Business Day (Ghana)

AfDB Approves US$20 Million Investment In Private Equity Fund Targeting The Infrastruc­ture Sector In Africa

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The board of directors of the African Developmen­t Bank Group (AfDB) has approved an equity investment of US$20 million in the Africa50 Infrastruc­ture Accelerati­on Fund I, in support of its target to mobilize private capital for infrastruc­ture across the continent.

The Africa50 Infrastruc­ture Accelerati­on Fund I is a pan-African infrastruc­ture private equity fund that is mobilizing up to US$500 million for investment and value creation in strategic infrastruc­ture sectors. These include power, energy, digital and social infrastruc­ture, transporta­tion, logistics, and water and sanitation.

The fund is sponsored by Africa50, an infrastruc­ture investment platform establishe­d by government­s and the African Developmen­t Bank.

Africa50 brings infrastruc­ture project developmen­t and financing under one umbrella. Africa50 has a strong track record of investment­s in the private sector and of projects undertaken under a Public Private-Partnershi­p (PPP) framework.

The mobilisati­on of private capital is critical to closing the infrastruc­ture financing gap in Africa, especially given the limited fiscal space of African government­s which currently provide the largest source of infrastruc­ture funding on the continent.

The Africa50 Infrastruc­ture Accelerati­on Fund I was establishe­d as a vehicle to help execute Africa50’s mandate of mobilizing private capital and accelerati­ng further investment flows into African infrastruc­ture by targeting private and institutio­nal investors.

The AfDB director for the Industrial and Trade Developmen­t Department, Abdu Mukhtar said the bank’s investment in the Fund underlined its strategic nature and the fact that the bank prioritise­s investing in strategic infrastruc­ture sectors that contribute to closing Africa’s infrastruc­ture financing gap (estimated at US$68-108 billion annually).

“The Bank’s investment will support Africa50 to crowd-in private capital into African infrastruc­ture through a private equity fund vehicle that private investors better understand and are more comfortabl­e investing in,” Mukhtar said.

Commenting on the approval, Wale Shonibare, African Developmen­t Bank’s Director for Energy Financial Solutions, Policy and Regulation­s said the Bank’s support for the Africa50 Infrastruc­ture Accelerati­on Fund I aligned with its High Five objectives. “It also strengthen­s the

Bank’s already existing partnershi­ps with the Africa50 Group on initiative­s such as the African Sovereign Investors Forum and the Alliance for Green Infrastruc­ture in Africa,” Shonibare added.

Alain Ebobissé, CEO of the Africa50 Group, said: “We are highly appreciati­ve of the African Developmen­t Bank’s support for the Africa50 Infrastruc­ture Accelerati­on Fund I. We look forward to continuing to work collaborat­ively with the African Developmen­t Bank and other investors to make a meaningful contributi­on to improving the infrastruc­ture landscape on the continent.”

By leveraging private capital for infrastruc­ture investment, The Africa50 Infrastruc­ture Accelerati­on Fund I can help create jobs, strengthen healthcare access, improve education access through digital technologi­es, enhance access to financial services and financial inclusion through fintech investment­s, and reduce the impact of climate change.

The fund is projected to create 3,278 fulltime equivalent jobs over the period 2023-2035, including 1,676 jobs for women. In addition, the fund is expected to contribute to fostering regional integratio­n through improvemen­ts in transport and logistics infrastruc­ture that can lead to increased inter and intra-regional trade.

The African Developmen­t Bank and partners in the new fund will continue to provide growth capital and infrastruc­ture equity to support the urgent need to accelerate private sector funding toward bridging the infrastruc­ture financing gap in Africa.

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