UAE membership to lift EBRD and NDB’s scope and widen funding access for local companies
The UAE’s decision to join the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development and the New Development Bank founded by the “Brics” nations is expected to improve the capacity for both lenders to engage in new projects.
Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid, Vice President and Ruler of Dubai, announced the UAE is joining both the EBRD, based in London, and Shanghai’s NDB as the country aims to grow its economic partnerships.
“The UAE joining the marquee club of EBRD and Brics enhances the scale and scope of the work undertaken by the Development Financial Institutions significantly,” said Ullas Rao, assistant professor of finance at Heriot-Watt University Dubai.
The membership of these banks will provide “UAE companies with alternative access to capital where commercial bank support is not forthcoming”, said Sachin Kerur, Middle East head of law firm Reed Smith.
“This will be particularly so for UAE companies involved in broader development projects where the risk profiles may be more challenging than the norm. This will include companies involved in sustainable and circular economy projects and renewable developments.”
The EBRD is a major multilateral lender set up in 1991, initially to help fund the recovery of eastern Europe after the collapse of the Soviet Union. It is owned by 69 countries from five continents, as well as the EU and European Investment Bank.
The bank, which had total assets of €68.2bn ($81.3bn) by the end of 2019, has widened its remit to include investments in the Middle East, North Africa and Central Asia.
Earlier this month, EBRD extended a $100 million financing package to Banque du Caire in Egypt to boost lending to local micro, small and medium-sized companies. It is also partnering with the Bank of Palestine to provide financial assistance to women entrepreneurs.
The UAE’s application to join the EBRD was approved by the bank’s shareholders this year.
“The UAE is an important business and knowledge hub and its membership will benefit many of the economies where the EBRD invests and will open up further opportunities across our regions,” EBRD president Odile Renaud-Basso said in January.
The New Development Bank, on the other hand, is a multilateral development bank established by the Brics (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) nations as equal stakeholders in 2014.
The bank supports public and private projects through loans, guarantees, equity participation and other financial instruments.