Ladies and Gentlemen, (Introduction)



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Transcription:

Dr. Werner Hoyer President of the European Investment Bank Africa Business Week 22-26 April 2013, Frankfurt Keynote speech at Infrastructure conference, Thursday 25 th April (Erstentwurf: Heike Rüttgers, überarbeitet von Frank Schuster) Ladies and Gentlemen, (Introduction) It is my pleasure and privilege to address the Africa Business Week conference. I would like to thank Afrika Verein and the Maleki Group once again for inviting me. This gathering provides an excellent opportunity to promote business relations between European and African companies and institutions. And it also offers the chance to identify synergies and opportunities for cooperation between organisations present here today to help further Africa s economic development. In the next 20 minutes I would like to give you an overview about the activities of the European Investment Bank, about possibilities, financial instruments as well as challenges that we are facing on the African continent. 1

(EIB role) As the house bank of the EU, the overriding principle of the European Investment Bank s financing in Africa is sustainable development. In the last ten years, the EIB has lent some EUR 12.5 billion for infrastructure projects, representing 65% of the total portfolio in Africa. Central to ensuring the projects sustainability and contribution to economic growth is the ethos of African ownership of the projects financed. Access to safe and reliable water and electricity supplies, efficient transport and telecommunications facilities form the cornerstone of economic growth and social development. They are preconditions for businesses to develop and grow, trade and production to be carried out, and populations to become part of the economic fabric of their countries. Across a continent as vast as Africa, there is of course a huge disparity between each country s infrastructure systems, from Tunisia to South Africa, from Senegal to Somalia. Much is already being done - by international development finance institutions, governments, civil society groups, and many others to address the individual needs and priorities for infrastructure development at a national level. 2

However, it is vital to focus on regional infrastructure initiatives across all the sectors including the development of regional financial sector cooperation in order to unlock the sustainable and inclusive economic growth for which Africa has the capacity. Through regional integration, trade is facilitated, knowledge can be transferred and skills shared for the benefit of the wider region and continent. (Partnerships private sector) It is in partnership with others that the EIB can ensure that its unique position, experience and technical expertise can be used the most effectively in financing infrastructure in Africa. One example is partnership with the private sector, a core driver for economic growth. The European Commission s Agenda for Change rightly advocates the pivotal role of engagement with the private sector as the foundation for sustainable and inclusive growth. Across Africa, private sector operations account for more than half of the total portfolio of EIB lending on the continent in the last ten years. In sub-saharan Africa, where the Bank prioritises projects promoting the development of the private sector and commercially-run public enterprises in the 3

infrastructure and financial sectors, financing is carried out under the so-called ACP Investment Facility. What we do observe is the fact, that over the last 25 years, governments have sought to ensure more efficient delivery of public services, and partnership with private sector specialists operating locally and internationally, to achieve economic growth and to improve people s lives in the 21st century. In some countries, private participation in infrastructure can account for half of all infrastructure spending. Private sector participation is highest in infrastructure sectors that have required heavy recent investment, or in which investment needs remain high. The most significant of these is telecommunication. The mobile revolution across Africa and its impact in both urban and rural communities, as well as its role as a catalyst for economic growth and market efficiency is well documented. The European Investment Bank has supported a number of mobile telecommunications initiatives where commercial funding was lacking and to ensure broader population coverage in rural areas as well as remote island states for example on the Seychelles where we have financed one of these projects. 4

So, Ladies and Gentlemen, without any doubt, there is a strong synergy between an effective private sector and more effective government engagement. An entrepreneurial culture, increased productivity, greater government revenues, development of human capital and education and institutional reforms all encourage both better governance and contribute to a more conducive business environment. (Partnerships infrastructure) Returning to infrastructure, experience has clearly shown that it is through the optimisation of funding resources that projects can produce the most far-reaching and long-term results - by blending grant money, loans and expert support. The EU-Africa Infrastructure Trust Fund, launched in 2007 by the African Union and the European Commission under the EU-Africa Partnership on Infrastructure, aims to substantially increase EU investment in regional African infrastructure and the delivery of transport, energy, water and ICT services. The Trust Fund, whose Secretariat is housed at the EIB, combines grant resources from the European Commission and EU Member States with the technical expertise and lending capacity of the EIB and EU development financiers (currently 13 are represented in the Fund s Project Financiers Group), as well as the African Development Bank (AfDB). 5

It provides interest rate subsidies, direct grants and technical assistance for long-term cross-border and regional infrastructure projects, once again under the guiding principles of sustainability and African ownership. At the end of 2012, the Trust Fund had provided a total of EUR 378 million in grant operations. Each euro approved is expected to generate about thirteen euros in total investments (leverage effect of 12.8). The fund performs well. Let me, for example, draw your attention to the so-called Mount Coffee hydropower project, which will provide an important source of renewable energy to Liberia. In conjunction with an interconnector between Côte d Ivoire-Liberia-Sierra Leone and Guinea, it will contribute to economic development and poverty reduction in a region whose development has been severely hindered by civil conflict. So, it is through coordinated collaboration between international partners whose instruments, objectives and operating methods complement and enrich each other s that we can effectively support the development of Africa s infrastructure. 6

(Focus on energy the Sustainable Energy for All initiative) Permit me to focus for a moment on energy, a vital sector for economic growth and access to which is a pre-condition for human welfare. The United Nations General Assembly declared 2012 the year of Sustainable Energy for All (or SE4All). The UN Secretary General subsequently launched an initiative calling for global actors, including national governments, financing institutions, private sector enterprises and civil society to work together to achieve three ambitious targets ensuring universal access to modern energy; doubling the rate of improvement in energy efficiency and doubling the share of renewable energy in the global energy mix, all by 2030. The challenge is great: how to promote universal access to energy AND ensure that as much of it is clean and resourceefficient in other words, sustainable. Only then can we stay on track to meeting the global target of limiting temperature increase to less than 2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels, and only then can we achieve the Millennium Development Goals. 7

Just consider these grim statistics: Over two thirds 1 of the population of Sub-Saharan Africa has no access to electricity the lowest of all regions in the world. The area accounts for only 12% of the global population, but for almost 45% of those without access to electricity, according to data from the International Energy Agency. Power outages average 56 days a year 2. And if we do not intervene, this situation will get worse as the rate of population growth will surpass the rate of connections. In the EU, we have a broad awareness of the importance of changing the way in which we generate electricity, heat our homes and businesses, and travel. But it is essential that measures taken on our continent are coupled with initiatives to promote growth in the developing world. Energy is at the heart of the European Investment Bank s investment priorities, and renewable energy and energy efficiency receive particular attention. External energy security and economic development in non- EU countries is one of five priority areas of our lending to the sector. This is why we are well placed to contribute to meeting the global targets of the Sustainable Energy for All initiative. 1 Precisely 69% 2 Figure from PJ 8

(Conclusion) Ladies and Gentlemen, let me conclude. The central role of coordination and mutual cooperation between all those who play a role in helping Africa to achieve sustainable economic growth and integration is of utmost importance. The necessity of bringing together decisiontakers and change-makers in conferences such as this one cannot be stressed enough; they represent unique opportunities to move forward on the wide-ranging aspects of achieving such growth and integration peace, security, trade, market liberalisation, and infrastructure and investment. They provide added impetus to the impressive momentum already gained in recent years in the drive to help Africa develop as a united, prosperous continent. I thank you for your attention. 9