second phase of the multilater­al lender’s Green Economy Financing Facility (Geff) programme, which is also supported by the EU and the UN’s Green Climate Fund.

The main goals of the financing facility are to translate pledges made at Cop27 “to projects on the ground” and “help green the Egyptian economy”, said Heike Harmgart, managing director for the EBRD’s Southern and Eastern Mediterran­ean region, at the green financing event in Cairo.

“Moving towards a lowemissio­ns developmen­t pathway can help Egypt build climate resilience and strengthen its competitiv­eness,” said Christian Berger, head of the EU delegation to Egypt.

The event was attended by government officials, banking representa­tives, developmen­t partners and members of the private sector.

At the UN climate change conference hosted in Sharm El Sheikh in November, Egypt highlighte­d some of its national initiative­s, such as the Nexus of Water, Food and Energy (NWFE) programme, and strengthen­ed its commitment­s to mitigate and adapt to climate change.

For example, Egypt has brought forward by five years its 2035 deadline for sourcing 42 per cent of its energy from renewable sources.

The country currently has an estimated 20 per cent in renewable energy capacity. “The concept of green finance is coming in very forcefully in all of our strategies,” Minister of Internatio­nal Co-operation Rania Al Mashat said.

Global investment in cleaner energy matched spending on fossil fuels for the first time after reaching $1.1 trillion last year, a BloombergN­EF report said on Tuesday.

The EBRD is Egypt’s lead partner on the NWFE energy pillar, committing $1 billion of private renewable finance, $300 million in sovereign finance and $3 million in grants.

Egypt was able to secure developmen­t finance of $10 billion per year on average over the past three years, “despite being very tough years globally when it comes to financing”, Ms Al Mashat said.

Minister of Environmen­t Yasmine Fouad said the EBRD’s green financing facility had helped support the private sector, reform Egypt’s banking sector and integrate a climate finance portfolio. Last year, the Egyptian government set priority areas for decarbonis­ation, such as renewable energy, green hydrogen, alternativ­es to single-use plastics, waste management and nature-based solutions, Ms Fouad said.

The industrial sector, which contribute­s 28 per cent of Egypt’s carbon dioxide emissions, is another area of focus.

“We need to look at how a green value chain can be fully integrated in the industrial sector,” Ms Fouad said. “We need to go down at the level of SMEs and start at a very early stage.” Since EBRD started investing in Egypt in 2012, it has provided more than €10 billion ($10.8 billion) in financing through more than 160 projects. Last year, the bank invested more than €1.3 billion in 25 projects, with nearly 60 per cent of all investment­s being green.

The lender’s Geff programme, running in Egypt since 2017, has invested €240 million to support resource efficiency, climate adaptation and the circular economy. Its local banking partners are National Bank of Egypt, Banque Misr, Ahli United Bank and QNB Al Ahli.

Globally, the programme operates through a network of more than 170 financial institutio­ns across 28 countries, supported by almost €5 billion of EBRD finance.

Along with funding from co-financing partners, it has enabled more than 218,000 green investment­s and averted about 9.5 million tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions per year. While the first phase in Egypt focused on all businesses and mainly mitigation efforts, the second will focus on the SME sector and adaptation technologi­es. The extension of the facility in Egypt will finance and advice private sector businesses and even households looking to invest in energy efficiency or renewable energy.

Before Cop27, the Central Bank of Egypt issued binding regulation­s for banks to have a sustainabl­e finance strategy.

Walid Ali, the central bank’s head of sustainabi­lity, said all banks should have a dedicated sustainabi­lity department and green finance reporting to the chief executive. Banks are also required to report on their sustainabi­lity activities and hire an environmen­tal expert to evaluate any large corporate project before financing.

EBRD’s new lending facility comes at a time when Egypt is suffering from the economic fallout of the Russia-Ukraine war, including soaring inflation, a higher import bill, declining foreign currency reserves and a depreciati­ng pound.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund has approved a $3 billion loan for Egypt, provided it enacts reforms and commits to a permanent shift to a flexible exchange rate. But banking representa­tives said they were ready to step up and help the most vulnerable segments of the economy make a green transition.

“Obviously the elephant in the room is FX shortage,” said Karim Kamal, head of support functions and sustainabi­lity at the National Bank of Kuwait.

“We believe that the government has a plan towards easing that short-term crisis and once this is resolved, [we will see] a pickup in Capex lending.”

Egypt needs the EBRD programme “more than ever”, said Tarek Fayed, assistant chief executive of QNB Ahli. “SMEs are a very important part of the fabric of Egyptian society. It has most of the population, whether in the formal or informal sector.”

The concept of green finance is coming in very forcefully in all of our strategies

RANIA AL MASHAT

Egypt’s Minister of Internatio­nal Co-operation

 ?? Reuters ?? A traditiona­l kilim weaver in Fayoum, south-west Cairo. Egypt’s industrial sector accounts for 28 per cent of the country’s carbon dioxide emissions
Reuters A traditiona­l kilim weaver in Fayoum, south-west Cairo. Egypt’s industrial sector accounts for 28 per cent of the country’s carbon dioxide emissions

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