Business a.m.

Nigeria, 39 other African countries to benefit from EIB’s 200m jobs, climate action support

- Ben Eguzozie in Port Harcourt

NIGERIA, AFRICA’S largest economy by gross domestic product (GDP), is among 40 African countries that would benefit from a European Investment Bank’s (EIB) €200 million loan facility aimed at supporting traderelat­ed productive investment­s in renewable energy projects in Africa.

The facility, which comes through the Africa ExportImpo­rt Bank (Afreximban­k) has a 15-year repayment period, and will support promoters in 40 countries across Africa with long-term funding.

A statement by Obi Emekekwue, director and global head, communicat­ions and events management, Afreximban­k, sent to our correspond­ent, said, the agreement was signed between Afreximban­k’s Afolabi Obisesan, manager, guarantees and specialise­d finance and Ambroise Fayolle, EIB’s vice president responsibl­e for developmen­t exchange docu- ments, on the margins of EIB’s Africa Day programme on November 22 in Addis Ababa, the Ethiopian capital.

By improving access to finance for private enterprise­s, and specifical­ly SMEs and mid-caps, the loan will enhance intra-African trade, as well as trade with the European Union, the EIB said.

It will enable smaller companies on the continent to sustain and create new jobs; and will ultimately stimulate the expansion, diversific­ation and developmen­t of African trade.

At least 25 percent of the financing will be dedicated to projects which will help to diversify the power mix in the region, reducing reliance on fossil fuels and supporting climate goals, said Afreximban­k’s Obisesan.

For Nigeria, Africa’s largest oil producer, whose economy almost wholly depends on crude petroleum incomes, diversifyi­ng would be a good game changer on how to strut growth in the country’s economy that has been badly harried by a 2016 recession.

Werner Hoyer, president of the European Investment Bank speaking on the Africa Day event, jointly hosted by the EIB and the United Nations Industrial Developmen­t Organizati­on (UNIDO), said: “The EIB, as the EU Bank, is committed to supporting investment in Africa that unlocks economic opportunit­ies, creates jobs and tackles a changing climate. As one of the largest multilater­al financial institutio­ns, the EIB has a crucial role to play to help channel private capital towards the energy transition. This is urgent if we want to achieve the Paris Agreement and the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals. With this operation, Afreximban­k and the EIB are joining forces to improve access to clean energy across Africa.”

On his part, Benedict Okey Oramah, president of Afreximban­k, said “We are confident that effective implementa­tion of this facility, which heralds Afreximban­k’s financing of climate action projects in Africa, will lead to strong developmen­t outcomes, including employment creation, increased economic activities, and increase in tax revenues for fiskind cally strained government­s.”

According to him, Afreximban­k decided to conclude the facility in furtheranc­e of its current strategy which prioritize­s intra-African trade; intra–African investment­s, industrial­ization and export manufactur­ing of the labourinte­nsive type.

The EIB has been active across Africa for over 40 years. In sub-Saharan Africa, the European bank operates under the Cotonou Agreement. The Bank supports regional developmen­t, private sector and key infrastruc­ture contributi­ng to economic growth. In 2017, it invested EUR 1.47 billion in 40 projects across sub-Saharan Africa, the Caribbean and the Pacific, and the Overseas Countries and Territorie­s.

The EIB’s Africa Day was created to explore the continent’s many challenges and discuss ways to tap into its huge potential. The event serves as a platform for debate in areas such as private sector developmen­t, finance for small businesses, jobs for youth and women, agricultur­e, innovation and digitalisa­tion.

 ??  ?? L-R: Olumide Orojimi, head, corporate communicat­ions department,The Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE); Oscar N. Onyema, chief executive officer, NSE; Stefan Traumann, German consul general; and Pai Gamde, chief human resource officer, NSE, during a closing gong ceremony to discuss on more collaborat­ive opportunit­ies with the NSE in Lagos recently.
L-R: Olumide Orojimi, head, corporate communicat­ions department,The Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE); Oscar N. Onyema, chief executive officer, NSE; Stefan Traumann, German consul general; and Pai Gamde, chief human resource officer, NSE, during a closing gong ceremony to discuss on more collaborat­ive opportunit­ies with the NSE in Lagos recently.

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