The Civil Engineering Contractor March 2018 | Page 11

INFRASTRUCTURE AFRICA The plan follows a shareholder agreement signed between the ICD, the private sector arm of the Islamic Development Bank, and the private equity arm of India’s Infrastructure Leasing and Financial Services Group. The fund will launch with USD105- million in seed capital and expects to close its initial round of fundraising in the first half of the year, the ICD told reporters. The fundraising effort was expected to take approximately 18 months after the first round was closed, the ICD said. Power and transport would be the main sectors for the fund, which would finance small to mid-sized projects in ICD member countries, with a focus on Africa, according to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN). The ICD, established in 1999, supports the economic development of its 53 member countries. In recent years, it has sought to widen the appeal of Islamic finance across Africa, home to a quarter of the world’s Muslims. The ICD has advised several African governments on their plans to issue Islamic bonds, or sukuk, with Senegal, Nigeria, and Ivory Coast among those that have tapped the market. Late last year, ICD extended a USD100-million financing facility to the Cairo-based African Export- Import Bank (Afreximbank). Source: News Agency of Nigeria CTRG is some 100km from Mozambique’s capital, Maputo. EAST AFRICA MOZAMBIQUE Power project to draw new infra investments The IFC, part of the World Bank Group, said its financing of the 175MW Central Térmica de Ressano Garcia (CTRG) plant was made together with a syndicated loan of USD42-million from the Emerging Africa Infrastructure Fund and Dutch development bank, FMO. Proparco, the development financial institution partly owned by the French Development Agency and Barclays Africa group subsidiary ABSA Bank, as arranger, provided parallel loans, the IFC said. The IFC said the “club of lenders’ disbursed debt facilities amounted to a total of USD189-million”, in a move designed to attract additional private capital to help fund the country’s infrastructure needs. CTRG, some 100km from Mozambique’s capital, Maputo, and close to the South African border, is one of the country’s first independent power producers. The IFC said CTRG, which was completed in early 2015, “provides highly reliable and competitively priced power to Mozambique’s national utility Electricidade de Mocambique (EDM) under a 20-year power purchase agreement.” CTRG is owned by EDM and South African petrochemicals group Sasol, which provided bridge financing for the plant’s construction up to the project financing stage. Source: www.out-law.com CEC March 2018 - 9