China Daily Global Edition (USA)

AIIB to be ‘lean, clean and green’

Summit lays out principles ahead of signing articles of agreement

- By ZHENG YANGPENG zhengyangp­eng@ chinadaily.com.cn

The Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank will ensure that projects it funds are sustainabl­e and environmen­tally friendly, Jin Liqun, the head of the working group charged with establishi­ng the bank, said on Saturday.

The comment came just two days ahead of representa­tives of the bank’s 57 prospectiv­e founding members signing its articles of agreement on Monday.

“The regulation­s on AIIB lay out a set of environmen­tal criteria for projects it will fund. It will explore a new developmen­t model that will try to address the conflict between improving people’s livelihood and environmen­tal protection,” said Jin, chairman of the Multilater­al Interim Secretaria­t of the AIIB, at a think tank summit in Beijing.

This is part of the bank’s overall commitment to be “lean, clean and green”, Jin said.

Jin said the first aspect to adhere to the “green” principle is to design a set of “highstanda­rd” rules: The bank has already drafted an environmen­t-related document to be approved by member countries. It will also push through the adaptation of energy saving and environmen­tally-friendly technology in its projects.

It will adopt “green finance” and cooperate with private capital providers to jointly fund projects, Jin said.

The AIIB’s headquarte­rs, in Beijing, will be an ecofriendl­y building, he said.

He also said that more countries have submitted applicatio­ns to join the China-led bank.

A previous report by Kyodo News said more than 10 countries were waiting to join the bank. That would increase AIIB members to about 70, exceeding the 67-member Asian Developmen­t Bank.

Financial transparen­cy, corporate governance and high standards in top management skills will be the cornerston­es of the new bank, Jin said earlier at a forum. He also pledged to adopt “21st century management”.

This will involve a “core group of profession­als” running the bank, where the top management will be appointed for ability and not political connection­s. On several occasions he has said that the AIIB will have “zero tolerance for corruption”.

Jin is a former vice-minister of finance and served at both the World Bank and Asian Developmen­t Bank. He is considered to be a highly competitiv­e contender for the presidency of the future bank.

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